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  2. Kajukenbo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kajukenbo

    Kajukenbo (Japanese: カジュケンボ) is a hybrid martial art from Hawaii.It was developed in the late 1940s and founded in 1947 in the Palama Settlement on Oahu, Territory of Hawaii.

  3. Moo Duk Kwan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moo_Duk_Kwan

    Hwang Kee further expanded his Moo Duk Kwan school of martial arts after in 1957 he was introduced to the Muye Dobo Tongji by a librarian at the Korean National University in Seoul. It referenced the martial arts system of Subak, a bare hands and feet technique. [3] Hwang Kee changed the name of his martial art system to "Soo Bahk Do" on June ...

  4. Modern schools of ninjutsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_schools_of_ninjutsu

    Modern schools of ninjutsu are schools which offer instruction in martial arts. To a larger or smaller degree, the curriculum is derived from the practice of ninjutsu, the arts of the Shinobi; covert agents of feudal Japan. One of the earliest modern schools to be established was the Bujinkan Organization in 1972 by martial artist Masaaki Hatsumi.

  5. Shuri-ryū - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shuri-ryū

    Shuri-ryū (首里流) karate is an eclectic martial arts system developed by Robert Trias (1923–1989), reportedly the first American to teach a form of karate in the mainland United States, and also opened his public first dojo in 1946 in Phoenix, Arizona.

  6. Karate in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karate_in_the_United_States

    In 1946 Robert Trias, a returning U.S. Navy veteran, began teaching private lessons in Phoenix, Arizona. [9] Other early teachers of karate in America were Ed Parker (a native Hawaiian and Coast Guard veteran who earned a black belt in 1953), [10] George Mattson (who began studying while stationed in Okinawa in 1956), and Peter Urban (a Navy veteran who started training while stationed in ...

  7. Shitō-ryū - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shitō-ryū

    Kenwa Mabuni (Mabuni Kenwa 摩文仁 賢和) was born in Shuri, Okinawa in 1889. Mabuni was a 17th generation descendant of the warrior Uni Ufugusuku Kenyu. [2] He began his instruction in his home town in the art of Shuri-te (首里手) at the age of 13, under the tutelage of Ankō Itosu (糸州 安恒, Itosu Ankō) (1831–1915).

  8. Robert Trias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Trias

    In 1948 he founded the United States Karate Association (USKA), the first karate organization on the American mainland. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] Jointly with John Keehan , Trias hosted the first national karate tournament in the United States, called the 1st World Karate Tournament, at the University of Chicago Fieldhouse in late July 1963 in Chicago , IL.

  9. List of Kyokushin practitioners - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Kyokushin...

    Sonny Chiba – popular Japanese actor and martial artist. [48] While he was a university student, he began studying martial arts with Sosei Oyama (whom he later portrayed in a trilogy of films), which led to a first-degree black belt on 15 October 1965, later receiving a fourth-degree on 20 January 1984.