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Jigen-ryū

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(Redirected from Jigen-ryu) Japanese martial arts Not to be confused with the separate martial art Tenshinsho Jigen Ryu.
Jigen-ryū
(示現流)
Ko-ryū
Foundation
FounderTogo Shigekata
東郷 重位
Period foundedlate 16th century
Current information
Current headmasterTōgō Shigenori
東郷重徳
Arts taught
ArtDescription
Kenjutsu - ōdachiSword art - long sword
Ancestor schools
Tenshinsho Jigen Ryu
Taisha Ryu
Descendant schools
Yakumaru Jigen Ryu

Jigen-ryū (示現流 lit: revealed reality style) is a traditional school (koryū) of Japanese martial arts founded in the late 16th century by Tōgō Chūi (1560–1643), a.k.a. Tōgō Shigekata, in Satsuma Province, now Kagoshima prefecture, Kyushu, Japan. It focuses mainly on the art of swordsmanship.

Jigen-ryū is known for its emphasis on the first strike: Jigen-ryū teachings state that a second strike is not even to be considered.

The basic technique is to hold the sword in a high version of hasso-no-kamae called tonbo-no-kamae (蜻蛉構 Dragonfly Stance), with the sword held vertically above the right shoulder. The attack is then done by running forward at your opponent and then cutting diagonally down on their neck. The kiai is a loud "Ei!".

Traditionally, this is practised using a long wooden stick, and cutting against a vertical pole, or even a real tree. During a hard practice, the wood is said to give off the smell of smoke. During the Edo period, at the height of its popularity, adepts of Jigen-ryū were said to practice striking the pole 3,000 times in the morning, and another 8,000 times in the afternoon. The style is also famous for its impressive kiai known as the Enkyō (猿叫, lit. 'monkey's scream').

The style is still taught at the Jigen-ryū practice hall in the city of Kagoshima.

References

  1. Kendo: Elements, Rules, and Philosophy, Jinichi Tokeshi, University of Hawaii Press, 2003, ISBN 0-8248-2598-5, p6
  2. Powerful 1st strike of Jigen-ryu (Jul. 6, 2008) http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/columns/0005/lens236.htm

External links

Classical schools of Japanese martial arts
14th century (1301–1400)
15th century (1401–1500)
16th century (1501–1600)
17th century (1601–1700)
18th century (1701–1800)
19th century (1801–1876)
Classical arts practiced
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