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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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their own schools, teaching on their own authority; instructors retained no<br />

residual control over former students or students of students. It was common<br />

practice for such graduates to blend what they had learned with personal<br />

insights and/or with techniques and ideas gleaned from other teachers.<br />

<strong>Of</strong>ten, the former students changed the name of the style, in effect<br />

founding new ryûha in each generation. Consequently, lines of descent<br />

from famous warriors tend to fork and branch again and again, over time<br />

giving rise to many hundreds of ryûha.<br />

During the Tokugawa period, the procedures surrounding martial art<br />

instruction and the master-disciple bond became much more formal and cabalistic,<br />

and the koryû assumed the shapes they have retained into modern<br />

times. One of the first steps toward institutionalization of martial art koryû<br />

was the issuing of diplomas and licenses to students. This practice began<br />

in the sixteenth century with certificates given to acknowledge “graduation”<br />

from an instructor’s tutelage. <strong>The</strong> vocabulary used on and for these<br />

certificates varied from teacher to teacher, but the most common term for<br />

this level of achievement was menkyo-kaiden. Kaiden, which means “complete<br />

transmission,” indicated that the student had learned all that the<br />

teacher had to offer. Menkyo means “license” or “permission,” and signified<br />

authorization to use the name of the teacher’s style in dealings with<br />

persons outside the school—such as in duels or when seeking employment.<br />

Medieval bugei instructors seldom formally differentiated students by<br />

level prior to graduation; there was little need for such distinctions, inasmuch<br />

as the period of tutelage was usually brief—sometimes only a few<br />

months. But during the Tokugawa period, as instruction became more professionalized<br />

and more commercialized, apprenticeships became longer.<br />

Thus, more elaborate systems of intermediate ranks were introduced, providing<br />

students with tangible measures of their progress.<br />

Today, a few koryû have adopted the standardized dan-kyû system of<br />

ranks and grades introduced by jûdô pioneer Kanô Jigorô in the late nineteenth<br />

century and embraced by most modern cognate martial arts. Prior<br />

to Kanô’s innovation, however, each ryûha maintained its own system of<br />

ranks and its own terminology for them, and most koryû continue to use<br />

these systems today. This situation makes it difficult to compare the levels of<br />

students from different ryûha, inasmuch as even terms used in common<br />

sometimes represent completely different levels of achievement from school<br />

to school. Similarly, there is no simple formula for calculating equivalencies<br />

between koryû ranks and those of the dan-kyû system, which many koryû<br />

view as being based on fundamentally different premises from those of their<br />

own systems. Ranks within the koryû tend to certify not skills mastered or<br />

status achieved so much as initiation into new and deeper levels of training.<br />

Promotion in “rank,” therefore, signifies the granting of permission for the<br />

Koryû Bugei, Japanese 303

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