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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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290 Kobudô, Okinawan<br />

various forms upon returning to Okinawa. Matayoshi Shinkô (1888–1947)<br />

studied bô, sai, kama, and eku under Gushikawa no Tigwa in Chatan, Okinawa.<br />

He also trained in tonfa and nunchaku under Moshigiwa Ire.<br />

Matayoshi then spent a total of thirteen years traveling throughout China.<br />

He researched several weapons disciplines in his travels, including ba-jutsu<br />

(mounted archery technique), nagenawa-jutsu (lariat technique), and<br />

shuriken (throwing spikes) techniques, which he learned from a gang of<br />

Manchurian bandits. Matayoshi acquired a knowledge of nunti, tinbei, and<br />

suruchin in Shanghai, as well as learning herbal medicine and a Shaolin<br />

Crane Style of boxing known as Kingai-noon (pinyin baihequan). In 1934,<br />

Matayoshi studied another Shaolin-based style in Fuzhou.<br />

Matayoshi disseminated his knowledge of kobudô throughout Okinawa<br />

and Japan. He demonstrated kobudô in Tokyo in 1915, performing<br />

with the karate master Funakoshi Gichin. This was the first performance<br />

of Ryûkyûan kobudô on the Japanese mainland. Matayoshi also performed<br />

for the crown prince Hirohito at Shuri Castle in 1921. Shinkô’s son Shinpô<br />

continued the Matayoshi tradition of kobudô until his death in 1997.<br />

Okinawan Kobudô<br />

Taira Shinken (1897–1970) began his study of combative forms in 1922<br />

when he met Funakoshi Gichin in Japan. Taira trained with Funakoshi until<br />

1929, when he expanded his studies to include Ryûkyû kobudô under<br />

Yabiku Môden (1882–1945), the leading authority on Okinawan weaponry<br />

in Japan.<br />

Taira opened his first dôjô in Ikaho, Gunma Prefecture, in 1932, and<br />

was awarded Yabiku’s personal shihan menkyo (Instructor’s Certification)<br />

in 1933. In 1934, Taira began studying with Mabuni Kenwa, the founder<br />

of Shitô-ryû karate and a respected kobudô practitioner. Returning to Okinawa<br />

in 1940, Taira continued to research and teach kobudô. He established<br />

the Ryûkyû Kobudô Hozon Shinkô Kai in 1955 for the purpose of<br />

consolidating, preserving, and disseminating Ryûkyûan kobudô.<br />

<strong>The</strong> movement was supported in both Okinawa and Japan by many respected<br />

karate and kobudô masters, including (in Japan) Mabuni Kenei (son<br />

of Mabuni Kenwa, Seitô Shitô-ryû), Sakagami Ryûshô (Itosu-ha), Kuniba<br />

Shiyogo (Motobu-ha), Hatashi Teruo (Hayashi-ha), and Kunishi Yasuhiro<br />

(Shindô Jinen-ryû). Supporters in Okinawa included Chibana Chôshin<br />

(Shôrin-ryû), Higa Yochoku (Shôrin-ryû), Shimabukuro Eizô (Shobayashiryû),<br />

Nakazato Sûgûrô (Kobayashi-ryû), Nagamine Shôshin (Matsubayashiryû),<br />

Sôken Hohan (Matsumura Seitô Shôrin-ryû), Nakamura Shigeru<br />

(Shôrin-ryû), Miyahira Katsuya (Naha Shôrin-ryû), Shimabukuro Tatsuo<br />

(Isshin-ryû), Higa Seiko (Gôjû-ryû), Yagi Meitoku (Gôjû-ryû), Miyazato Eiichi<br />

(Gôjû-ryû), Toguchi Seikichi (Gôjû-ryû), Fukuchi Seiko (Gôjû-ryû),

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