My brother's, it's always a pleasure to watch your classes. I'm a judoca who became a Jiu-Jitsu Black belt, 2° degree under Professor Draculino. I truly believe all BJJ schools should have a picture of Jigoro Kano and his history always telling to all the students. It's our legacy. What's your opinion? One day I'll visit Valente Brothers school to shake your hands and talk about the history of martial arts. 🙇
That is complete nonsense that jujitsu that jujitsu focussed on the ground,virtually no schools did that because they were battlefield arts where being on 5he ground was very risky
Thank you Paul. We have evidence to prove that there was a lot of ground grappling. We even have fight stats documents from jujutsu matches showing grappling techniques. Our research is alive and what you thought was true yesterday might not be the case today. All the best and thank you for the support. 🙏
What is "nonsense" is you thinking you know what went on, on medieval Japanese battlefields or Japanese Samurai society...lol. First Jiu-jitsu belonged to the practitioner and he used it the way he needed it. For example, Japan went through a long period of peace and stability after the establishment of the Tokugawa shogunate , so there were no large battles anymore. Yet jujitsu flourished. At this time much of Jiu-jitsu would have been used as more personal defence for the individual Samurai in his life and duels in conjunction with his bladed weapons. Other jiu-jitsu schools were developed for the "police" of the era who had very strict rules of not killing or shedding the blood of higher caste Samurai. So controlling , holding and even tying up men on the ground was an integral part of their training. This "police style" was the origin of the Tenshin Ryu that Kano originally studied-so of course there was extensive ground holds. This seems to have had a long tradition on the Japanese battle field since valuable prisoners had to be captured alive and held down. Not only ground work, but tying people up was the specialty of some jiu-jitsu Ryu. Your ideas of what went on in Japanese martial culture seems to come from comic books not history.
Judo and Jûjutsu ARE NOT the same art. They weren't, never were and never will be. Otherwise there would be no sense for Judo to be created. Jigoro Kano created Judo precisely to be much more than simply practicing attack and defense techniques, which was Jûjutsu.
Yes, Dr. Jigoro Kano, the founder of Judo, was indeed a teacher at a university. He was an educationist and served as a professor at the University of Tokyo in Japan. Specifically, Dr. Kano Jigoro was born in December, 1860. After graduating from Tokyo University, Dr. Kano founded Kodokan Judo. He served for 23 years as principal of the Higher Normal School and the Tokyo Higher Normal School, which were forerunners of the University of Tsukuba
Jigoro Kano didn't get a doctorate degree to be called Dr. And no, he didn't teach at a university. He was a STUDENT at Tokyo Imperial University. He was a professor at the the Gakushūin (学習院) or Peers School (Gakushūin School Corporation), initially known as Gakushūjo, is a Japanese educational institution in Tokyo, originally established to educate the children of Japan's nobility. which only became a University in 1949.@@TonyPacenski
Love listening to these guys. Very well spoken, knowledgeable and charismatic.
Thank You Professors
Dr. Erwin Balz visited Hikosuke Totsuka. The style of Jujutsu he taught was Totsuka-ha Yoshin Ryu. His adoptive son’s name was Hidemi.
My brother's, it's always a pleasure to watch your classes. I'm a judoca who became a Jiu-Jitsu Black belt, 2° degree under Professor Draculino. I truly believe all BJJ schools should have a picture of Jigoro Kano and his history always telling to all the students. It's our legacy. What's your opinion? One day I'll visit Valente Brothers school to shake your hands and talk about the history of martial arts. 🙇
Great video
Yagi Teinosuke. Tenjin Shin'yō-ryū school
Terá uma versão em português ou legendada?
Mataemon Tanabe fusen ryu jiu jitsu
Is still consider judo as Kano ju-jitsu
That is complete nonsense that jujitsu that jujitsu focussed on the ground,virtually no schools did that because they were battlefield arts where being on 5he ground was very risky
Thank you Paul. We have evidence to prove that there was a lot of ground grappling. We even have fight stats documents from jujutsu matches showing grappling techniques. Our research is alive and what you thought was true yesterday might not be the case today. All the best and thank you for the support. 🙏
there are many old scrolls and books on jiujitsu in japan which showed ground grappling and techniques
What is "nonsense" is you thinking you know what went on, on medieval Japanese battlefields or Japanese Samurai society...lol. First Jiu-jitsu belonged to the practitioner and he used it the way he needed it. For example, Japan went through a long period of peace and stability after the establishment of the Tokugawa shogunate , so there were no large battles anymore. Yet jujitsu flourished. At this time much of Jiu-jitsu would have been used as more personal defence for the individual Samurai in his life and duels in conjunction with his bladed weapons. Other jiu-jitsu schools were developed for the "police" of the era who had very strict rules of not killing or shedding the blood of higher caste Samurai. So controlling , holding and even tying up men on the ground was an integral part of their training. This "police style" was the origin of the Tenshin Ryu that Kano originally studied-so of course there was extensive ground holds. This seems to have had a long tradition on the Japanese battle field since valuable prisoners had to be captured alive and held down. Not only ground work, but tying people up was the specialty of some jiu-jitsu Ryu. Your ideas of what went on in Japanese martial culture seems to come from comic books not history.
Judo and Jûjutsu ARE NOT the same art. They weren't, never were and never will be. Otherwise there would be no sense for Judo to be created. Jigoro Kano created Judo precisely to be much more than simply practicing attack and defense techniques, which was Jûjutsu.
Jigoro Kano was never a judo teacher at universities, as he was not even a professor at a university.
He was a STUDENT at the University of Tokyo.
stop spreading misinformation online
Yes, Dr. Jigoro Kano, the founder of Judo, was indeed a teacher at a university. He was an educationist and served as a professor at the University of Tokyo in Japan. Specifically, Dr. Kano Jigoro was born in December, 1860. After graduating from Tokyo University, Dr. Kano founded Kodokan Judo. He served for 23 years as principal of the Higher Normal School and the Tokyo Higher Normal School, which were forerunners of the University of Tsukuba
Jigoro Kano didn't get a doctorate degree to be called Dr. And no, he didn't teach at a university. He was a STUDENT at Tokyo Imperial University. He was a professor at the the Gakushūin (学習院) or Peers School (Gakushūin School Corporation), initially known as Gakushūjo, is a Japanese educational institution in Tokyo, originally established to educate the children of Japan's nobility. which only became a University in 1949.@@TonyPacenski
@@Keepitsimple0912 Just prove that I said some misinformation