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  2. Isshin-ryū - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isshin-ryū

    Isshin-Ryū (一心流, Isshin-ryū) is a style of Okinawan karate created by Tatsuo Shimabuku (島袋 龍夫) in approximately 1947/1948 (and named its present name on January 15, 1956).

  3. Comparison of karate styles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_karate_styles

    The four major karate styles developed in Japan, especially in Okinawa are Shotokan, Wado-ryu, Shito-ryu, and Goju-ryu; many other styles of Karate are derived from these four. [1] The first three of these styles find their origins in the Shorin-Ryu style from Shuri, Okinawa, while Goju-ryu finds its origins in Naha. Shuri karate is rather ...

  4. Harold G. Long - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_G._Long

    [2] [3] He was a co-founder of the International Isshin-ryu Karate Association, [4] and also served as the vice president of the United States Karate Association. He co-produced the first nationally televised Isshinryu Hall of Fame Karate Tournament (1992), [ 5 ] co-produced an instructional video series (1991) and co-authored seven books. [ 3 ]

  5. Ticky Donovan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ticky_Donovan

    David 'Ticky' Donovan OBE (born 1947) is a British karate competitor and coach. [2] [3] He was the coach and manager of both the British and English national karate teams, from 1977 until he retired from that role in 2008. [4]

  6. Seisan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seisan

    As is a feature of the style, all punches are performed with a vertical fist. The founder's primary teacher of the kata was Chotoku Kyan of the Shorin-Ryū style, but the Isshin-ryu version also shares many features with the Goju-Ryū style, including tension and breathing techniques. Meaning 13, some people refer to it as 13 hands, 13 fists ...

  7. Shintō Musō-ryū - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shintō_Musō-ryū

    Isshin-ryū kusarigamajutsu is a school of handling the chain and sickle weapon. The 24th unofficial headmaster of Shinto Musō Ryu, Shiraishi Hanjirō, received a full license (Menkyo) in Isshin-ryū from Morikata Heisaku in the late 19th century,. [1] Shiraishi would later transmit the Isshin-ryū to his own Jōdō students.

  8. ‘Min Me Ryu:’ Find out why people learn taekwondo in Monroe ...

    www.aol.com/min-ryu-why-people-learn-090915232.html

    In Master Mark Bergmooser's taekwondo class, students learn mind and body control through unarmed self-defense techniques, discipline and concentration

  9. Isshin-ryū kusarigamajutsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isshin-ryū_kusarigamajutsu

    Isshin-ryū (一心流) is a traditional school of the Japanese martial art of kusarigamajutsu, the art of using the chain and scythe (). [1] Its exact origin is disputed, and may have been founded as early as the 14th century by the samurai Nen Ami Jion 念阿弥慈恩 (b.1351-?), but the modern-day techniques were compiled and incorporated no later than the 17th century, by the unification ...