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Hyoho Niten Ichi-ryu

 

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Hyoho Niten Ichi-ryu



 
 
, which can be loosely translated as "the school of the strategy of two heavens as one", is a style of classical Japan
Japan

Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, People's Republic of China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south....
ese swordsmanship
Swordsmanship

Swordsman redirects here. For the comic book characters, see Swordsman . For the 1990 Hong Kong film, see The Swordsman.Swordsmanship refers to the skills of a swordsman, a person versed in the art of the sword....
 conceived by the famous warrior Miyamoto Musashi
Miyamoto Musashi

, also known as Shinmen Takezo, Miyamoto Bennosuke, or by his Buddhist name Niten Doraku, was a Japanese people swordsman famed for his duels and distinctive style....
. Hyoho Niten Ichi-ryu is mainly known for the two-sword—katana
Katana

A Japanese sword, or , is one of the traditional bladed weapons of Japan. These are categorised in several types according to size and method of manufacture....
 and wakizashi
Wakizashi

File:Edo period Wakizashi.jpgFile:Daisho Asian Art Museum SF.JPGThe is a traditional Japanese sword with a shoto blade between 30 and 60 cm , with an average of 50 cm ....
kenjutsu
Kenjutsu

, meaning "the art of the sword", is a term for classical Japanese sword arts , in particular those which predate the Meiji Restoration. It is sometimes used more generally to describe any martial art which makes use of the Japanese sword....
 techniques Musashi called Niten Ichi (???, "two heavens as one") or Nito Ichi (???, "two swords as one").

nd 1640, Musashi intended to pass on his art to three successors from among his thousand students; specifically, to Terao Magonojo
Terao Magonojo

was a famed swordsman during the Edo period of Japan. Magonojo was the elder brother of Terao Motomenosuke, the successor to the School of Musashi....
, his younger brother Kyumanosuke and to Furuhashi Sozaemon
Furuhashi Sozaemon

was a Japanese samurai of the early Edo period. Famed for his skill in swordsmanship. Sozaemon, along with both Terao Magonojo, and his younger brother Terao Motomenosuke would be the legendary Miyamoto Musashi's three chosen successors....
.






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, which can be loosely translated as "the school of the strategy of two heavens as one", is a style of classical Japan
Japan

Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, People's Republic of China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south....
ese swordsmanship
Swordsmanship

Swordsman redirects here. For the comic book characters, see Swordsman . For the 1990 Hong Kong film, see The Swordsman.Swordsmanship refers to the skills of a swordsman, a person versed in the art of the sword....
 conceived by the famous warrior Miyamoto Musashi
Miyamoto Musashi

, also known as Shinmen Takezo, Miyamoto Bennosuke, or by his Buddhist name Niten Doraku, was a Japanese people swordsman famed for his duels and distinctive style....
. Hyoho Niten Ichi-ryu is mainly known for the two-sword—katana
Katana

A Japanese sword, or , is one of the traditional bladed weapons of Japan. These are categorised in several types according to size and method of manufacture....
 and wakizashi
Wakizashi

File:Edo period Wakizashi.jpgFile:Daisho Asian Art Museum SF.JPGThe is a traditional Japanese sword with a shoto blade between 30 and 60 cm , with an average of 50 cm ....
kenjutsu
Kenjutsu

, meaning "the art of the sword", is a term for classical Japanese sword arts , in particular those which predate the Meiji Restoration. It is sometimes used more generally to describe any martial art which makes use of the Japanese sword....
 techniques Musashi called Niten Ichi (???, "two heavens as one") or Nito Ichi (???, "two swords as one").

Origin

Around 1640, Musashi intended to pass on his art to three successors from among his thousand students; specifically, to Terao Magonojo
Terao Magonojo

was a famed swordsman during the Edo period of Japan. Magonojo was the elder brother of Terao Motomenosuke, the successor to the School of Musashi....
, his younger brother Kyumanosuke and to Furuhashi Sozaemon
Furuhashi Sozaemon

was a Japanese samurai of the early Edo period. Famed for his skill in swordsmanship. Sozaemon, along with both Terao Magonojo, and his younger brother Terao Motomenosuke would be the legendary Miyamoto Musashi's three chosen successors....
. He considered Magonojo to excel in technique but to lack in reflection, while Furuhashi excelled at reflection but lacked technique. Magonojo received the famous treatise, the Go Rin no Sho
The Book of Five Rings

is a text on kenjutsu and the martial arts in general, written by the samurai warrior Miyamoto Musashi circa 1645. It is considered a classic treatise on military strategy, much like Sun Tzu's The Art of War and Chanakya's Arthashastra....
, on the condition that he read it and then burn it. But Furuhashi borrowed it for a few days and on the orders of Hosokawa Mitsuhisa made two copies- one for Hosokawa and one for himself, which he transmitted under the name of Ihon go rin no sho. The best known edition today is the Hosokawa copy.

