Unfortunately
there was little written about the early development of martial arts.
Most of the history we have learned has been orally transmitted down through
the centuries from teacher to student. A need for the refinement of fighting
techniques came about due to mans basic survival instinct and the defense
of family and possessions.
Okinawa,
the largest of the Ryukyu Islands is strategically located between China
and Japan. Both countries have occupied the islands at different times
throughout history. Okinawan/Japanese karate had influences from many
parts of the world, especially China. At the end of the 5th century A.D.
a Buddhist priest by the name of Bodhidharma (Daruma in Japanese) traveled
to China from India where he taught monks meditation and basic Indian
fighting exercises. These moves evolved into what was later to become
known as kung fu, Chu'an-fa, kempo and Chinese Boxing. Chinese boxing
eventually made it’s way to Okinawa.
Okinawa
had its own form of martial art; an aggressive closed fisted style known
as te (hand). The king of Okinawa outlawed the possession of weapons in
the mid fourteen hundreds. In 1609 the Satsuma clan of Japan invaded and,
to control the population, reinstated the ban on owning weapons and training
in the martial arts. Anyone caught disobeying would be severely punished.
This resulted in te being practiced in secrecy. These bans accelerated
the development of te as a way to fight oppression.
In the mid 1800’s Satsunuku Sakagawa, the number one student of
te master Peichin Takahara, learned Chinese boxing under the famous military
attaché known as Kusanku. The blend of the circular, defensive
open hand style of the Chinese with the more offensive, closed handed
style of the Okinawa’s was to become known as tode (karate). Sakagawa
became known as Karate (tode) Sakagawa.
Three
fighting styles were named after the villages where they developed. From
Naha came Naha-te or Shorei-ryu, from Shuri came Shuri-te or Shorin-ryu
and from Tomari came Tomari-te (later absorbed into Shorin-ryu). Some
considered the original Naha styles preferable for larger stronger people
and the styles from Shuri best for those smaller and quicker. Most karate
systems can trace their origin to one or all of these villages.
Karate
came out of hiding and into the public school system in 1903 as part of
the curriculum. Then in 1915 an Okinawan schoolteacher named Gichin Funakoshi
demonstrated karate in Japan. Funakoshi returned to Japan in 1922 to stay
and teach the art. After World War II military personnel from around the
world were introduced to the different styles of karate while stationed
in Japan and Okinawa. Now karate has spread throughout the world where
countless people are enjoying the benefits it offers.
Master
Dave Joslin
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