Unravelling the Cords - The Book of Taisha-ryu Swordsmanship

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  • Опубліковано 6 бер 2024
  • In this video we examine the new book from the Taisha-ryu sword school which is a full translation of the "Taisha-ryu Kaichu"! There is plenty of interesting details here to learn about Taisha-ryu swordsmanship and the history of the school!
    Get yourself a copy of "Unravelling the Cords" www.amazon.com/Unravelling-Co...
    Thank you do Daniel Trauner of Taisha-ryu for reaching out to me regarding the book!
    Check out the original video I made with Taisha-ryu! • Evolution of Koryu wit...
    This video is done in collaboration with channels "Samurai and Ninja History", "Sengoku Studies戦国研究", and "Samurai Traditions of the Tada Genji" Check out their great videos!
    Samurai and Ninja History: • I bet you can not gues...
    Sengoku Studies戦国研究: • Ōtsuchi 大槌: Large Hamm...
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    Music:
    "Finding Movement" by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    Source: incompetech.com/music/royalty-...
    Artist: incompetech.com/
    "Melting Sands" by ELPHNT
    Artwork and Images:
    Photos provided by Taisha-ryu
    Samurai Portraits from the Nobunaga's Ambition Series
    Classical art, which in most cases can be considered public domain.
    Other modern artist renditions and photos, if you see your work in this video please contact me so that I can give you proper credit!
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    Social Media:
    Facebook: / theshogunateyoutube
    Twitter: / shogunatethe
    Support the channel on Patreon! www.patreon.com/theshogunatey...
    #Samurai #History #Japan

КОМЕНТАРІ • 52

  • @taisharyuofficial3839
    @taisharyuofficial3839 3 місяці тому +16

    Thank you very much for the nice video!
    We hope this book will help to improve the understanding of Japanese Kobudo.
    If any of you are interested, our Taisha-ryū Historical Research Group (THRG) also publishes an Annual Bulletin. Last year was about Sagara Seibei Yorimori - a senior retainer of the Sagara domain - and with tracing other possible connections to the school in the area of Hirosaki, northern Honshu, where Seibei was sent into exile in 1641.
    This year's bulletin is concerned with with the feudal lord of the Yanagawa Domain - Tachibana Muneshige (立花宗茂; 1567 - 1643), who was a licensed student of Marume Kurando, and follows him, Kurando and other historical figures related to Taisha-ryū through the period of the Imjin War (1592-1597).

  • @BeachTypeZaku
    @BeachTypeZaku 3 місяці тому +10

    I loved the last video you did concerning the Taisha-Ryu school. The swordsmanship in Japan is so unique it's nigh impossible to mistake it for any other. These schools keep the culture alive for us to experience today and very thankful they are still around.❤

  • @saberserpent1134
    @saberserpent1134 3 місяці тому +2

    "Taisha in the East; Marumé in the West"
    Great storytelling regarding this unique Koryū, it's history, and it's curriculum! Will definitely share this to the FB study group!
    Great vid!

  • @loneronin6813
    @loneronin6813 3 місяці тому +10

    I wish I could train in swordsmanship, especially Japanese methods/styles. Due to issues with my hands I'm unable to even hold a sword anymore and due to an injury that keeps me from striking and pulling off most throws I now use a mix of sweeps, joint locks, holds, chokes, and limb breaks. I've also been learning Yang Taijiquan so that I can teach it locally for free and teach my own methods alongside it to anyone interested.
    I may not train the same way I used to, but I still consider myself a legitimate martial artist as everything I've learned to combine together I pressure test with a friend of mine who I've been teaching just because I love having someone to share my martial arts passion with and I feel that teaching it is the way I was meant to share something and contribute to the betterment of the world.
    Just as the Samurai served a master (something or rather someone beyond themselves) I feel that in my own way I'm doing the same by teaching others so that they may maintain health and more importantly, protect their own lives and the lives of others. I like to think some of the mentality of older martial arts teachings is instilled in me from my own training and experience. I don't think of myself as a modern-day Samurai or anything, I just strive to serve a similar purpose I suppose.

    • @outboundflight4455
      @outboundflight4455 Місяць тому +1

      Have you tried ZNKR Seitei Iaido

    • @loneronin6813
      @loneronin6813 Місяць тому

      @@outboundflight4455 I haven't heard of that specific form of Iaido, but it sounds interesting. What does it entail? Do you know where I can find out more about it?

