The Ran Network

The Ran Network

The Ran Network

World Martial Culture

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Aikido Timeline

Aikido Timeline

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  • @bierbrauer11
    @bierbrauer11Күн бұрын

    Hip and shoulder throws are radically different in aikido. It is a leading throw vs a jacking/leverage throw. It is the only technique I have executed in self defense mode. It did involve tucking the head of the jerk who attacked me.

  • @user-zp7sx6be3m
    @user-zp7sx6be3m2 күн бұрын

    😮ズッコケ❗武田惣角🎉👍️、いいね!❗大東流合気柔術‼️

  • @velly027
    @velly02712 күн бұрын

    Don't use ai voices

  • @Goshin65
    @Goshin6514 күн бұрын

    O-sensei was right: rank means very little.... but boy do we make a big deal out of nothing, don't we.

  • @longdongsilver4719
    @longdongsilver471918 күн бұрын

    Is this the birth of bullshido?

  • @michelebecciu9698
    @michelebecciu969813 күн бұрын

    Couldn't you have said from the beginning that you are a worthy representative of the failure of this society, without necessarily revealing it under every comment ? Unless you actually think you said something intelligent …

  • @medk
    @medk25 күн бұрын

    C'est du foutage de gueule.

  • @JustMe-vz3wd
    @JustMe-vz3wd26 күн бұрын

    An irrelevant person in the whole larger story. and "adoption" in that era in Japan is completely different from our western notion of "adoption". Admiral Takeshita similarly was "adopted".

  • @tonykuli
    @tonykuli29 күн бұрын

    Beyond technique

  • @kirkneff2247
    @kirkneff2247Ай бұрын

    Get a robot that can say “don” (soft “a”) a level of black belt grading, instead of “Dan” (hard “a”), a common male first name.

  • @gyunan79
    @gyunan79Ай бұрын

    Everyone should watch this movie, it's a great movie.

  • @michelebecciu9698
    @michelebecciu9698Ай бұрын

    All humanity is poorer without him. But reading some comments, I think this is right. Humanity didn't deserve it. Certainly not this “humanity”. A humanity that literally descends to the same level as animals, and therefore it is good that it is only interested in what happens in the "cages".

  • @pierrew1532
    @pierrew1532Ай бұрын

    Aikido is probably cool even useful as an energetic practice like tai chi etc, but let's be honest guys, as martial techniques it is a myth. And none of the footage with Master Ueshiba actually show somebody attacking him with power and skills. It is only formal pseudo-attacks by disciples, respectful of their master, not resisting even a split second. It is just choregraphy. And aikido has been painfully debunked at the begining of MMA era. But it the whole concept looks good.

  • @expertlydriven8162
    @expertlydriven8162Ай бұрын

    Hmmm.....I beg to differ. Ai Ki is an energy based art. Yes the demonstrations are face value ....but the principals of meeting force, following force, power/energy misdirections/ reversals simple 3 sided physics to totally dis balance an openet while simultaneously employing well practiced boxing to take down/ grappling are VERY real, not to mention a core principal in every REAL martial art. It's also about balance awareness... disruption....such as ....judo, shoot wrestling, core ju jit su.... Plus let's be honest here ....what it really comes down to is who the teacher is/was and how they taught it.....for example,. The man that taught me aikido concepts was an Olympic boxing coach to Roy Jones Jr and additionally one of the first Americans to knock a Thai Boxer out in Thailand.....safe to say the guy taught me how to street fight. He also taught me about flowing energy and how to manipulate it....then how to blend both with real functionality.... Tell ya the truth....I used to practice Ai Ki in mosh pits...no shit. Most fun I ever had ! Also had more people buying me drinks after taking a few minutes at set break to talk with all the guys I threw around like rag dolls but never let em hit the floor...it was just practice....wasnt trying to hurt people. Question to you.....how long have you trained martial art and what systems?

  • @kenwilson6160
    @kenwilson6160Ай бұрын

    He was undefeafed for decades. When this video was made he was recognized as the leading martial artist in Japan and this was Japan gearing up for war. His ukes in these videos are all high level jujitsu practioners. I trained with one of his students in 1989, a 70 year old woman and she rang my bell. 15 minutes of my life where I desperately wished I was somewhere else. You simply don't know what you are talking about.

  • @michelebecciu9698
    @michelebecciu9698Ай бұрын

    “Aikido was painfully debunked at the beginning of the MMA era” … “I think there is no need to add anything else, it's all Your Honor.”

