HISTORY RANK REQUIREMENTS

 

7th Kyu
6th Kyu
5th Kyu
4th Kyu
Brown Belt

 

 

7TH KYU

SHORIN RYU KARATE

Name of Style..........Shorin Ryu

Country of Origin.....Okinawa, Japan

Master of Style.........Eizo Shimabukuro 10th Dan

SHUDOKAN KARATE

Name of Style..........Shudokan

Country of Origin.....Okinawa, Japan

Master of Style........Walter Todd, 8th Dan (deceased)

 

6TH KYU

THE SHORIN RYU PATCH 

BODY, MIND, SPIRIT                                                             

Three components affected by karate training

TORII GATE

Striving for Perfection

EIGHT SIDED LOTUS FLOWER (patch shape)

symbolizes infinity

KARATEDO            

Empty hand way

EIZO SHIMABUKURO

10TH Dan Grandmaster

 

Five Traditional Okinawan Weapons

 Bo (wooden)       

 Bo

 Sai (metal) 

 sai_l.gif (9188 bytes)

 Tonfa (wooden

Tonfa

 Nunchaku (wooden) 

 Nunchaku

 Kama (wooden handle, metal blade)  

 Kama

 

Lineage

 Eizo Shimabukuro / Walter Todd

 Herbert Wong

 Karl Scott III / Gary Hu

 Barbara Christensen

 Ilene Smoger

 Tim Kelley

Three Styles of Shorin Ryu

 Shobayashi (small forest)

 Kobayashi (young forest)

 Matsubayashi (pine forest)

 

5TH KYU

Other Okinawan Traditional Styles

 Shobayashi ..................................................................Eizo Shimabukuro

 Kobayashi .................................................................Miyahara/Nakazato

 Matsubayashi. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . Nagamine's son Takayoshi

 Gojo Ryu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..Miyagi / Yamaguchi

 Okinawan Kempo. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..Nakamura

 Isshin Ryu. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .Tatsuo Shimabukuro's son, Kichiro

 Uechi Ryu . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . Kanei Uechi's son Kanmei

O' Sensei Shimabukuro's Primary Instructors

 Kyan

 Miyagi

 Motobu

Toyama was the chairman of the All Japan Karate-do League International and presented O'Sensei Shimabukuro with the tenth dan (red belt) and named him Grand Master of the Shorin Ryu Shobayashi system. Toyama also made Sensei Todd Shibucho for the United States.

 

4TH KYU

There are three major Okinawan cities from which karate systems evolved: Naha, Shuri and Tomari. The systems were first named after the city with the addition of the word te (hand) suffixed, i.e., Naha-te, Shuri-te and Tomari-te. Because the three cities are only a few miles apart, the styles influenced each other and eventually became known as either Goju Ryu (Naha) or Shorin Ryu (Tomari, Shuri). Since O' Sensei Shimabukuro studied under Master Miyagi, the founder of Goju Ryu, he teaches two of the Goju Ryu kata in his system.

Karate was introduced to mainland Japan in the early 20th century by Gichin Funakoshi. He renamed some of the kata and formed Shotokan Karatedo. Today it is Japan's largest karate organization.

 

SHOBAYASHI RYU KATA HISTORY

SEISAN                             SOKON MATSURMURA

NAIHANCHI                     SHODAN SOKON MATSURMURA

NAIHANCHI NIDAN        SOKON MATSURMURA

NAIHANCHI SANDAN    SOKON MATSURMURA

ANAKU                             CHOTOKU KYAN

WANSHU                          CHOTOKU KYAN

PINAN SHODAN             ANKO ITOSU

PINAN NIDAN                 ANKO ITOSU

PINAN SANDAN             ANKO ITOSU

PINAN YONDAN            ANKO ITOSU

PINAN GODAN               ANKO ITOSU

GOJUSHIHO                    MATSUMURA & CHIBANA

CHINTO                           SOKON MATSURMURA

PASSAI SHO                    SOKON MATSURMURA

KUSANKU SHO              SOKON MATSURMURA

PASSAI DAI                     SOKON MATSURMURA

KUSANKU DAI               SOKON MATSURMURA

SEIUNCHIN                     CHOJUN MIYAGI

SANCHIN                        CHOJUN MIYAGI

 

BROWN BELT

At the time the empty hand art of karatedo was developing in Okinawa, the Ryukyu Kobujutsu, or weapon arts were also being systematized. O'Sensei Shimabukuro studied weapons through the Taira school of weaponry. As well as the five classical weapons, O'Sensei has taught the use of a 6th weapon called Noburi Gama. It has a sickle type blade attached to a handle about 5 feet long. Though today these implements have little practical use as weapons, their use is still taught in order to preserve an art and to strengthen empty-handed movements.

Okinawan Masters

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Chibana

This man was named a "Living Treasure" by the Japanese Government. He was the head of the Kobayashi branch of the Shorin Ryu. Though the lineage of his system is the same as the Shobayashi system, he wrote the character Ko instead of Sho. Thus, his style is referred to as Ko (small, minor) bayashi (forest) instead of Sho (little, scarce) bayashi. Shimabukuro once went to him wearing a white belt and asked to have his kata corrected so that any changes he had inadvertently made could be changed back to the original.

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Kusanku              

A Chinese boxing master who spent six years on Okinawa during the 18th century, Kusanku        demonstrated an art which greatly influenced karatedo. Two kata named after him are taught in our system.

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Motobu  

One of O'Sensei's major instructors, Motobu was known as Okinawa's greatest fighter. He practiced the Naihanchi Kata.

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Itosu

A principal influence of Shorin Ryu, Itosu developed the Itosu-ha system, which is little known outside of Okinawa. As a teacher in the Okinawan public schools, Itosu systematized karate and made it available to the public. He formulated the Pinan Kata.