    • @loneronin6813
      @loneronin6813 Місяць тому

      @@outboundflight4455 Sadly the only thing I can hold is a knife but there are no classes for any form of knife training available to me so I've been learning out of books. Lately I've found that even Tai Chi is too painful for me to do, but oddly enough I can do most of the techniques from Shuai Jiao, a traditional form of Chinese Wrestling.
      I've also been learning that from books and other sources since again there are no schools for it where I live. I would take up Aikido because I think I could do it, but again there are no classes for it where I live and also as I understand it the art's effectiveness is often called into question, but I would do it just out of my love for martial arts more so than techniques I would look to use in a self defense scenario.
      It's hard to practice solo for me, but I do teach a friend of mine what I know when he has the time and my girlfriend that I recently started a relationship with wants me to teach her as well so that's something, I guess. No one else is willing to learn from me though because I'm disabled and what I teach isn't from a single style that I have a high enough rank in to teach as what I do is a hybrid of techniques more than anything.

    • @outboundflight4455
      @outboundflight4455 Місяць тому +1

      @@loneronin6813 it's the federally established style for Iaido in Japan. It is also practiced globally. I'm sure there must be at least a dojo in your town that practices it. I would recommend searching all swordmanship schools and dojos around your area and making calls or emails and asking them if they offer it.

    • @loneronin6813
      @loneronin6813 Місяць тому

      @@outboundflight4455 Thanks I really appreciate the advice and information. Where I live there's a Korean sword class similar to Iaido called Haidong Gumdo but it's super expensive and I can't hold a sword, I can only hold knives.
      I've learned some knife fighting back when I trained in Krav Maga and learned basic techniques on my own, but I would love to train in a specific method or system of knife fighting, which I also can't find any classes for.
      When it comes to unarmed martial arts, I can only perform grappling moves from standing. I can't pick people up and throw them anymore, though. That's why I combine sweeps with joint locks, chokes, holds, takedowns, and limb breaking techniques.

  • @mikotagayuna8494
    @mikotagayuna8494 3 місяці тому +2

    I appreciate how you laid out the caveat about martial arts not being your expertise and discussing this book in the lens of an onlooker. Too many people have styled themselves as experts in martial arts just because they have a UA-cam channel or have attended some classes. Some even presume to be authoritative in the interpretation of these documents despite their inability to engage with their primary sources.

  • @AntonyCummins
    @AntonyCummins 3 місяці тому +1

    Alex Alera has done the best research for this book. He has done a lot of samurai research.

  • @dees.daniel7
    @dees.daniel7 3 місяці тому +5

    Wonderful video. Thank you for taking the time to create such a thoughtful video. Greetings from Taisha Ryu in North America.

    • @outboundflight4455
      @outboundflight4455 Місяць тому

      Where is your dojo located if you don't mind me asking?

  • @akarivn
    @akarivn 6 днів тому

    I read from some article relating to Hokushin Itto Ryu that the one that Marume Kurando challenge was not a Yagyu, but Chiba Shusaku.

  • @TheCCBoi
    @TheCCBoi 3 місяці тому

    Amazing video, cant wait to read the book.

  • @-RONNIE
    @-RONNIE 3 місяці тому

    Thanks for the video 👍🏻

  • @hanzohattori5908
    @hanzohattori5908 3 місяці тому

    Very interesting story

  • @user-fg8cq6qu4s
    @user-fg8cq6qu4s 3 місяці тому

    Karl Friday's "Legacies of the Sword" has already been recommended elsewhere in the comments, but much of his later interviews on the subject in articles and interviews are also valuable (such as one from 2021 on Budo Japan). He re-examines some of his old positions from the book in the later articles, a major one being the fundamental misunderstanding of what koryu schools were actually created for. And it wasn't just (or even mainly) about combat even in the 15-16th centuries.

  • @Sw-sx7nw
    @Sw-sx7nw 3 місяці тому

    Extremely cool

  • @xxmrbrooksxx
    @xxmrbrooksxx 3 місяці тому +1

    Always great content. I don't know if you read these yet but I have two books to recommend. "Legacies Of the Sword: The Kashima-Shinryu and Samurai Martial Culture, by Karl F. Friday and Seki Humitake. And, The Secret Teachings of the Family Sword by Yagyu Munenori.

