Karate

Subject classification: this is a sports resource .

Karate (空手) is a Japanese martial art.[1] It was developed in the former Ryūkyū Kingdom in what is now Okinawa Prefecture.

Karate uses all parts of the human body as a weapon such as the hand, fist, elbow, leg and knee. Karate training has three main sections:

Karate: sokuto meets gedan barai.

History of Karate

Gichin Funakoshi, a school teacher from the island of Okinawa, introduced Karate to mainland Japan in the early 1900s.[2] Traditional karate is different from boxing, wrestling and kickboxing: in karate, there is just as much importance on the strength of the mind and good manners as there is on strength of the body.

Karate became more known around the world because of Karate movies in the 1960s and 1970s. Now people all over the world learn Karate.

After World War II, Karate also became popular in Korea, where it was known under the name "tangsudo". The full name of Karate is "Karate-do" which means "the way of the empty hand" in English.

There are many schools or styles of karate, including

A person who does Karate is called a "karateka".[3] Notable Karateka include: Gichin Funakoshi, Yoshitaka Funakoshi,[2] Shigeru Egami, Masutatsu Oyama, and Fumio Demura.

Karate Clothing

Subject classification: this is a sports resource .
Coloured belts for Karate.

When people practice Karate, they wear special clothes called a karategi. The karategi is made up of a white jacket and white pants. People who practice Karate also wear a colored belt, which tells other people the rank you have in karate not how good you are. Two people wearing different colored belts means not how long they have been doing karate but they have tested and know more about karate.

Different schools of Karate have different colors of belts for their ranks. You cannot know precisely how good they are without either asking them or knowing how their school arranges the belt colors in ranks. Usually the black belt is for the students who try very hard to be the best that they can be for a long time.

Some schools have several degrees of black belts. They show this by having a white stripe, called a Dan, on the one end of the belt, for the black belt degree the person has. For instance a "3 Dan black belt" would have 3 white stripes on his black belt and would be higher ranked than a "1 Dan black belt".

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "Karate" in Japan Encyclopedia, p. 482.
  2. 1 2 Nussbaum, "Funakoshi Gichin" at p. 220.
  3. Nussbaum, "karateka" at p. 483.

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