Chen Qingping

Chinese Tai Chi Chuan practitioner


title: "Chen Qingping" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["chinese-tai-chi-practitioners", "1868-deaths", "1795-births", "martial-artists-from-henan", "people-from-jiaozuo"] description: "Chinese Tai Chi Chuan practitioner" topic_path: "geography/china" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chen_Qingping" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Chinese Tai Chi Chuan practitioner ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox martial artist"]

FieldValue
nameChen Qingping
陳清平
birth_date1795
birth_placeChenjiagou, Henan, China
death_date
nationalityChinese
styleChen-style tai chi
(7th gen. Chen-style)
Zhaobao tai chi
(7th gen. Zhaobao-style)
relativesChen Youben,
Chen Changxing,
Chen Wangting
studentsWu Yuxiang
::

| name = Chen Qingping 陳清平 | image = | caption = | birth_name = | birth_date = 1795 | birth_place = Chenjiagou, Henan, China | death_date = | death_place = | death_cause = | other_names = | residence = | nationality = Chinese | style = Chen-style tai chi (7th gen. Chen-style) Zhaobao tai chi (7th gen. Zhaobao-style) | years_active = | occupation = | university = | spouse = | relatives = Chen Youben, Chen Changxing, Chen Wangting | students = Wu Yuxiang | website = | footnotes = | updated = |c = 陳 |t = |s = |p = Chén Qīngpíng |w = Ch'en Ch'ing-p'ing

Chen Qingping or Ch'en Ch'ing-p'ing (1795–1868) was a 15th generation descendant and 7th generation master of the Chen family tai chi, which he learned from Chen Youben, and the 7th generation successor of the Zhaobao style of tai chi, which he learned from Zhang Yan. He was an influential martial artist and teacher of tai chi.

Chen Qingping was married to a woman from the Zhaobao village, only a few miles north east of the Chen Village (Chenjiagou) — the home of the Chen Family famous for their martial arts.

Chen Qingping's main disciple He Zhaoyuan passed on this art which later developed into He-style tai chi. Other disciples, such as Li Zuozhi (created Tengnuojia), and Li Jingyan (created the Hulei-style tai chi), created their own styles by combining their arts with other martial arts popular in the local area where they lived.

Chen Qingping also taught Wu Yuxiang, who later developed the Wu (Hao)-style tai chi, sometimes referred to as the "Scholar-style of tai chi". Wu Yuxiang went to Chen Village to learn from Yang Luchan's master, Chen Changxing, who recommended him to Chen Qingping.

Tai chi lineage tree with Zhaobao focus

Notes

References

  • Wile, Douglas Lost T'ai-chi Classics from the late Ch'ing Dynasty (1996) State University of New York Press, Albany.

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chinese-tai-chi-practitioners1868-deaths1795-birthsmartial-artists-from-henanpeople-from-jiaozuo