  • @claudiegarnier4560
    @claudiegarnier4560 3 місяці тому

    Thanks❤

  • @azrielaquino4176
    @azrielaquino4176 3 місяці тому

    If you may sir, you can do a video about Ishikawa Goemon, who was a thief and was boiled alive including his son. He tried to assasinate Hideyoshi.

  • @sandroclemus
    @sandroclemus 3 місяці тому +23

    It's a myth that you cannot use a Katana indoors ... It's been overdone in movies and teachings. Like you can "ONLY" fight inside with a Wakisashi. A shorter sword might be more practical, but is not like a 30cm longer sword is "impossible" .. You can still thrust and slash sideways and from under... Besides, real combat is from afar, thrusting is the most effective skill. People rarely close the distance in real life.

    • @mjolninja9358
      @mjolninja9358 3 місяці тому +1

      who knows

    • @nickdavis5420
      @nickdavis5420 3 місяці тому +5

      It’s not that it’s not possible it’s that your not supposed to draw a full sword inside a home your visiting .

    • @killurrstudios
      @killurrstudios 3 місяці тому +9

      "People rarely close the distance in real life" ....If you've studied the history of combat for more than 2 seconds you will realize how off that declaration really is

    • @sandroclemus
      @sandroclemus 3 місяці тому +1

      @@nickdavis5420 But they always make a big deal out of it in movies. Just like in The Shogunate's tale. Like you cannot draw, people hitting the ceiling in a silly way and so on. I'm sure a samurai unsheathes as fast as a gunslinger no matter where you put him.

    • @vivecald-vehk6978
      @vivecald-vehk6978 3 місяці тому +7

      My guy, closing the distance is often the most effective stratagem for people who try to off you at range.
      Any moment in history where cavalry charges, or troops fix bayonets, or the forest yelling "Tenno Heika Banzai" is proof that closing the distance is more effective than not (aside from the last one, Banzai's can either go really well or really, really bad)

  • @JiggaMan1297
    @JiggaMan1297 3 місяці тому

    Marume Kurando / Marume Nagayoshi was once named by the Tokugawa Shogunate as the greatest swordsman in Western Japan

  • @tip9223
    @tip9223 3 місяці тому +2

    You should definitely start training... I do Ki Aikido (Shin Shin Toitsu Aikido). and Shaolin. There are a lot of Iado schools.
    Any community would love your passion and historical knowledge. 🙏

  • @SengokuStudies
    @SengokuStudies 3 місяці тому

    I either didn't know or didn't remember that you have swords and do backyard cutting kind of stuff.

    • @TheShogunate
      @TheShogunate  3 місяці тому +1

      I've talked about it on the discord a bit, but yeah I don't really advertise it haha

  • @drholidayinn5810
    @drholidayinn5810 3 місяці тому

    Who's the winged character?

  • @itskyyuuuu
    @itskyyuuuu 3 місяці тому

    Commenting for the algorithm and for the only alpha comedian

  • @CptFugu
    @CptFugu 3 місяці тому +1

    "Master sold separately"

  • @SpeedDemon_Editzzz
    @SpeedDemon_Editzzz 3 місяці тому +4

    Fuck Yeah some more Samurai Goatness🗡🔥💯

  • @user-vx1zp1zg3p
    @user-vx1zp1zg3p 3 місяці тому

    I wish I could go to Japan 🇯🇵 and study 📖 this technique.

  • @jarred2694
    @jarred2694 3 місяці тому

    No mention of the Tengu?

  • @josetgomez
    @josetgomez 3 місяці тому

    This story of Marume Kurando and Miyamoto Musashi never happens. There have been few intents of making Musashi as a loser and always is the same lineage line, from the Sinto Ryu of Tsukahara Bokuden and Sinto ryu Muso Ryu of Gonnnosuke schools and the Taisha Ryu of Marume Kurando that they don’t accept that The supremacy of Musashi’s wisdom power over the Sinto god's supposed martial inspirations techniques.

  • @TravelingThruLife
    @TravelingThruLife 3 місяці тому +2

    First viewer