|
Shotokan is a traditional Japanese
martial art. It is a system of offensive and defensive techniques
utilizing the various parts of the body as weapons and shields.
The arms and legs are used for this purpose. The training is
broken up into 3 categories :
- Kihon (training without a partner)
- Kata (it is a set of offensive and defensive movements executed
as a set)
- Kumite (Kumite is sparring and there are several levels of
difficulty associated with it)
The Birth Place of Karate was
the Island of Okinawa which is to be found in the Ryeukyu Islands
Between the northern coast of Japan and the southern coast of
China. Karate emerged after 1372 when relations between China
And Okinawa were instituted. During the 15th & 16th century
Karate was driven underground because of the Islands being run
by war Lords who would not tolerate it's teachings and practice.
At this time all weapons were confiscated which achieved two
things. Firstly Karate became a deadly defensive system against
an armed or unarmed adversary and secondly the Okinawan farmers
learnt to use blunt farm implements as deadly weapons. The most
common of these were the Bo, Jo, Nunchacku, Tonfa and Sai.
The Founder of Shotokan was master
Gichin Funakshi. He was a Teacher, Philosopher and Poet. He would
sign his poetry Shoto and it is from this that the word Shotokan
arose. The name made up using Shoto, meaning waving pines because
his home was situated on the edge of a pine forest, and the word
Kan meaning house or school. Thus Shotokan means the house or
school of the waving pines, but today is interpreted as the school
or method of Funakoshi.
In 1936 the first Shotokan was
established outside Okinawa in Tokyo which Eventually led to
the Japanese Karate Association in 1955 with Funakoshi as Chief
Instructor. He remained There until April of 1957 when he died
at the age of 88.
Information
supplied by: http://www.webmartial.com |