  • @michelebecciu9698
    @michelebecciu9698Ай бұрын

    My friend, I want to be kind with you. If you are looking for a martial practice that you can reveal to your opponent in the context of a competition, that's simply not Aikido. If, however, you are looking for an effective technique in the context of a real aggression by someone who does not know and does not imagine that his target is capable of defending himself, there are several, and it just so happens that Aikido may also be among these. While I don't want to change your opinion in any way (which in fact I sincerely hope remains unchanged), I hope to have at least raised the doubt that you and some other "debunkers" may simply not be able to contextualize a martial art, simply because your concept of martial art is limited solely to what happens inside a cage.

  • @kevinappleton5746
    @kevinappleton574619 күн бұрын

    All of you people who try to deny the power of Aikido are so full of crap. Try me...

  • @Andrath
    @AndrathАй бұрын

    Those bajonet/rifle techniques are awesome.

  • @longdongsilver4719
    @longdongsilver471918 күн бұрын

    And so fake.

  • @raideenj
    @raideenjАй бұрын

    Please add english transcript!

  • @yahoorich6gt
    @yahoorich6gt2 ай бұрын

    One eye symbol..Nephilim hybrids👽👽👽

  • @user-sy5gs6gt8f
    @user-sy5gs6gt8f2 ай бұрын

    What a Jedi, a pity there is no light saber combat in here.

  • @pauline9975
    @pauline99752 ай бұрын

    Merci pour avoir posté ce film !! Etsuko Shihomi est la meilleure !!

  • @nicolasartheau822
    @nicolasartheau8222 ай бұрын

    Mach ado about nothing. ... O’Sensei did’nt care much about ranks and obviously liked to joke with those who gave them to much importance. The tenth dan of Koichi Tohei is an exception occured for spiritual reasons we have no means nor right to évaluate.

  • @BoyG10
    @BoyG102 ай бұрын

    O'Sensei insisted Tohei a 10th because of his mastery of ki and techniques and being the chief promoter of the art across the continents particularly Hawaii and US.

  • @curtrod
    @curtrod3 ай бұрын

    grown men pretending, pitiful

  • @privatesalsa1700
    @privatesalsa1700Ай бұрын

    @curtrod ANGRY WHITE PYJAMAS

  • @privatesalsa1700
    @privatesalsa1700Ай бұрын

    Angry white pyjamas

  • @robertthomas3777
    @robertthomas37773 ай бұрын

    All before John Wick. Amazing footage and quality. What a find. Just think that the world was recovering from WW1, getting over the Great Depression all leading in to WW2.

  • @stevedows8501
    @stevedows85013 ай бұрын

    Tohei sensei better

  • @carlosbonefontphd2591
    @carlosbonefontphd25913 ай бұрын

    Interesting content on the topic. Thank you 🙏

  • @towag
    @towag4 ай бұрын

    Stuffed dogi's me thinks!! 😂

  • @user-xb2ru3rf4z
    @user-xb2ru3rf4z4 ай бұрын

    Cela s'apparente à un jeu d'enfant,pourtant à y voir la profondeur de la technique, c'est purement scientifique

  • @arjunadan3812
    @arjunadan38124 ай бұрын

    The most underated master martial artist! But the best of all time!

  • @longdongsilver4719
    @longdongsilver471918 күн бұрын

    Did'nt you mean the most overrated?

  • @arjunadan3812
    @arjunadan381217 күн бұрын

    @@longdongsilver4719 Do you know any other martial arts master who could read the thoughts of those around him (like Morihei)?

  • @longdongsilver4719
    @longdongsilver471917 күн бұрын

    @@arjunadan3812 Do you have any proof that he could do that?

  • @arjunadan3812
    @arjunadan381216 күн бұрын

    @@longdongsilver4719 I read about it în the book "The power of harmony" >the biography of Morihei Ueshiba, the founder of Aikido - by John Stevens, but also many other amazing abilities of Morihei. Morihei Ueshiba is the greatest martial arts practitioner in history. At the age of 80 he could disarm any opponent, knock down any number of attackers, pin down his opponent with a single finger. In 1942, during World War II, he had his third state of enlightenment, realizing the absurdity of war, understanding that the true path of the warrior is the Art of Peace, the true spiritual warrior being the one who has the ability to conquer using the force of love. An aikido practitioner does not aim to destroy the opponent, but to control the aggression, so that the aggressor understands that it is not through violence that he will be able to get what he wants. Aikido is M.Ueshiba's gift to humanity, it is truly a spiritual path that can transform the practitioner in a profound way, on all level. Although invincible as a warrior, he was primarily a follower of peace, abhorring fighting, war, violence of any kind. Besides, Aikido, the martial path founded by him, translates as "Art of Peace". In 1925, following a fight in which he, unarmed, faced the furious attacks of a master swordsman, he had his first enlightenment, as a result of which he understood that a true warrior must constantly manifest Divine Love. In December 1940, following the practice of a purification ritual, he experienced the second state of enlightenment, after which he understood that the techniques should be used for the cultivation of life, virtue, wisdom and not for the destruction of people.

