Karate Kata

In 1877, eighteen years, the Arts, University of Tokyo student named Jigoro Kano, the son of an important official in the Japanese navy, started practicing jiu-jitsu in Shin'yo Tenshin Ryu with Master Fukuda. Jigoro Kano was a young man with an inferiority complex that leads to push to exceed in many areas. His main motivation for doing ju-jitsu stemmed from having been a sickly child who feels the need to strengthen and toughen himself up. In addition to studying English and German with native teachers and Japanese literature and the general culture at the University of Tokyo, he took time to train in ju-jitsu. As his studies progressed he had reported that although there were many negative aspects of ju-jitsu with which he disagreed, he also included a cultural heritage considerable, which might be lost forever as the twentieth century stood near. He recognized a potential teaching in ju-jitsu that has inspired study ever deeper.
When Master Fukuda died in 1879 Kano continued his studies with Mataemon ISO Shin'yo Tenshin Ryu. After Master Iso death in 1881 he began training in Kito Ryu with Master Ōkubi. In 1882, having inherited the rolls of the Shin'yo Tenshin Ryu and with his own ideas began to crystallize, Kano established his own dojo for the study of these aspects of the old Ju-jitsu system which he thought valuable. Its new system, which he began to teach at the Buddhist temple Enshoji, with only nine students, was called judo. Rather than involving simple training in self-defense, it was conceived as a vehicle for the physical and cultural development. He named his new school, the Kodokan, the place to study how.
Judo The big advantage of Kano had on other systems was that, with Atemi-waza kicking dangerous strikes and punches, removed from the system and the regular practice of ukemi-waza (technical fall), it became possible to evolve the randori (free play) the method of training. Schools that performed traditional kata, which involved passing through a series of prearranged techniques with partners without resistance, so while the students have developed high skill levels, they had no actual experience of real combat. Randori enabled students to grapple Kano, in the same way that boxers SPAR to prepare them for realities of combat, test techniques from each other with various degrees of strength and intensity.
The effectiveness the method of Kano quickly became well known following successive victories by students in a number of tournaments ju-jitsu, organized like sporting events struggle M. Mishima, the head of the Tokyo Metropolitan Police. In the early days there were a number of challenges and confrontations with representatives of schools of Ju-jitsu who wanted to test the effectiveness of this new system. Students in Kano, especially Yamashita, Yokoyama and Saigo, had to face the best fighters of Ju-jitsu of the day and still won. The most famous contest was between a ju-jitsu expert called Nakamura Saigo and the Kodokan, who finally defeated his opponent with a Yama-Arashi devastating storm or mountain run.
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Judo Uniforms
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