History
Shorin-Ryu
Shorin-ryu is one of the major modern
Okinawan martial arts. Said to have been founded by Sokon Matsumura
during the 1800s, Shorin-ryu combines elements of the traditional
Okinawan fighting styles Shuri-te and Tomari-te. Shorin-ryu is widely
considered to be one of the two major modern styles of Okinawan karate,
along with Goju-ryu, which is rooted in the other traditional Okinawan
style, Naha-te.
Sokon Matsumura was a renowned warrior
of his time; he has been called the Miyamoto Musashi of Okinawa.
However, while he is often referred to as the "founder" of Shorin-ryu,
he did not invent all the components the style, and perhaps didn't ever
call it "Shorin-ryu" himself. It is quite possible that he synthesized
his knowledge of Okinawan arts with Chinese fighting styles that he
learned on his travels and taught it as a coherent system to some eager
students, who subsequently refined it, labeled it, and passed it on.
(Highlighting Shorin-ryu's Chinese heritage is the fact that "Shorin"
is the Japanese pronunciation of the Chinese 少林, "Shaolin"; "ryu" means
"school", or "style".)
Along with being a style on its own,
Shorin-ryu is also perhaps the most influential single ancestor of
modern Japanese karate. One of Matsumura's best-known students, Anko
(or "Ankoh") Itosu became a great practitioner and teacher of Okinawan
karate and developed the five Pinan kata, which are now taught not only
in Shorin-ryu, but also in a wide variety of Okinawan, Japanese and
derived martial arts. It is also believed by some that the first two
Pinan katas were actually developed by Matsumura and the last three by
Itosu. In addition, Itosu and another student of Matsumura's named Anko
Azato were among the primary influences on a fellow Okinawan named
Gichin Funakoshi. Funakoshi introduced his Okinawan martial arts to
mainland Japan in 1922, and in subsequent decades was instrumental in
developing what he termed simply "karate" or "karate-do" as a popular
Japanese sport and art. (The style Funakoshi taught on mainland Japan
is now called Shotokan karate.)
Shorin-ryu is generally characterized
by natural breathing, natural (narrow, high) stances, and direct --
rather than circular -- movements. Shorin-ryu practitioners will say
that deep stances are not important for powerful moves, and that only
correct motion matters. In fact, Okinawan traditionalists often claim
that deep, wide stances are a development of Japanese-styled karate,
and useful only for show.
There is not now, and perhaps has
never been, a single unified school of "Shorin-ryu," although many
dojos use the term for simplicity's sake. Some of the best known
schools of Shorin-ryu include Shobayashi, Matsumura Orthodox
Shorin-ryu, Kobayashi Shorin-ryu (Shorinkan), and Matsubayashi-ryu, but
there are many others, most with long and distinguished histories that
trace back to Matsumura and his students.
Shuri-Ryu
Shuri-ryu karate is an eclectic martial
arts system, developed by the martial arts pioneer Robert
Trias, the first person to teach karate in the United States in 1945 in
Phoenix, Arizona. He opened the first karate school in the nation
in 1946 and formed the first karate organization, the United
States Karate Association, in 1948. Other styles of karate related
to the Trias-line are Shorei-Goju-Ryu and Shorei-Ryu. The style of
Shuri-ryu is taught and is especially prevalent in the United
States, parts of Europe, and South America.
The roots of Shuri-Ryu are in Okinawa, especially in the Shuri-Te
karate of Ankoh Itosu and Choki Motobu and the Hsing Yi Chuan of
Tung Gee Hsing. Robert Trias, the style's founder, trained with
Tung Gee Hsing, who had cross-trained with Choki Motobu earlier in
the Okinawan village ofKume Mura. Tung Gee Hsig taught Trias Hsing Yi
(the "Intellectual" Fist) and Shuri Karate Kempo. Later Trias
studied with Hoy Yuan Ping, Gogen Yamaguchi, Roy Oshiro, Yasuhiro
Konishi, Makoto Gima, and several other teachers. Konishi awarded Trias
with the 9th Dan in 1964 and was a prominent student of both Choki
Motobu and Gichin Funakoshi. Gima was a prominent student of
Funakoshi and awarded Trias the 10th Dan in 1983. Both, Konishi and
Gima helped Trias reconstruct the old Shuri-Te system of Okinawan
karate with some modifications,hence a new name for the system
was designated Shuri-Ryu. Shuri-Ryu also incorporated some Naha
katas and methods.
