24.03.2013 Views

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Peichin; warrior) studied karate in Okinawa<br />

from the Chinese master Iwah and<br />

from Sakugawa Toudi. Matsumura later<br />

served as a security agent for the Okinawan<br />

royal house. During this period,<br />

he traveled to China and to Satsuma,<br />

where he studied the Jigen system and received<br />

his menkyo (teaching license) from<br />

Ijûin Yashichirô. Matsumura returned to<br />

Okinawa, where he combined his knowledge<br />

of karate with his knowledge of Jigen-ryû<br />

to create what would eventually<br />

become known as Shuri-di (Shuri Hand).<br />

Both Sakugawa and Matsumura transmitted<br />

various weapons kata into the<br />

Okinawan civil combative disciplines.<br />

Chinese Influence on<br />

Okinawan Kobudô<br />

In 1372, the Ming emperor Wu Hong<br />

sent an envoy, Zai Yang, to the Okinawan<br />

kingdom of Chûzan for the purpose<br />

of establishing a tributary alliance<br />

with Okinawa. <strong>The</strong> Chûzan king, Satto, was cognizant of the advantages of<br />

being allied with the Ming and welcomed the opportunity of increasing<br />

trade with China, especially Fujian. In 1393, the Thirty-Six Families (the<br />

number thirty-six denotes a large rather than a specific number), a delegation<br />

of Chinese envoys, established a mission at Kume village, in the Kume<br />

district of Naha. <strong>The</strong> settlement at Kume was a point of exchange between<br />

the Okinawan and Chinese cultures. It was at Kume that weapons training<br />

was introduced by the Thirty-Six Families as part of the combative systems<br />

that they brought to Okinawa. <strong>The</strong> Okinawans absorbed the Chinese fighting<br />

arts into their own culture.<br />

In the Ôshima Hikki (Ôshima Writings) it is reported that the Chinese<br />

kenpô (fist method) master Kusanku arrived in Okinawa with a group of his<br />

students in 1762. Kusanku exerted a considerable influence on the development<br />

of civil combative disciplines in the Ryûkyûs. Kusanku kata is one of<br />

the highest forms in Shôrin-ryû and Shôtôkan Karate. Kusanku’s students<br />

included Sakugawa Toudi and Yara Chatan, both of whom made significant<br />

contributions to the study and practice of empty-hand forms and kobudô.<br />

Ryûkyû kobudô was also influenced by Okinawans who traveled<br />

abroad, learning weapons techniques and then transmitting them through<br />

Sensei Ty Yocham<br />

of the Texas<br />

Okinawan Gôjû<br />

Kai Federation<br />

sidesteps a<br />

downward cut<br />

of the sword and<br />

delivers a strike<br />

with the eku (oar).<br />

(Courtesy of Ron<br />

Mottern)<br />

Kobudô, Okinawan 289

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!