  • @Aikibiker1
    @Aikibiker14 ай бұрын

    Interesting that Osensei demonstrated defenses against tackling/double leg takedown type attacks. That is something missing in modern Aikido training.

  • @colinmorgan2660
    @colinmorgan26604 ай бұрын

    O'Sensei would have been very powerful for 51 yrs old and anyone who has ever felt kokyo power from any senior instructor at the same age will have felt the same amazing power. Great video.

  • @fredricclack7137
    @fredricclack71374 ай бұрын

    👁️ Seidokan ☯️

  • @fredricclack7137
    @fredricclack71374 ай бұрын

    Aikido Misogi HAI! 🥋

  • @fredricclack7137
    @fredricclack71374 ай бұрын

    Belt holds 👆👖😊☯️

  • @fredricclack7137
    @fredricclack71374 ай бұрын

    Seidokan Aikido 6th ☯️🥋

  • @NatureIskatel
    @NatureIskatel4 ай бұрын

    Sensei do not kill humans. Paradise

  • @fredricclack7137
    @fredricclack71374 ай бұрын

    👁️ Seidokan ☯️ 2 appreciate Aikido 1 must Experience Ki/Qi flow & extension from a True Master technician! 🥋

  • @fredricclack7137
    @fredricclack71374 ай бұрын

    👁️ Seidokan ☯️

  • @joespina3019
    @joespina30195 ай бұрын

    Japanese jujitsu. It works superior to. comparing. aikido 👋💪💯

  • @vladimirpoutine7522
    @vladimirpoutine75225 ай бұрын

    I like the history and all but lets be honest, he's not really doing anything. Not just here, but in all the older videos. This art is pleasing to the eye, but not a useful tool on the street.

  • @jeremymanson1781
    @jeremymanson17815 ай бұрын

    O'Sensei came from a fighting arts background. However, with Aikido, he specifically designed an art that aimed to protect practice opponent(s). The focus of this art was self development. There are many many full on combat arts available. Aikido is not one of them.

  • @aguilabet1294
    @aguilabet12945 ай бұрын

    @@jeremymanson1781 Entonces no es un arte marcial, solo un ejercicio físico

  • @vladimirpoutine7522
    @vladimirpoutine75225 ай бұрын

    @@jeremymanson1781 If that's true then I don't disagree. It's a visually pleasing art.

  • @jeremymanson1781
    @jeremymanson17815 ай бұрын

    @@aguilabet1294 yes and no 🌻 Some of my Aikido Sensei have told us Aikido is not a 'martial art' in the usual understanding of that term. The ultimate goal is to be spontaneous and formless. And Aikido is non-competitive and has no 'rules'. The ideal is that when conflict arises it is resolved without any kind of clash. This is simply a 'direction of travel', as in reality, very few attain this and if conflict arises of course we first look after ourselves and worry about the aggressor very much as an after-thought!

  • @aguilabet1294
    @aguilabet12945 ай бұрын

    @@jeremymanson1781 Si no tiene utilidad para el combate no es un arte marcial. En la guerra o la supervivencia tambien se corre, pero en un corredor no es una artista marcial. Los escritores tambien narran las guerras, pero eso no los hace artistas marciales . No se puede confundir a la gente, para hacer prevalecer un punto solo por interes propio.

