The Yang family first became involved in the study of tai chi in the early 19th century. The founder of the Yang-style was
Yang Luchan, who studied under
Chen Changxing starting in 1820. Yang became a teacher in his own right, and his subsequent expression of tai chi became known as the Yang-style, and directly led to the development of three other major styles of tai chi (see below). Yang Luchan (and some would say the art of tai chi, in general) came to prominence as a result of his being hired by the
Chinese Imperial family to teach tai chi to the elite
Palace Battalion of the Imperial Guards in 1850, a position he held until his death. Yang Luchan passed on his art to: • his second son, the oldest son to live to maturity,
Yang Banhou, who was also retained as a martial arts instructor by the Chinese Imperial family. Yang Banhou's first student was
Wu Quanyou, a
Manchu Banner officer. Wu had previously trained under Yang Luchan, but Yang Banhou became his formal teacher. Wu and his son,
Wu Jianquan, would go on to co-found
Wu-style tai chi. • his third son
Yang Jianhou, who passed it to his sons,
Yang Shaohou and
Yang Chengfu and Niu Chunming (1881–1961). •
Wu Yuxiang, who went on to develop
Wu (Hao)-style. Wu (Hao)-style, in turn, would become the ancestor of
Sun-style tai chi. Yang Jianhou passed on the middle frame long form, sometimes called the 2nd generation Yang form or the Yang Jianhou form, to his disciples who still practice this more martial form. It is seen as more reminiscent of Chen style for which it is closer to in time as well as form than the Yang Chengfu form or 3rd generation styles. Yang Chengfu removed the vigorous
fa jin ("release of power") from the Hand (solo) Form, as well as the energetic jumping, stamping, and other abrupt movements in order to emphasise the
Da jia (大架
large frame style), but retained them in the Weapons (sword, saber, staff, and spear) forms. The Hand Form has slow, steady, expansive and soft movements suitable for general practitioners. Thus, Yang Chengfu is largely responsible for standardizing and popularizing the Yang-style tai chi widely practised today.
Modern short forms Yang Chengfu developed his own shortened "large frame" version of the Yang long Form, in order to make it easier to teach to modern students who are busy with modern life. Now the most popular long tai chi form in the world,
the classic Yang Chengfu form retains the health and self-defense benefits of the original 300-movement sequence in only 150 movements, most commonly divided by teachers today into 85, 88, 103, or 108 "postures" or stopping points. The Cheng Man-ch'ing and
Chinese Sports Commission short forms are said to be derived from Yang family forms, but neither is recognized as Yang family tai chi by current standard-bearing Yang family teachers. The Chen, Yang and Wu families are now promoting their own shortened demonstration forms for competitive purposes. As the 21st century began, the Chinese government also commissioned short
10 Forms and
16 Forms from each of the five major tai chi lineages. (The
10 forms are also known as
8 forms.) After these forms had been taught for several years, they were all presented as a set to attendees of the First International Tai Chi Chuan Symposium in Nashville, TN in July 2009. {{Tree chart|ZMQ| |CS|ZMQ=
Cheng Man-ch'ing1902–19754th gen. Yang
Short (37) Form|boxstyle_ZMQ=background-color:#FFFF70
Tai chi lineage tree with Yang-style focus ==Some notable descendants of Yang Luchan==