I know that from one point of view this thread should probably be in the GMAT forum. But I'm trying to get the perspective of CMAists who have had some firsthand familiarity with the Karate-based arts—the Okinawan, Japanese and Korean styles of Karate—to see if anyone has a clear picture of the relationships, both at the strategic and tactical level, between the various CMAs on the one hand and the apparently much more recent Karate-based arts on the other.We have reasonably documentary evidence that chuan fa traditions go back quite a ways in Fukien Province, probably hundreds of years, for example, while the same kind of evidence is very solid on the 19th c. origins of the modern linear karate-based arts in Okinawa.
Patrick McCarthy, Riichard Kim and others have argued that Tode Sakugawa, Bushi Matsumura's teacher, learned White Crane chuan fa from a high ranking MAist and diplomat, Kong Su Kung who took TS on as an apprentice `on loan', as it were, from the noble monk Takahara, TS' first teacher, and whose name was the source of the name of the kusanku kata. What Matsumura, the creative genius behind the Karate-based arts, did was to fuse the White Crane elements of Sakugawa's chuan-fa-based system with the grappling, close-contact-based native Okinawan todi systems using many locks, pins and leverage techs, and added a core technical element—hard linear impact based on maximum striking velocity of the impact surface—to produce the precursor of modern karate.
That's a story, and it might be right, or wrong, or a bit right and a bit wrong. I'm a TKDist, hence a Korean karateka, and have no particular horse in this race. But what I'd very much like is to hear from you CMAists who either practice, or have at least studied, the linear striking systems that go under the general rubric of karate, and to learn what you regard as the essential relationship between the CMAs and the O/J/KMAs—between the Chinese arts and Karate in the most general sense, Not historically, primarily (though that's always interesting) but technically. How are they different, and how are they similar? Do you think they have anything to say to each other in terms of applied self-defense methods?
Patrick McCarthy, Riichard Kim and others have argued that Tode Sakugawa, Bushi Matsumura's teacher, learned White Crane chuan fa from a high ranking MAist and diplomat, Kong Su Kung who took TS on as an apprentice `on loan', as it were, from the noble monk Takahara, TS' first teacher, and whose name was the source of the name of the kusanku kata. What Matsumura, the creative genius behind the Karate-based arts, did was to fuse the White Crane elements of Sakugawa's chuan-fa-based system with the grappling, close-contact-based native Okinawan todi systems using many locks, pins and leverage techs, and added a core technical element—hard linear impact based on maximum striking velocity of the impact surface—to produce the precursor of modern karate.
That's a story, and it might be right, or wrong, or a bit right and a bit wrong. I'm a TKDist, hence a Korean karateka, and have no particular horse in this race. But what I'd very much like is to hear from you CMAists who either practice, or have at least studied, the linear striking systems that go under the general rubric of karate, and to learn what you regard as the essential relationship between the CMAs and the O/J/KMAs—between the Chinese arts and Karate in the most general sense, Not historically, primarily (though that's always interesting) but technically. How are they different, and how are they similar? Do you think they have anything to say to each other in terms of applied self-defense methods?