Peichin Takahara
Peichin Takahara | |
---|---|
Born | 1683 Akata-Chō\Southern Shuri, Ryūkyū Kingdom |
Died | 1760 |
Style | Ch'uan Fa |
Teacher(s) | Chatan Yara,[1] |
Notable students | Kanga Sakukawa |
Takahara Pēchin (高原 親雲上) was an early karate practitioner. He was known as a great warrior[citation needed] and is attributed to have been the first to explain the aspects or principles of the dō ("way")[citation needed]. Pēchin (親雲上) was a social class of the Ryūkyū Kingdom.
These principles are: 1) ijō, the way-compassion, humility, and love. 2) katsu, the laws-complete understanding of all techniques and forms of karate, and 3) fo dedication-the seriousness of karate that must be understood not only in practice, but in actual combat. The collective translation is: "One’s duty to himself and his fellow man." He was the first teacher of Sakukawa "Tode" Kanga who was to become known as the "father of Okinawan karate.".[2]
References[]
- ^ First Karate pioneers Archived 2009-04-22 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Takahara, Peichin
Categories:
- Okinawan male karateka
- 1683 births
- 1760 deaths
- Ryukyuan people
- Japanese karate biography stubs