Karate
-
(Contributors: Howard S.
High, Avron Boretz, Izar Tarandach, Richard Parry)
Intro:
Somewhat generic term used for Japanese and Okinawan
fighting arts.
Origin: Okinawa.
History:
Karate is a term that either means "Chinese hand" or
"Empty hand" depending on which Japanese or Chinese
characters you use to write it. The Okinawan Karates
could be said to have started in the 1600s when Chinese
practitioners of various Kung Fu styles mixed and
trained with local adherents of an art called "te"
(meaning "hand") which was a very rough, very simple
fighting style similar to Western boxing. These arts
generally developed into close-range, hard, external
styles.
In the late 19th century Gichin Funakoshi trained under
several of the great Okinawan Karate masters (Itosu,
Azato) as well as working with Jigoro Kano (see Judo)
and Japanese Kendo masters (see Kendo). Influenced by
these elements, he created a new style of Karate. This
he introduced into Japan in the first decade of the 20th
century and thus to the world. The Japanese Karates (or
what most people refer to when they say "karate") are of
this branch.
Description:
Okinawan Karate styles tend to be hard and external. In
defense they tend to be circular, and in offense linear.
Okinawan karate styles tend to place more emphasis on
rigorous physical conditioning than the Japanese styles.
Japanese styles tend to have longer, more stylistic
movements and to be higher commitment. They also tend to
be linear in movement, offense, and defense.
Both tend to be high commitment, and tend to emphasize
kicks and punches, and a strong offense as a good
defense.
Training:
This differs widely but most of the Karate styles
emphasize a fairly equal measure of basic technique
training (repitition of a particular technique),
sparring, and forms. Forms, or kata, as they are called,
are stylized patterns of attacks and defenses done in
sequence for training purposes.
Sub-Styles:
Okinawan
* Uechi-Ryu
* Goju-Ryu
* Shorin-Ryu
* Isshin-Ryu
Japanese
* Shotokan
* Shito-Ryu
* Wado-Ryu
Complete List - Here is a more complete list
(complements of Howard High) in which Okinawan and
Japanese styles are mixed.
Ashihara |
Okinawa Te |
Shorin-Ryu
(Matsumura) |
Chinto-Ryu |
Ryokukai |
Shorinji
Kempo |
Chito-Ryu |
Ryukyu
Kempo |
Shorinji-Ryu |
Doshinkan |
Sanzyu-Ryu |
Shoshin-Ryu |
Gohaku-Kai |
Seido |
Shotokai |
Goju-Ryu (Kanzen) |
Seidokan |
Shotokan |
Goju-Ryu (Okinawan) |
Seishin-Ryu |
Shotoshinkai |
Goju-Ryu (Meibukan) |
Shindo
Jinen-Ryu |
Shudokai |
Gosoku-Ryu |
Shinjimasu |
Shuri-Ryu |
Isshin-Ryu |
Shinko-Ryu |
Shuri-Te |
Kenseido |
Shito-Ryu
(Itosu-Kai) |
Uechi-Ryu |
Koei-Kan |
Shito-Ryu
(Seishinkai) |
Wado-Kai |
Kosho-Ryu
Kempo |
Shito-Ryu
(Kofukan) |
Wado-Ryu |
Kenpo |
Shito-Ryu
(Kuniba Ha) |
Washin-Ryu |
Kyokushinkai |
Shito-Ryu
(Motobu Ha) |
Yoseikan |
Kyu Shin
Ryu |
Shorin-Ryu
(Kobayashi) |
Yoshukai |
Motobu-Ryu |
Shorin-Ryu
(Matsubayashi) |
Yuishinkan |
Okinawan
Kempo |
Shorin-Ryu
(Shobayashi) |
|
Sub-Style Descriptions:
Wado-Ryu was founded by Hironori Ohtsuka around the
1920s. Ohtsuka studied Jujutsu for many years before
becoming a student of Gichin Funakoshi. Considered by
some to be Funakoshi's most brilliant student, Ohtsuka
combined the movements of Jujutsu with the striking
techniques of Okinawan Karate. After the death of
Ohtsuka in the early 1980s, the style split into two
factions: Wado Kai, headed by Ohtsuka's senior students;
and Wado Ryu, headed by Ohtsuka's son, Jiro. Both
factions continue to preserve most of the basic elements
of the style.
Uechi-ryu Karate, although it has become one of the main
Okinawan martial arts and absorbed many of the
traditional Okinawan karate training methods and
approaches, is historically, and to some extent
technically quite separate. The "Uechi" of Uechi-ryu
commemorates Uechi Kanbun, an Okinawan who went to
Fuzhou, the capital city of Fujian province in China in
1897 to avoid being drafted into the Japanese army.
There he studied under master Zhou Zihe for ten years,
finally opening his own school, one of the few
non-Chinese who ventured to do so at the time. The man
responisble for bringing Uechi-ryu to the US is George
Mattson.
Uechi-ryu, unlike the other forms of Okinawan and
Japanese karate mentioned in the FAQ, is only a few
decades removed from its Chinese origins. Although it
has absorbed quite a bit of Okinawan influence and
evolved closer to such styles as Okinawan Goju-ryu over
those decades, it still retains its original Chinese
flavor, both in its technique and in the culture of the
dojo. It is a "half-hard, half-soft" style very similar
to such southern Chinese styles as Fukienese Crane (as
still practiced in the Chinese communities of Malaysia),
Taiwanese Golden Eagle, and even Wing Chun. Conditioning
the body for both attack and defense is a common
characteristic of both Okinawan karate and southern
Shaolin "street" styles, and as such is an important
part of Uechi training. There is a strong internal
component to the practice, including focused breathing
and tensioning exercises similar to Chinese Qigong.
Uechi, following its Chinese Crane heritage, emphasizes
circular blocks, low snap kicks, infighting
(coordinating footwork with grabs, locks, throws, and
sweeps), and short, rapid hand traps and attacks (not
unlike Wing Chun).
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