Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Gyokushin-ryū Ninpō ("The Jeweled Heart School") is taught by the Bujinkan martial arts organization. According to the Bujinkan, Gyokushin Ryu has sutemi waza techniques and is focused more on the art and techniques of espionage than on fighting. Its most prominent weapon is the lasso (nagenawa). [30]
Gyokushin-ryū was a koryu jujutsu style known for its extensive arsenal of sutemiwaza (sacrifice throws). It shared many techniques with Daitō-ryū Aiki-jūjutsu . Yoseikan Budō partially descends from this style.
Gyokushin Ryu Aikido, Nihon Tai Jitsu Yōseikan Budō ( 養正館武道 ) (originally Yoseikan-ryū Gyokushin Jujutsu) [ 1 ] is a Japanese -French martial art , created by Hiroo Mochizuki , who may be classified as a sōgō budō form ( 総合武道 , "composite" or "comprehensive" martial art), but is used here to indicate a martial art into ...
Bujinkan sources indicate that Toda taught the following "five precepts for ninpo" : To know that patience comes first. To know that the path of mankind comes from justice. To renounce greed, laziness, and obstinacy. To recognize sadness, worry, and resentment as natural and to seek the immovable heart .
In 1972, Masaaki Hatsumi founded the Bujinkan organization. It uses the concepts of Ninjutsu in three of its nine schools [3] though they have since steered away from the "Ninjutsu" moniker in order to avoid stereotypes and since the art, which contains 9 ryūha (or schools), only has 3 schools based on the ninja while the other 6 are based on samurai tactics.
The 1969 edition of the Bugei Ryūha Daijiten states that Takamatsu's Togakure-ryu "is a genealogy newly put together by Takamatsu Toshitsugu, who made use of (took advantage of) the popularity of written materials on ninjutsu after the Taishō era" and that "there are many points where it has added embellishments, it has made people whose real ...
Ninjutsu (忍術), sometimes used interchangeably with the modern term ninpō (忍法), [1] is the martial art strategy and tactics of unconventional warfare, guerrilla warfare, insurgency tactics and espionage purportedly practised by the ninja.
The use of the foot ensures the technique is effective, even when the opponent is resisting. Less emphasis is then placed on timing, and more importantly, an overcommitted attack is not required. As for sacrifice throws, a fundamental principle used in Yoseikan Aikido is gyokushin, or the spirit of a ball. Even when a ball rolls it maintains ...