- or "traditional school". It is
sometimes also
translated as "old style".
Koryū is
often used as a
synonymous shorthand for Ko-budō (古武道),
ancient ****anese...
- This is an
incomplete list of
koryū (lit. "traditional schools", or "old schools")
martial arts.
These are
schools of
martial arts that
originated in...
-
Nakamura Sakyōdayū
Yoshikuni around 1610, and is
often referred to as Yōshin
Koryū (楊心古流).
Nakamura later changed his name to
Miura Yōshin (三浦 楊心), and this...
-
Koryū Osaka (1901-1985),
birthname Koryū Matsumoto, was a ****anese lay Zen-teacher who
taught Taizan Maezumi the
Inzan koan-curriculum. Musa
Koryū Osaka...
-
Kōryū-ji (広隆寺) is a
Shingon temple in Uzumasa, Ukyō Ward, Kyoto, ****an. The
temple is also
known by the
names Uzumasa-dera (太秦寺) and Kadono-dera (葛野寺)...
-
Kōryū Tadaharu (光龍 忠晴, born 4
February 1984) is a
Mongolian former sumo
wrestler from Ulan Bator. His
highest rank was
maegashira 11. He was
forced to...
- This art of
drawing the ****anese sword, katana, is one of the ****anese
koryū martial art
disciplines in the
education of the
classical warrior (bushi)...
- and targeting. As such, battōjutsu is not
intended for sport-like kendo.
Koryu school:
Shinmei Muso Ryu Battōjutsu (神明夢想流 抜刀術),
founded by Haya****aki...
-
which were
established after the
Meiji Restoration (1866–1869). Kobudō or
koryū are the
opposite of
these terms referring to
ancient martial arts established...
- rule of thumb, the
primary purpose of a
koryū martial art was for use in war. The most
extreme example of a
koryū school is one that
preserves its traditional...