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04-17-2006, 05:15 PM | #1 |
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I did a search for kenjitsu and in the video it mentions something about shinkage-ryu. Could someone that knows more about this please explain something to me.
I thought kenjitsu was only with the katana and in the back they are also training with other weapons or are those part of this ryu? http://www.vidilife.com/index.cfm?f=...69-4080-BDA0-8 |
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04-17-2006, 05:38 PM | #2 |
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http://www.yushinkan.com/old/UK/pages/ukshinka.html
Thru a Dutch site I was set thru to this which explains some more, interesting reading but it doesn't speak about other weapons but then this also is about the iaido side. |
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04-17-2006, 07:20 PM | #3 |
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Shinkage-ryu is a koryu, old school, bugei, samurai fighting art. It focused on a number of weapons, the long and short swords, spear and halberd techniques, as well, If I remember correctly, yawara or taijutsu techniques, what would eventually be called jujutsu.
The shinkage-ryu is primarily attributed to Kamiizumi Nobatsuna (If I've misspelled the name, I deeply apologize) and was later expanded by the Yagyu family into the Yagyu Shinkage-ryu. I'm pretty certain that both strains of the ryu are still in practice today. Dave Lowry, the modern martial Way writer is a student of the Yagyu Shinkage-ryu. |
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04-18-2006, 03:38 AM | #4 |
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it looks like Aikido with weapons to me http://www.yushinkan.com/old/UK/pages/ukshinka.html Lars, just contact him or one of his students (use their new site, the structure of the organisation has changed a lot). |
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04-18-2006, 05:24 AM | #6 |
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04-18-2006, 06:35 AM | #7 |
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04-18-2006, 09:42 AM | #9 |
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There's no way that video clip is showing any authentic koryu. Later I noticed who the poster was and then I started looking on the internet. The funny thing is that Shofukan the iaido part is that comes up when I press on iaido at my dojo's website which interested me even more. I'm generally interested in budo and would like to know alot about it ever since a yondan has been showing me some iaido when I just started kendo I've been intregued by it. If any of you would know some more vids I'd like to know. |
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04-18-2006, 11:29 AM | #11 |
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I like this way of thinking http://www.yushinkan.com/disci_en.php
"...The difference between Shinkage ryu and most other ryu is that in Shinkage ryu the main goal is not to kill your opponent, but to eliminate him in the coming battle. However the higher goal of this ryu is to completely avoid any armed conflict, most of all by using superior tactics. These principals are clearly recognisable in the techniques used in this ryu. The initiative of commencing the fight is always in the hands of the opponent, without exception. Then the opponents techniques are used against him. Timing plays a crucial part in gaining victory." |
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04-18-2006, 11:50 AM | #12 |
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Lars,
There are several versions of Shinkage ryu alive and well today, the video is NOT one of them. The video that you posted is of the Chikara dojo folks and their made up arts. Any relationship to actual Japanese sword arts is strictly accidental. There are several koryu dojo in your part of the world. I encourage you to go and check them out in person. That's the best way to do it. Good luck! |
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04-18-2006, 12:26 PM | #14 |
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Is that the same group that hosted that Sengoku Classic tournament? Apart from the bad footwork and unwielding swings, I can understand why some people would prefer this to Kendo, Iaido or legitimate Koryu Kenjutsu. It's a bit like those role playing fights or the club where one hits each other on a parking lot with shinai's. It's a league on its own would be my most positive comment. But for god's sake don't call it Shinkage Ryu or anything else for that matter. If they named it Kilgore Ryu then there wouldn't be problems and you could do whatever you want with any weapon that there is. You could even wear your tare over your do. The part where the fencer is having troubles is interesting to see. I would have thought that he would lunge, strike and that's it. But according to the text the fencer should be quite able to do his thing. Furthermore the bokuto "Ji Geiko" has I think nothing to do with the real thing. It is being treated as something casual. I don't think that this would be the case when both of them are holding a 1 meter long razor. I think that it would look different. But then again I never saw a death match, so I wouldn't have a clue what to look for. I have a feeling that the stuff that our good friend Scott from the UK is going to post here anytime is more of this. |
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04-18-2006, 03:36 PM | #16 |
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Thanks for clearing this up.
