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  2. All Japan Kendo Championship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_Japan_Kendo_Championship

    The All Japan Kendo Championships (全日本剣道選手権大会, Zennihon kendō senshuken taikai) is a kendo tournament held every year in Japan. The men's tournament is held at Nippon Budokan on 3 November, on Culture Day .

  3. Kendo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kendo

    The DNBK was also disbanded. Kendo was allowed to return to the curriculum in 1950, first as "shinai competition" (竹刀競技, shinai kyōgi) and then as kendo in 1952. [18] [19] The All Japan Kendo Federation (AJKF or ZNKR) was founded in 1952, immediately after Japan's independence was restored and the ban on martial arts in Japan was ...

  4. All Japan Kendo Federation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_Japan_Kendo_Federation

    The All Japan Kendo Enbu Taikai is the oldest, most traditional, and most prestigious Kendo event in both Japan and the world. In addition to the above competitions and events, which cater to a select group of practitioners (such as professional athletes or high-ranking practitioners), the AJKF also organizes open events for all practitioners ...

  5. World Kendo Championship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Kendo_Championship

    There is an opinion in Japan that this tournament is not of the same caliber as the All Japan Kendo Championship or the All Japan Police Kendo Championship. The argument being that there is a distinct qualitative difference in the playing level and style of nationalities where Japanese people lived or immigrated to before WW2, and countries ...

  6. Zen Nippon Kendō Renmei Iaidō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zen_Nippon_Kendō_Renmei...

    The twelve seitei-gata are standardised for the tuition, promotion and propagation of iaido within the kendo federations. Although not all kendo dojo teach seitei iaido, the AJKF uses them as a standard for their exams and shiai. As a result, seitei iaido has become the most widely recognised form of iaido in Japan and the rest of the world. [1]

  7. Masahiro Miyazaki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masahiro_Miyazaki

    Masahiro Miyazaki (宮崎 正裕 - Miyazaki Masahiro, born 1963) is a Japanese Kendo practitioner who works for Kanagawa Prefectural Police in Japan.He participated in the All Japan Kendo Championship 12 times from 1990 to 2001 and won 6 times, more than any other competitor in the championship's history, including 2 successive victories (1998 and 1999).

  8. Category:Japanese swordsmanship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Japanese...

    View history; General ... Modern Japanese fencing is called kendo. Subcategories. ... All Japan Iaidō Federation; All Japan Kendo Federation;

  9. Naoki Eiga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naoki_Eiga

    By winning the title of All Japan Kendo Champion of the year 2000, Eiga ended the Miyazaki era. He attributed his success to his teacher, Kazuo Furukawa. Based on his success in the AJKC in November 2000, Eiga was chosen as team captain of the Japanese national team for the World Kendo Championship 2003 in Glasgow, Scotland. [4]