Magonojo then yielded the role of successor to his younger brother Kyumanosuke who had received the Hyoho San-jugo from Musashi. It was Kyumanosuke who transmitted this document to his students with seven added instructions called the Hyoho shiji ni kajo.

Shortly before his death, Musashi also wrote the Dokkodo
Dokkodo

The Dokkodo was a work written by Miyamoto Musashi a week before he died in 1645. It is a short work, consisting of either nineteen or twenty-one precepts; precepts 4 and 20 are omitted from the former version....
 ("Going My Way"). It seems to be a list of rules that one should try to follow in life; in essence each rule has very deep meaning steeped in Buddhist precepts.

Succession

Terao Kyumanosuke (Motomenosuke) had received the complete transmission of the School of Musashi, with certification and Musashi's two swords. He at first refused to teach and sent what he had received to Musashi's adopted son, Iori. Iori refused the succession, since the honor had not been bestowed upon him. With this, Kyumanosuke then agreed to take over as head—both his and Iori's actions were manifestations of their respect for Musashi.

Succession in the Hyoho Niten Ichi-ryu (the name given by Musashi towards the end of his life) does not follow a hereditary pattern. It is attested to by the bestowing of two artifacts: a scroll on which is written the name of the techniques and the approach to them that must be transmitted if the school is to be perpetuated truly, and a wooden sword that Musashi made himself, with which he trained and used as a walking stick during the last years of his life, today in possession of the Usa city Shinto Shrine.

Dispute

The Gosho-ha Hyoho Niten Ichi-ryu
Gosho-ha Hyoho Niten Ichi-ryu

The was one of the branches of the Hyoho Niten Ichi-ryu, the Kenjutsu school created by Miyamoto Musashi, under the supervision of Gosho Motoharu, Shihan of the 9th generation....
 disputes the lineage and that Iwami Toshio Gensho is the sole legal representative of Hyoho Niten Ichi-ryu.

Lineage

The lineage to date is as follows:
  1. Shinmen Miyamoto Musashi-No-Kami Fujiwara no Genshin
  2. Terao Kyumanosuke Nobuyuki (Second name can be read as Motomenosuke)
  3. Terao Goemon Katsuyuki
  4. Yoshida Josetsu Masahiro
  5. Santo Hikozaemon Kyohide
  6. Santo Hanbe Kiyoaki
  7. Santo Shinjuro Kiyotake
  8. Aoki Kikuo Hisakatsu
  9. Kiyonaga Tadanao Masami
  10. Imai Masayuki Nobukatsu
  11. Iwami Toshio Gensho


Techniques

Today the following sets of techniques (waza or kata) are transmitted:
  1. Tachi Seiho—Twelve techniques with long sword.
  2. Nito Seiho—Five techniques with two swords corresponding to the five forms in the Water Scroll.
  3. Kodachi
    Kodachi

    for other uses see:Kodachi A , literally translating into "small or short tachi ", is a Japanese sword that is too short to be considered a long sword but too long to be a dagger....
     Seiho—Seven techniques with a short sword.
  4. Bojutsu
    Bojutsu

    , translated from Japanese language as "staff technique", is the martial art of using a staff weapon called bo which simply means "staff". Staffs are perhaps one of the earliest weapons used by man....
    —Twenty techniques with a staff.
  5. Aikuchi roppo
  6. Jitte
    Jitte (weapon)

    The , literally meaning "ten-hand" , is a specialized weapon which was used by law enforcement officers during Edo period Japan. Nowadays, the jutte is the subject of the Japanese martial art of juttejutsu....
     to jutsu—Five techniques against a sword.


According to Gosho Motoharu Hanshi, the Aikuchi roppo was constituted by free nito forms using fukuro shinai, not formalized kata. However this waza was not taught by Musashi and is a later addition.

The Jitte techniques, also according to Gosho Hanshi, are modern addition, and were not practiced in the time of the eight headmaster, Aoki Kikuo. The techniques taught had a direct relation and followed the order of the grades in the ryu:

Shoden: Itto Seiho
Chuden: Kodachi Seiho
Okuden: Nito Seiho
Menkyo: Bojutsu
Menkyo Kaiden: All the curriculum of the ryu plus have a deep knowledge of the founder teachings.

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