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Masatomi Ikeda (born 1940 in Tokyo ) is a Japanese aikido teacher who holds the rank of 7th dan in the Aikikai and was the representative for the organisation in Switzerland.
Masatomi Ikeda - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Masatomi Ikeda (born 1940 in Tokyo ) is a Japanese aikido teacher who holds the rank of 7th dan in the Aikikai and was the representative for the organisation in Switzerland.
Masatomi Ikeda - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(b. 15 November 1952). B. Tokyo. Yoshinkan Aikido Shihan. Graduate in Economics of Chuo University. Began training in 1970 at the Aikido Yoshinkan Yoyogi Dojo. Spent three years in the U. K. from 1981-1984 where he taught YOSHINKAN AIKIDO.
Encyclopedia of Aikido [SHIODA, YASUHISA]
Kenji Shimizu (清水 健二 Shimizu Kenji b. 1940) is an aikido teacher and founder of the aikido style Tendoryu.
Kenji Shimizu - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shimizu was born in 1940 in Fukuoka, Japan.
Shimizu had been training judo since childhood and held a 4th dan in this art when he changed to aikido in 1963. He then became one of the last personal students of the founder of aikido Morihei Ueshiba. After Ueshiba died in 1969, Shimizu, then with a 7th dan in aikido, founded his own school in Tokyo named Tendoryu (ten: heaven, dō: way, ryū: school).
Tendoryu Aikido is characterized by its large and clear movements and convinces spectators and students by its naturalness and harmonic flow of motion.
Since 1978, Shimizu sensei has regularly held seminars in Germany and other European countries with the formation of the German Tendoryu Society was founded in 1993.
He received the 8th dan aikido from the Japanese Budo Federation in 1998.
Shimizu sensei co-authored a book titled Zen and Aikido (ISBN 4-900586-13-7) with Shigeo Kamata.
Shimizu received the award of the Minister of Foreign Affairs for the year Heisei 14 (2002) for his work spreading aikido abroad for many years. In the same year he was invited to the autumn garden party at the imperial palace in Akasaka, Tōkyō.
(29 March 1912-29 May 1993). 9th dan Aikikai (1972). Awarded 10th dan posthumously. Aikikai Shihan. B. Oyamura, Yamagata Prefecture. From a family of OMOTO believers whose mother practiced AIKI BUDO at a dojo of the BUDO SENYOKAI in Japanese-occupied Manchuria. Entered the KOBUKAN DOJO in 1933 and was known for his exceptional physical strength. Shirata was later dispatched to Osaka where he taught until his induction into the Japan Imperial Army. Shirata he resumed teaching c. 1960 continuing until shortly before his death. He supervised publication of the 1984 book in English, Aikido: The Way of Harmony by John STEVENS (see bibl. ). Interviewed AN#62-63.
Encyclopedia of Aikido [SHIRATA, RINJIRO]
Minoru Mochizuki (1907-04-07 in Shizuoka, Japan - 2003-05-30 in Aix-en-Provence, France) founded Yoseikan Budo. 10th dan, aikido, International Martial Arts Federation (IMAF); 9th dan, jujutsu; 8th dan, iaido; 8th dan, judo; 8th dan, kobudo; 5th dan, kendo; 5th dan, karate; 5th dan, jojutsu.
Mochizuki was one of the direct students of judo founder Jigoro Kano, aikido founder Morihei Ueshiba and Gichin Funakoshi, founder of Shotokan Karate. Believing that the martial arts have become distorted by specialization into separate disciplines and transformation into sports, Mochizuki assembled the major techniques of the Japanese martial tradition into a single coherent structure. He oversaw the development of his system from his home in Shizuoka, Japan, where his dojo, the Yoseikan, was often visited by martial arts practitioners from all over the world. Mochizuki formally passed the leadership of his Yoseikan Budo system to his son, Hiroo Mochizuki, in 2000. Yoseikan Budo is currently practiced in 29 countries around the world, and in such diverse places as Australia and Algeria, where a recent clinic had 240 people in attendance. The organization continues to grow and expand to more countries each year.