  • @liasuzukisvirtualdojo6240
    @liasuzukisvirtualdojo62405 ай бұрын

    Looks good!👍

  • @EyeOfTheVeda
    @EyeOfTheVeda6 ай бұрын

    What a legend

  • @kellypurdue1990
    @kellypurdue19906 ай бұрын

    Agree with Wagner that Osensei was first and foremost a religous man. The question then arises as to how his belief changed his art. I think the investigations startedby Stan Pranin and continued by others, notably the two guests here , show there is little change externally. Since we cannot replicate his belief paradigm, indeed, cannot even understand his talks on the subject except in the broadest terms, i ask what did his process do to his way of thinking/being with his practice. For me the simplest way to approach this is the subjugation of ego. Looking at Osensei's earlier practice of Chingon Buddhism and his later interest in Omoto Kyo and their view on meditation/prayer giving rise to spirit possession and awareness of the many deities around them coupled with O sensei saying he was a reincarnation of 2 different deities and the times he said he didn't do an action but rather it was a kami within him. This leads me to believe this is why many comment on his being so relaxed. He utterly believed he was being taken care of as it were. He didn't view the interaction with an aggressor in the framework of having to overcome using confrontational strength, rather joining (Aiki) and moving to a martial conclusion. Henry Kono told the story of yin yang, he also mentioned training with the uchi deshi of the day and as good as they were you always knew why/how you hit the ground. With O sensei you fell down and didn't know why. Sunadomori Sensei told us O sensei said the purpose of the techniques was to remove the sediment from the joints ie move freely. Tohei Sensei said the most important thing he learned from Osensei was relax. I think a serious investigation into relax is the portal to O sensei's art

  • @habubob7270
    @habubob72706 ай бұрын

    Please notice that Sensei telegraphs to the UKE how and where to attack. No spontaneous movements. Just a Choreographed dance😴

  • @gbrldz0
    @gbrldz05 ай бұрын

    If you watch closely, he takes their center first before throwing them and of course the defender is also demonstrating how to fall correctly(escape the technique) in different situations.

  • @Aikibiker1
    @Aikibiker14 ай бұрын

    Of course, it is a scripted demonstration.

  • @alanpower8234
    @alanpower82343 ай бұрын

    It would be less embarrassing to just say you do not understand what you are looking at.

  • @Aikibiker1
    @Aikibiker13 ай бұрын

    @@alanpower8234 I knew a guy that actually fought a challmatch against Morihei Ueshiba in the 1950's. He said Osensei was very good . Most people do not understand that what you see in a martial arts demonstration is not a representation of that art's combat effectiveness, it is a showcase of the skills of the presenters in that art. Whether that is something like this video, karate students doing katas, TKD guys breaking boards, or BJJ students doing self defense demos.

  • @kenashcom7580
    @kenashcom75802 ай бұрын

    How do you think samurai practiced disarming an opponent without killing each other? This is an ancient art made modern.

  • @teodisk6337
    @teodisk63376 ай бұрын

    Wie sehr ich diesen Mann verehre !!!!!!

  • @igorponomarew4548
    @igorponomarew45487 ай бұрын

    Блез Паскаль

  • @igorponomarew4548
    @igorponomarew45487 ай бұрын

    Блез Паскаль

  • @sherman4970
    @sherman49707 ай бұрын

    The way they hand out Dan grades nowadays, I’m not surprised that there aren’t thousands of Tenth Dans out there!!!!

  • @igorponomarew4548
    @igorponomarew45487 ай бұрын

    Блез Паскаль

  • @Durante_di_Alighiero
    @Durante_di_Alighiero4 ай бұрын

    That's reserved for the Japanese only.

  • @JL-jm5tc
    @JL-jm5tc7 ай бұрын

    🙏🏻

  • @user-so8oq3sq8z
    @user-so8oq3sq8z7 ай бұрын

    I wonder if Japanese soldiers for the second world war were trained with similar things

  • @Aikibiker1
    @Aikibiker14 ай бұрын

    Some of the Imperial Japanese intelligence agents (sekihotai?) received Aikido training initially, but this was changed to karate later because it is quicker to learn and become effective.

  • @Republican-00769
    @Republican-007692 ай бұрын

    All of the Japanese soldiers were trained in Brazilian juijitsu. Duh?!

  • @fahmikadaffi5873
    @fahmikadaffi58738 ай бұрын

    sin lam ba

  • @jb6368
    @jb63688 ай бұрын

    Cancer of liver,,was he a drinker?

  • @therannetwork
    @therannetwork8 ай бұрын

    "For as long as I’d known Sensei he has had a weak liver but I heard that his troubles began during the affair in Mongolia. When he went there with Onisaburo Deguchi they were captured by mounted bandits and were dangerously close to losing their lives. The bandits’ leader apparently told him that if he drank a full bucket of salt water in one gulp he would spare their lives. Sensei drank every last drop of the salt water and his party was saved. However, he has had liver trouble ever since." Shioda, Gozo, Aikido Shugyo, Shindokan Books, 2002

  • @christianboddum8783
    @christianboddum87837 ай бұрын

    After the atomic bomb the people had to get some medicine (can't recall the name) and many got cancers and liver issues after that. Nishio sensei was one, though he also had a history of hitting the bottle after training, so that did help either....

  • @alastairfraser8177
    @alastairfraser81778 ай бұрын

    Fascinating documentary