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Online Articles P. 1

Martial Arts Terms and Definitions (1)
Budo and Bujutsu

by Wayne Muromoto

The budo of Japan are defined as the "martial arts" of Japan.

The term, more properly and literally defined as "martial ways," in its general usage, applies to all arts of a martial nature, whether or not they were developed by the classical hereditary warrior caste, or by commoners. The term can be used in a more limited and structured fashion to mean only what Japanese call "gendai" budo, or modern budo. Gendai budo refers to budo that became finalized after the Meiji restoration (1868), in other words, budo forms that were established only one or at most three generations ago. In that case, martial arts systems that were developed prior to 1868 are referred to bujutsu (martial methods or arts).

The delineation is not all that concrete, at least not in Japan. Many bujutsu teachers call their arts a "budo," for the sake of convenience or some other reason. In addition, budo offers an emphasis on the spiritual and meditative aspects of a martial art, as the "-do" comes from the Chinese character for the Taoist "Way" (tao or in Japanese -do). To practice a martial "way" is to emphasize the spiritual aspect of the art as an end point to mental and physical training in martial (bu-) training methods.

bu

The character "bu" or martial.

do or michi

The character "do" or "michi," the Way, road, path.

jutsu

"jutsu," or techniques, methods.

 

budo or michi

"Budo."

bujutsu

"Bujutsu."

Another set of terms for budo and bujutsu, which are more concrete, are gendai budo and koryu budo/bujutsu. Gendai budo, as aforementioned, means "modern" martial arts, usually of a large-audience appeal, established in "modern" (gendai) times. Koryu ("Old Tradition") are martial arts schools that are older than 1868. A list to show the difference between the two categories' subgroups of arts follows:

Gendai budo:
karatedo schools (Goju-ryu, Shito-ryu, Kyokushinkai, Shotokan, Uechi-ryu, Shorin-ryu, Wado-ryu, etc.)
kendo
iaido (Seitei iai forms)
judo (Kodokan)
aikido (hombu/Aikikai, Ki Society, Yoshinkan, Tomiki-ryu)
Shorinji Kempo
jukendo
jodo
naginatado
kyudo
naginatado

Koryu (bujutsu) schools:
kenjutsu
iaijutsu
jujutsu (torite, toride, taijutsu, hade, hakude, kumi-uchi, etc.)
bojutsu (long staff)
jojutsu (short staff)
kyujutsu (archery)
bajutsu (horsemanship)
suieijutsu (swimming; epecially for the samurai class, including swimming and acquatic swordfighting in full armor)
hojojutsu (using a rope to bind and capture an enemy)
shurikenjutsu (throwing dirks and knives)
heiho (traditional strategy)
shinobi no waza ("ninjutsu"; traditional espionage techniques)
chikujo jutsu (castle building)
kiaijutsu
kogusoku (short sword)
kusarigama jutsu (sickle and chain)
sojutsu (spear)
naginata jutsu (long "poleaxe")
tessen jutsu (iron fan)
onmyo jutsu (using Chinese mysticism to predict the outcome of battles)
jutte jutsu (truncheon methods)
tembun jutsu (weather forecasting)
hojutsu (gunnery)
etc.

The -ryu
All koryu and several gendai budo schools are called such-and-such-ryu. The -ryu appended to a title refers to the system's "name"; it is a "style" or "school" delineation. Therefore, there karatedo, while a unified gendai budo fighting system originating out of Okinawa, retains several strains that are quite different in their kata and training methods. A Shotokan stylist would be different from, say, a Goju-ryu stylist, as opposed to an Uechi-ryu stylist. They would all be doing karatedo, certainly, but even the application of a simple punch would be very different in terms of placement of the arms, use of force, and so on.

Some gendai budo do not have any -ryu systems. Kendo, for example, has been unified as a national (and international) sport and pastime for the use of bamboo staves to represent swordfighting. There are no "styles" or schools of kendo. There is only kendo. All kendo schools share the same general rules when it comes to competition and kendo kata (forms). Likewise judo, although it has fragmented a lot in recent times, is basically judo. Even recent iterations of some modern "jujutsu" schools are, at heart, simply subsets of some parts of judo, emphasizing perhaps the more combative or roughhouse aspects of judo to the detriment of the sportive aspects.

Aikido started out as one and only one martial art form. It, too, has developed along different stylistic lines due to differences of style, personality clashes, and other kinds of martial arts politics. Aikido arts presently encompass various different schools, the larger ones being Aikikai (or hombu, the "main branch" style of aikido), Ki Society (Ki No Kenkyukai), Yoshinkan, and Tomiki-ryu.

The differences between koryu schools are even wider. While a Shito-ryu stylist may find similarities in a kata performed by a Shotokan stylist, some jujutsu schools, for example, have no common grounds with each other. Even similar techniques may go by completely different names.

Koryu Schools
The number of distinct koryu schools have decreased since Japan's modern era (1868), due to Westernization, the consolidation of martial endeavors into the modern -do schools, and sheer neglect. However, a number of koryu schools continue to this day. While koryu budo once numbered in the thousands, they now number in the low hundreds, if at all that much. The list that follows is very incomplete, but suggests the variety of possibilities still available in koryu schools. Some of the schools may not fit in the category I have assigned them, depending on one's point of view. For that, I beg your indulgence as I admit to not having an in-depth experience with most of the schools listed.

Composite Schools (primarily a variety of bujutsu methods)
Tenshin Shoden Katori Shinto-ryu
Kashima Shin-ryu
Kashima Shinto-ryu (Bokuden-ryu)
Takeuchi-ryu (Honke, bunke, and Bitchu-den)

Jujutsu
Daito-ryu
Araki-ryu
Seigo-ryu
Tenshin Shinyo-ryu
Sosuishitsu-ryu
Takagi Hontai Yoshin-ryu
Kito-ryu

Iaijutsu
Muso Jikiden Eishin-ryu
Muso Shinden-ryu
Hoki-ryu
Mugai-ryu
Sekiguchi-ryu iai
Hayashizaki Muso-ryu
Tamiya-ryu
Mugai-ryu
Hasegawa Eishin-ryu

Swordsmanship
Yagyu Shinkage-ryu
Ono-ha Itto-ryu
Sekiguchi-haItto-ryu
Hokushin Itto-ryu
Hyoho Niten Ichi-ryu
Jikishinkage-ryu
Maniwa Nen-ryu
Shizen-ryu
Kyo Hachi-ryu
Tamiya-ryu
Jigen-ryu
Kage No-ryu

Staff (bojutsu, jojutsu)
Chikubushima-ryu
Shinto (or Shindo) Muso-ryu
Kukishin-ryu bo
Imaeda-ryu jo

Shuriken jutsu
Shirai-ryu
Negishi-ryu

Sojutsu
Owari Kan-ryu
Hozoin-ryu

Kyujutsu
Ogasawara-ryu (also a school of etiquette and horsemanship)
Takeda-ryu
Heki-ryu

Naginatajutsu
Tendo-ryu
Jikishinkage-ryu naginatado

Kusarigama
Jikiyuishin-ryu


Copyright 2003 by Wayne Muromoto and Tengu Press. All Rights Reserved.