Minoru Mochizuki - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Steven Seagal (born April 10, 1951) is an American action movie actor, producer, writer, director and a singer. A 7th-dan black belt in aikido, Seagal began his adult life as an aikido instructor in Japan, before moving to the Los Angeles, California area where, after being noticed by entertainment executives, he made his film debut in 1988.
Steven Seagal - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kenji Tomiki (1900–1979) is a Japanese aikido teacher and the founder of aikido style Shodokan, often referred to as Tomiki Aikido.
Tomiki was one of the early students of the founder of aikido Morihei Ueshiba, and also of Jigoro Kano, the founder of judo. In 1925, the year he joined Morihei Ueshiba, he obtained 5th dan in judo. In 1929 he represented Miyagi Prefecture in the first judo tournament held in front of the Emperor - this tournament became the All Japan Tournament the following year. From 1936 till the end of the second world war he lived in Manchukuo (Manchuria) where he taught aikibudo (an early name for aikido) to the Kanton army and the Imperial Household Agency. In 1938 he became an assistant professor at Kenkoku University in Manchukuo. He went on to be awarded the first 8th dan in aikido (1942) and an 8th dan in judo. After returning from a three year internment by the Soviet Union, he taught both judo and aikido for many years at Waseda University. It was there that he formulated and expanded his theories concerning both kata based training methods and a particular form of free-style fighting which would put him at odds with much, but not all, of the aikido world.
In 1974 he founded the Japan Aikido Association (JAA) from an earlier organization of the same name to promote his theories. He called his style Shodokan Aikido and a honbu dojo, dedicated solely for the study of aikido, had been built in 1967 in Osaka. The current head of the dojo and chief instructor of the JAA is Tetsuro Nariyama.
Koichi Tohei (藤平光一) (born January 1920) is a 10th Dan aikidoka and founder of the Ki Society and its style of aikido, officially known as Shin-Shin Toitsu Aikido - "aikido with mind and body unified", but commonly known as Ki-Aikido. The Ki Society is also known as Ki no Kenkyukai (気の研究会; Japanese for "Ki Research Society").
Koichi Tohei - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kazuo Chiba (born Feb 5,1940,Tokyo) is an aikido teacher from Japan who has spent a considerable part of his teaching career in the United States. He is an 8th dan from the aikido organisation Aikikai, and the founder of the dojo (aikido club) San Diego Aikikai in San Diego where he relocated to in 1981. He is also the founder of an international aikido federation known as Birankai. In the aikido world, Chiba is sometimes known as a representative of the "hard" or "tough" side of aikido, with a strong emphasis on weapons training. As of May 2006, Chiba sensei has announced his gradual retirement from seminar-style training, which often imposes a heavy travel schedule. He has cited a desire to spend his remaining years closer to his family.
Kazuo Chiba - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Nobuyoshi Tamura was born on 1933-03-02 in Osaka, Japan. His father was a kendo teacher. Tamura entered the Aikikai Hombu Dojo around 1953 as an uchi-deshi (live-in student) of aikido founder Morihei Ueshiba. He was one of Ueshiba's favorite pupils and since 1964 has greatly contributed to the development of aikido in Europe and France in particular. He is the National Technical Director (DTN) of the FFAB (French Federation of Aikido and Budo). He currently holds the rank of 8th dan, and the title of Shihan. He has trained many others instructors throughout various countries mainly in Western Europe but also in different countries around the world. In 1999, he received the medal of "Chevalier de l'ordre National du Mérite" from the French government. Tamura has published several books on aikido (in French). His dojo (Shumeikan Dojo) is located in the village of Bras (Var, France).
