When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tachi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tachi

    A tachi is a type of sabre-like traditionally made Japanese sword worn by the samurai class of feudal Japan. Tachi and uchigatana generally differ in length, degree of curvature, and how they were worn when sheathed, the latter depending on the location of the mei (銘), or signature, on the tang.

  3. Kendo Kata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kendo_Kata

    The first seven kata use tachi, a long bokken, for both student and teacher. [1] The last three kata use tachi for the teacher and kodachi, a shorter bokken, for the student. [1] In general, mastery of the first three kata are required for advancement to 1-Kyu and more for Dan grades.

  4. Yamatorige - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamatorige

    Yamatorige was forged during the middle Kamakura period (13th century). [2]According to Kanzan Sato, a nihontō (Japanese sword) appraiser and researcher, it was named so in order to honor the beauty of the tachi by likening it to the feather of a copper pheasant or the landscape of sunset mountains. [3]

  5. Japanese sword - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_sword

    Okanehira, together with Dōjigiri, is considered one of the best Japanese swords in terms of art and is compared to the yokozuna (the highest rank of a sumo wrestler) of Japanese swords. [49] In the tachi developed after kenukigata-tachi, a structure in which the hilt is fixed to the tang (nakago) with a pin called mekugi was adopted.

  6. Talk:Uchigatana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Uchigatana

    Outside Japan, katana is a sword worn with the blade facing up, which became the mainstream Japanese sword after tachi, but in Japan, it is specifically called uchigatana. The term katana in Japan is a broad term that refers to single-edged swords from all over the world, and it is necessary to pay attention to the confusion in the vocabulary.

  7. Katana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katana

    On the battlefield in Japan, guns and spears became main weapons in addition to bows. Due to the changes in fighting styles in these wars, the tachi and naginata became obsolete among samurai, and the katana, which was easy to carry, became the mainstream. The dazzling looking tachi gradually became a symbol of the authority of high-ranking ...

  8. Niten Ichi-ryū - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niten_Ichi-ryū

    Hyohō Niten Ichi-ryū (兵法 二天 一流), which can be loosely translated as "the school of the strategy of two heavens as one", is a koryū (ancient school), transmitting a style of classical Japanese swordsmanship conceived by Miyamoto Musashi.

  9. Yamato (film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamato_(film)

    Yamato (男たちの大和, Otoko-tachi no Yamato, literally "The Men's Yamato") is a 2005 Japanese war film. It was directed by Junya Satō and is based on a book by Jun Henmi . With a framing story set in the present day, by flashbacks it tells the story of the crew of the World War II Japanese battleship Yamato , concentrating on the ship's ...