View Full Version : History of the Black Belt - By Bob Hubbard


Bob Hubbard
01-02-2006, 01:50 AM
History of the Black Belt
By Bob Hubbard Most martial arts schools have some means of ranking students. Usually, it is in the form of a colored belt, though sashes, cords and other means are also used. In the ‘old days’, rank was usually limited to “Teacher” and “Student”. You determined your rank by fighting other martial artists, sometimes to the death. With the arts becoming more mainstream, a different and less lethal system was needed.

The introduction of colored belts to denote rank is credited to Jigaro Kano, founder of the art of Judo. It was later adapted by Gichin Funakoshi for use in his Shotokan Karate schools. As Karate became better known, other arts began using colored belts as well. Today, the term “Black Belt” is in the popular mind set as an expert martial artist.

Each system, and even each school within a system can have a different color system. Most schools start at white, with black reserved for the highest levels. Some however, use a different system. The French art of Savate for example, uses a glove system, rather than belts, with a silver glove being one of the highest ranks. Contrary to popular opinion, a “Black Belt” is not the highest rank. Many systems use the color red to signify highest achievement.

The color meanings also vary from art to art. In many, the colors simply represent a 1,2,3 type progression, whereas in others, each color has certain attributes, requirements and creeds a student must master in order to progress. The color progressions also differ from art to art. While a 3rd level student might wear an orange belt in 1 art, in another, the 3rd level might wear a blue, or even black! When looking at the colors, one sometimes must do a little digging to understand exactly how they compare.

Shortly after World War 2, the belts were dyed a new, darker color each time a student was promoted. This was done due to shortages of materials. Today, elaborate ceremonies have evolved concerning the removal of the old belt, and awarding of the new.

There are many theories and legends concerning the white-to-black progression of the traditional karate belt. One such myth is that you must never wash your belt. As you train, your sweat and the grime of training gradually darkens your belt. After many years of hard work, it is now black. Sadly, this is more myth than reality. Most schools have a dedication to good hygiene, and wearing a grimy and smelly belt or gi are usually frowned upon.

There are of course many more myths about what the belts mean. One such urban legend is that upon becoming a “Black Belt”, one must register their hands with the police. Most law enforcement officials just smile at that one.

Today, we have a virtual rainbow of belts. There are solid colors, half stripes, quarter stripes, full stripes, even a camouflage belt! No two systems use an identical rank system. One art can take 3 years, another 5, another decades to achieve a “black belt”. One thing is certain however; the use of belts and the idea that a “Black Belt” is someone of merit will continue.

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Bob Hubbard is an administrator of the popular martial arts portal site MartialTalk.com and president of SilverStar WebDesigns inc., a web site design and hosting company specializing in affordable solutions for martial artists. A student of all the arts, he is currently studying Modern Arnis.
Bob can be reached at kaith@martialtalk.com


Published
February 2004 – MartialTalk Magazine
Copyright ©2004 Bob Hubbard - All Rights Reserved

terryl965
01-02-2006, 02:01 AM
Great Post Bob, I enjoyed very much.
Terry

mantis
01-02-2006, 02:06 AM
oh man
mucho gracious
good job.
i want to add that sometimes you will have different colors of belts within the same system, and the same family lineage!

green meanie
01-02-2006, 08:16 AM
Nice work.

kenpo0324
01-02-2006, 11:23 AM
Great Job.

fistlaw720
01-05-2006, 01:22 PM
Awesome post.....

I read somewhere that Kano got his idea of white/black belts from watching Competitive Japanese Swimmers. White was for the beginer and Red was for the advanced swimmer. Kano used this concept in the judo arena to show rookie vs. skilled. But switched red out for black.

Any Judo guys know if this story holds water?

Navarre
01-05-2006, 01:32 PM
That's a great article, Bob. Thanks for posting it.

Kacey
01-05-2006, 08:14 PM
Thanks for posting that - I knew some of it in general, but I haven't seen that much detail about some of the progressions, although I did know that dye was used to make belts different colors, so they had to get darker each time.

MCG
01-06-2006, 09:59 PM
Great post! I have heard alot about getting to black belt. Last night Sensei told me about "completing the circle". One starts out as a white belt, progresses to black belt. From Shodan to Judan the belt fades. By the time, you reach Judan the belt as faded back to white thus "completing the circle".
Do all Judans wear gold belts? Or is that style specific?

RichK
01-07-2006, 02:52 PM
Awesome post.....

I read somewhere that Kano got his idea of white/black belts from watching Competitive Japanese Swimmers. White was for the beginer and Red was for the advanced swimmer. Kano used this concept in the judo arena to show rookie vs. skilled. But switched red out for black.

Any Judo guys know if this story holds water?

Hey nice pun job :-)

fistlaw720
01-07-2006, 08:33 PM
:asian:

green meanie
01-07-2006, 09:53 PM
Awesome post.....

I read somewhere that Kano got his idea of white/black belts from watching Competitive Japanese Swimmers. White was for the beginer and Red was for the advanced swimmer. Kano used this concept in the judo arena to show rookie vs. skilled. But switched red out for black.

Any Judo guys know if this story holds water?

Yes and no. He got the idea for belt ranking from other athletic programs that were being used in Japanese public schools, most notably swimming.

The red and white colors have been used in competition (and I think it might still be) to distinguish between the competitors. In competitions one competitor is red and one is white. The judge of the match raises a red or white flag to show who scores the point. It's comparable to us using green and red in our public school compeititons: green for the home team and red for the visitors. I'm not sure what the origins are behind the choosing of the red and white colors but I know they were using red in white in swimming competitons before Kano started using it to distinguish between Judo competitors.

AlwaysTraining
01-13-2006, 10:44 PM
Hey Bob,

What styles hold a 'red' belt as being the most advanced color?

Bob Hubbard
01-13-2006, 10:52 PM
I've seen it in some FMA systems (Some Modern Arnis orgs use a black belt with red edges for high ranks I believe), and in Judo, Kano used both a red/white (for 6th-8th) and a solid red belt to indicate 9th and higher ranks. Also, contrary to popular belief, 10th is not the "end". The original english language copy (1955) of Illustrated Kodokan Judo, by Jigoro Kano, says: "There is no limit...on the grade one can receive. Therefore if one does reach a stage above 10th dan... there is no reason why he should not be promoted to 11th dan."

The MMA kid!
01-14-2006, 12:47 AM
the master of brazilian Jiu jitsu wears a red belt.

i beleive Helio Gracie passed it on to Rickson.

green meanie
01-14-2006, 08:51 AM
the master of brazilian Jiu jitsu wears a red belt.

i beleive Helio Gracie passed it on to Rickson.

It hasn't been passed on to anyone yet. If it goes to anyone it will go Helio's oldest son Rorion who his father ranked 9th degree in 2003.

Henderson
01-15-2006, 10:21 AM
Professor Wally Jay of Small Circle Jujutsu also wears a red belt.


Do all Judans wear gold belts?
Never seen a gold belt, other than a gold sash in CMA. But as far as Judans' go...they can wear whatever belt they want. Who's gonna argue with them? Let me re-phrase that, LEGITIMATE judans. There are way too many 40 yr old, self-proclaimed 10th dans running around out there embarrassing themselves and MA in general.

Respects,

Frank

rmclain
05-16-2006, 06:51 PM
What would be interesting is finding the basis for the Kyu/gup and Dan numerical ranking structure. I've heard that this ranking comes from the Japanese game "Go." This game is much older than martial arts rankings. Does anyone know if Gm Jigaro Kano was a "Go" player?

R. McLain