Nobuyoshi Tamura - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hiroshi Tada (born in December 13, 1929, Tokyo, Japan) is a 9th dan Aikikai Japanese aikido master who has taught at the Aikikai Hombu Dojo for many years. He was a member of the Waseda University karate club before starting training in aikido at the Hombu Dojo under aikido founder Morihei Ueshiba. He was dispatched to Rome, Italy in 1964 where he established the Italian "central dojo" around 1966. He returned to Japan in 1973 to resume teaching at the Aikikai Hombu Dojo. Masatomi Ikeda, the Aikikai representative in Switzerland is one of his students.
2003
1983年
Kisaburo Osawa (b. 1908, Kumagaya, Saitama prefecture, Japan - d. 1991-05-26) was an influential aikido master who taught for many years at the Aikikai Hombu Dojo and was a close advisor to Kisshomaru Ueshiba.
He started practicing judo at the age of 17 in order to fortify his body. In 1939 he was introduced to Morihei Ueshiba and entered the Kobukan dojo.
He became one of the most important and influential aikido teachers during the 1950s to 1970s, being the director of the Aikikai Hombu Dojo for many years until 1986 when he was replaced by Morihei's grandson and present Doshu, Moriteru Ueshiba. He held the rank of 9th dan Aikikai.
His son, Hayato Osawa (b. 1951) also became a prominent aikido shihan holding the rank of 7th dan.
Kisaburo Osawa - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gaku Homma (b 1950) is a Japanese aikido teacher who has spent most of his teaching career in the United States. He was born in Akita Prefecture and trained as an uchideshi in Iwama and the Aikikai Hombu Dojo in Tokyo, under the founder of aikido Morihei Ueshiba and Morihiro Saito in the late 1960s. He moved to Denver, Colorado in 1976 and founded the Nippon Kan as an independent dojo in 1978. This dojo has grown into the largest aikido dojo in the Rocky Mountain region. He has organized several large aikido seminars in Denver, many of them taught by Morihiro Saito.
Gaku Homma - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediahttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaku_Homma
Michio Hikitsuchi (1923 - 2004-02-02), 10th dan in aikido, was the founder of the Kumano Juku Dojo, in Shingu, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan. He met Morihei Ueshiba as a child and studied various martial arts during his entire life.
Michio Hikitsuchi (1923 - 2004-02-02), 10th dan in aikido, was the founder of the Kumano Juku Dojo, in Shingu, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan. He met Morihei Ueshiba as a child and studied various martial arts during his entire life.
Masamichi Noro (born in 1935 is a Japanese aikido master established in France. He entered the Aikikai Hombu Dojo in 1955 as an uchi-deshi and studied with the founder Morihei Ueshiba. He was then sent to France in 1961 to represent and develop aikido in that country and established his dojo in Paris. In 1979, he left the Aikikai to create the Ki no Michi ("the way of Ki"), which consists of practicing Aikido movements in slow motion.
Masamichi Noro - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shoji Nishio (December 5, 1927 - March 15, 2005), a noted aikidoka, was born in Aomori Prefecture of Japan in 1927. He joined Aikikai Hombu Dojo in 1951 and began to teach around 1955. Before aikido he studied judo (4th Dan Kodokan Judo), karate (4th Dan), iaido (7th Dan Nihon Zendoku Iaido) and jodo and also Shintō Musō-ryū jōjutsu and Hozoin-ryū sōjutsu. Skills gained from them he managed to smoothly include into his own specific aikido style where all techniques can be performed with the wooden sword bokken in hand as well as without weapons, and his weapon systems has few similarities to the more common system that derives from Morihiro Saito. He held the title of an Aikikai shihan and created a new school of Iaido with forms from aikido, called Aiki Toho Iaido. In 2003 Nishio Sensei received Budo Kyoryusho award from Japanese Budo Federation for his lifetime contribution to development and worldwide propagation of Aikido. He died in March 2005 aged 77.
Shoji Nishio - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(born in 1918 in the Kagoshima prefecture) is an Acupuncturist, an Oriental medicine practitioner and an aikido teacher with a strong judo background.
Relocated to France in 1960 where he remained until the early 1970s before moving to the USA
Nakazono is an authority on Kotodama and has written privately published books on the subject.
Mutsuro Nakazono - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia