MartialTalk Presents: KMATalk, A MartialTalk Community dedicated to the Polite and Professional exploration of the Traditional Korean Martial Arts
MartialTalk Home PageMartialTalk Main ForumKorean martial Arts TalkView New kMA TopicsView All New Topics
Martial Arts Encyclopedia and DictionaryMartialTalk Online MagazineMartial Arts Video LibraryMartial Arts PhotosReference LibraryCamps, Seminars and other EventsThe MT Network, a group of cooperating sites covering all your martial arts needs.School Directory
MartialTalk StaffAdvisory BoardSupporting MembershipsWeb Site Design ServiceWeb Site ServicesAll About MartialTalk
martial arts equipment
Martial Arts Equipment


Go Back   MartialTalk.Com > Korean Martial Arts Talk > Tang Soo Do

Tang Soo Do Tang Soo Do is a Korean martial art which teaches empty hand and foot fighting, fighting forms, self-defense, and weapons. Tang Soo Do also teaches people to live a healthy and harmonious life. This ancient martial art traces its lineage back 2,000 years to the Korean peninsula.

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 10-15-2002, 09:42 AM
Koga-Shinobi
Guest
Posts: n/a
Casino cash: $
 

TSD-TKD-Karate

Heya all, to a beginner MAist, I wonder if someone can try help me understand the differences in style between TSD, TKD and karate. I've heard they're all pretty simialr, specially the kicking aspects. WHat're the differences/similarities??
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 10-20-2002, 11:51 AM
Shinzu
Guest
Posts: n/a
Casino cash: $
 

i have only seen TKD, i have never trained in it. i do however train in TSD. i heard they are somewhat similar being both korean arts. sorry i couldn't help more
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 11-01-2002, 01:11 AM
arnisador arnisador is offline
Account Closed
Posts: 28,883
Casino cash: $54533
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: Terre Haute, IN
Thanks: 2,075
Thanked 1,968 Times in 1,262 Posts
 


20,000 Post Club
Rep Power: 0
arnisador has much to be proud ofarnisador has much to be proud ofarnisador has much to be proud ofarnisador has much to be proud ofarnisador has much to be proud ofarnisador has much to be proud ofarnisador has much to be proud ofarnisador has much to be proud ofarnisador has much to be proud of
Post TKD, TSD, and Karate.

Both TKD and TSD were heavily influenced by Japanese karate; the former in particular is very much a Korean interpretation of Karate.
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 11-15-2002, 04:31 PM
Dim Mak
Guest
Posts: n/a
Casino cash: $
 

Hello,

They are all related. Bear with the following history to understand the differences in the arts you asked about.

From a Korean standpoint, following WWII various styles of karate were brought to Korea by Koreans that had lived and studied in Japan, Okinawa, or even China. But, since this is about karate, I'll leave out the CHinese influence for now.

Five major school of martial art emerged in Korea from these Koreans that had returned to Korea. The Koreans generally called their art either "Tang Soo Do" or "Kong Soo Do" before the 1950's.

Korean culture uses the feet for "dirty" things(close to the ground) such as fighting, walking, kicking some bum off the front doorstep, etc - while the hands are reserved for "higher-mind" things such as writing, art, poetry, etc. So, naturally the Koreans favored kicking techniques over hand techniques.

In the 1950's, Koreans sought to seperate themselves from their previous Japnese oppressors. This included trying to make a uniquely "Korean" martial art for the country. Because of it's resemblence to the foot-fighting art of "Tae Kyun" practiced during the Yi Dynasty in Korea, the name of "Taekwondo" was suggested and adopted as a name for the Korean-karate - type martial arts. A few of the teachers resisted this name change, including Hwang Kee, who preferred to keep the older name, "Tang Soo Do."

The push for Korean martial art independence continued into the 1960's, even labeling Koreans practicing the older "Tang Soo Do" arts as "traitors to Korea" with lots of name calling. Most teachers quit, were assimilated into the new larger Korean Taekwondo Association(now WTF) because of a promised paycheck, or simply left the country for freedom to teach and preserve the older ways. Taekwondo became a sport with rules of competition.

Depending on the teacher, and how legitimate their link to Tang Soo Do teachings, their techniques should be very karate-like, with the exception of more kicking techniques.

The sport of Taekwondo around the world nowdays, doesn't even resemble the old teachings. I imagine it more resembles the way Tae Kyun was used at the Dan Oh Festivals in Korea during the Yi Dynasty. It was a competitive "game" for demonstration during that time - using the feet to score a point on the other competitor.

R. McLain
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:49 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
All content copyright 2001-2009 Martialtalk.com - All Rights Reserved.
Ownership of Posts - All posts and content become the property of MartialTalk.com except for text and images that are themselves on copyright.
Reproduction in whole or in part without prior written consent is not permitted. MartialTalk.com™
Advertize on Martial Talk - Terms and Conditions (Rules) - MartialTalk Banners for Your WebSite - Site Traffic and Stats

Design by Bob Hubbard
Hosting by SilverStar WebDesigns Inc.

The MartialTalk Project
MartialTalk.com | KenpoTalk.com | FMATalk.com | MartialTalk.net | Martialpedia.com
JMATalk.com
|CMATalk.com | KMATalk.com | SwordArtsTalk.com | WNYMartialArts.com
FMAResources.com | HolisticArtsTalk.com | KenpoTalkMagazine.com | MartialTalkMagazine.com
Forums Directory
Page generated in 0.21422 seconds with 13 queries