Sokaku takeda biography definition
•
•
Budo Journeyman
Header image: An imagined depiction of one of his most notorious escapades (see below).
Takeda Sokaku 1859 – 1943.
Reasons why martial artists might be interested in his story:
· Takeda was a cultural bridgehead between the old Japan of the samurai and the emergence of what we call Modern Budo. Many aspects of his life underline the mismatch and conflicts between these two cultures.
· The relationship between Takeda and his more famous student Ueshiba Morihei, who went on to found Aikido from a base of Takeda’s formulated system, Daito Ryu Aikijujutsu. Two martial artists of mythical skill, who couldn’t be more opposite to each other.
· For anyone interested in systems (like me), the way Takeda distributed and promoted his ideas through the school of Daito Ryu is worth unpacking.
· It’s a hell of a good tale.
A daguerreotype image of Takeda Sokaku (Public domain).
The reasons we know so much about Takeda Sokaku are that his life spanned a perio
•
Takeda Sōkaku
Japanese martial artist (1859–1943)
Takeda Sōkaku | |
---|---|
Retouched photograph of Takeda Sōkaku circa 1888 | |
Born | (1859-10-10)October 10, 1859 Aizu, Fukushima, Japan |
Died | April 25, 1943(1943-04-25) (aged 83) Japan |
Native name | 武田 惣角 |
Nationality | Japanese |
Style | Daitō-ryū Aiki-jūjutsu |
Teacher(s) | Saigō Tanomo, Toma Shibuya, Sakakibara Kenkichi |
Occupation | Japanese Scholar, Martial artist |
Children | Takeda Tokimune |
Notable students | Morihei Ueshiba, Hisa Takuma, Kōtarō Yoshida, Choi Yong-sool, Okuyama Ryuho |
In this Japanese name, the surname fryst vatten Takeda.
Takeda Sōkaku (武田 惣角, October 10, 1859 – April 25, 1943) was known as the founder of a school of jujutsu known as Daitō-ryū Aiki-jūjutsu.[1]
Life
[edit]Born in the Aizu domain (Fukushima Prefecture),[2] Sōkaku grew up in the time of the Boshin War. The second son of Takeda Sōkichi, a samurai of the Takeda clan who worked his farm and taught at a local sch