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  2. Karate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karate

    [9] [10] The martial arts movies of the 1960s and 1970s served to greatly increase the popularity of martial arts around the world, and English-speakers began to use the word karate in a generic way to refer to all striking-based Asian martial arts. [11] Karate schools began appearing around the world, catering to those with casual interest as ...

  3. 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 ...

  4. Robert Trias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Trias

    Robert A. Trias (March 18, 1923 – July 11, 1989) was an American karate pioneer, founding the first karate school in the mainland United States and becoming one of the first known American black belts. [1] [2] He also developed Shuri-ryū karate, an eclectic style with roots in Chinese kung-fu, and indirectly some Okinawan karate.

  5. Kyokushin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyokushin

    This was unlike the other schools of Karate at the time. [9] Over the next ten years, Oyama built his organization and demonstrated his karate around the world to spread it. Around 1956, Oyama would rename his school the "Oyama Dojo". In early days of the dojo, Oyama would not take the duty of teaching newer students.

  6. Shōrin-ryū - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shōrin-ryū

    Generally, Okinawan karate schools did not have individual names for styles like schools in Japan. Several branches of traditional Shōrin-ryū exist today in both Okinawa and the western world. While there is a more concentrated population of practitioners in its birthplace of Okinawa, Shōrin-ryū Karate has had many high dan grades outside ...

  7. 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.

  8. Nicholas Raymond Cerio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_Raymond_Cerio

    Cerio opened his first martial arts school, Cerio’s Academy of Martial Arts. ... Martial Arts Traditions, History, People, W.H. Smith, 1981. LCCN 82-11940;

  9. Yasuhiro Konishi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yasuhiro_Konishi

    While less famous than many of his contemporaries outside Japan, Konishi is today recognized as one of history's most significant budō masters. He was a successful businessman, teacher, and political activist, who strove to bring respectability to martial arts, and his efforts are a major reason that karate enjoys the position it does today ...