I'm interested in this all and I can see how easy it is to walk into some dojo like this when not knowing much about the art, even when being able to do a search. How does the real shinkage ryu look like then? There aren't any kenjitsu dojo's in Holland that teach this as far as I could see. I have seen there are 2 dojo's teaching shinkage ryu iaido, 1 in Rotterdam and 1 in Utrecht. I don't know what the major differences are between kenjitsu and iaido and if someone that does know could explain. |
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04-18-2006, 03:51 PM | #17 |
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I don't know what the major differences are between kenjitsu and iaido and if someone that does know could explain. Most people think of iaido as solo kata with a metal practice sword where you start and end with the sword sheathed, and inbetween dispatch a number of imaginary opponents. Furthermore, most people think of iaido as associated with the two most popular schools that teach it, Muso Shinden Ryu and Muso Jikiden Eishin Ryu. Most people think of kenjutsu as the practice of swordsmanship with a partner usually with bokken. This would consist normally of paired kata practice. Kenjutsu would be the sword-fighting curriculum of a koryu (old school), that school may or may not have additional material in its curriculum (such as empty-handed techniques, or other weapons like spear or staff). Of course where it gets fuzzy is that you can easily argue that MSR and MJER are also koryu, and not only that but they both have paired kata practice. Furthermore most kenjutsu traditions also practice drawing and solo kata. Really it's much simpler/more correct to consider it all koryu, except with different emphasis. However with MSR and MJER where the people spend the vast majority of their time on the solo kata, it's a little easier to label what they do "iaido". Most of the legitimate people practising koryu understand all these things. The ones practicing (mostly) iaido will say either they practice iaido or they will say they practice X-ryu. The ones practising what many would consider kenjutsu normally do not say that - they typically say they practice X-ryu. So when someone posts on the internet that they are "taking kenjutsu", my red flag goes up immediately. If they say they are "studing X-ryu" then my red flag may or may not go up, depending on where they are and what "X" is. |
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04-18-2006, 06:33 PM | #18 |
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06-20-2006, 12:24 AM | #19 |
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Dear all,
thanks for the free publicity and all ... Lars, since you started this thread: Shofukan dojo offers the iaido curriculum to members of (or thru) your kendo club ever since Fumetsu stopped teaching iaido themselves. So that's why you jump to us when you press 'iaido.' (By the way: you jump to Fumetsu, when you press 'kendo' at www.shofukan.nl. Isn't life great?) I agree with most of you that it is very hard to find an authentic dojo that offers Yagyu Shinkage ryu hyoho (= kenjutsu). Actually, this is only possible via Nobuharu sensei's Yagyu Kai in Nagoya, Japan, or Meik Skoss's dojo in the U.S., for example. There are a lot of groups who borrow the Yagyu family name to denote their school, which is all bull, even if they claim their xth headmaster received permission to do so etc. etc.. (No, I'm not even going to check out that video!) Only Nobuharu sensei's Yagyu Kai studies Yagyu Shinkage ryu and Yagyu Seigo ryu battojutsu, and they do so since 400 years. In fact, they established the darn thing! It is true, however, that there are teachers who studied under the Yagyu Kai, received menkyo kaiden AND permission to teach outside the Yagyu Kai. This happened to the man who started using the name "Shinkage ryu" for his batto and kenjutsu teachings since the thirties of the 20th century, Kashima Kiyotaka sensei. It's those teachings that have reached us through Akita sensei and Matsuoka sensei, both from Nagoya, today. And it is this Shinkage ryu that is studied through the Netherlands Shinkage ryu Foundation (yes, our web site www.shinkageryu.nl will be translated into English soon! I'm sorry!). Since Kashima sensei joined the Zen Nihon Kendo Renmei at the end of his life, we are still studying ZenKenRen waza today. And that is why Shinkage ryu iaido, for instance, is now trained as koryu by a dedicated group of people in Japan, France, The Netherlands, Greece, Germany, the US, and the UK, besides their ZenKenRen iaido, and under Matsuoka sensei's guidance. I hope this clears things up a bit, and shows that our "Shinkage ryu' has nothing to do with any Kilgore group whatsoever . Take care, Joris. |
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06-20-2006, 03:38 AM | #20 |
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I have a feeling that the stuff that our good friend Scott from the UK is going to post here anytime is more of this. Hiya Joris...! Welcome to the chaos that is Kendo World... |
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