Natori Ryu

Natori Ryu

The samurai war school Natori Ryu

Six Ninja Tools

Six Ninja Tools

Samurai Medicine

Samurai Medicine

Kogai

Kogai

Samurai Hidden Dagger

Samurai Hidden Dagger

Katana Pommel

Katana Pommel

Japanese Bows

Japanese Bows

Japanese Fans

Japanese Fans

Sageo Cord

Sageo Cord

Samurai Tools Cloth

Samurai Tools Cloth

Samurai Heads

Samurai Heads

Samurai Tactics

Samurai Tactics

Join a Samurai School

Join a Samurai School

Samurai when to Relax

Samurai when to Relax

Samurai times of Marching

Samurai times of Marching

Пікірлер

  • @activeenglishlecreusot9628
    @activeenglishlecreusot96287 күн бұрын

    Hard to understand anything.

  • @ericgrousilliat7180
    @ericgrousilliat718010 күн бұрын

    Not really Shinkage ryu...just a bad copy...

  • @alephninja
    @alephninja10 күн бұрын

    This is a beautiful practice to have going on. I love the amount of respect put into this school.

  • @tochiro6902
    @tochiro690211 күн бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @TheCases-qb6vz
    @TheCases-qb6vz11 күн бұрын

    Very good information! Thank you Antony, very appreciative for all you do!

  • @jwgoon
    @jwgoon14 күн бұрын

    I thought Shinkage Ryu seiho doesnt have any vocalised kiai and employs the fukuro shinai except for Empi no Tachi?

  • @kanibasami1234
    @kanibasami123417 күн бұрын

    8:23 good

  • @pericuno
    @pericuno21 күн бұрын

    Korrydo

  • @unknownsoldier399
    @unknownsoldier39924 күн бұрын

    Whatever dude

  • @joshuafinn6038
    @joshuafinn603829 күн бұрын

    These videos are EPIC, brother!! 3 separate camera angles. Close ups of the cutting target areas. Visible footwork demonstration. Really awesome man. I train Iaido in the Kobudo style. None of these haters on here even train, and you guys are 100X the sword fighters than they can dream of being, while watching demon slayer for the 500th time....

  • @richardschneider4775
    @richardschneider4775Ай бұрын

    Too much sojo make the brains soft

  • @3rdeye7thdimension
    @3rdeye7thdimensionАй бұрын

    Meanwhile, dead shinobi laugh at us for fixating upon their out-dated tech while eschewing modern implements. Talk about staring at the finger to miss all that heavenly glory.

  • @tochiro6902
    @tochiro6902Ай бұрын

    Thank you very much 👍

  • @signor_zuzzu
    @signor_zuzzuАй бұрын

    Of course the most important tool is the cat 🧐 Fun fact: take one 🐱 with you while training in the woods, they might teach you a trick or 2 😉

  • @scorpzgca
    @scorpzgcaАй бұрын

    This is excellent I want to join wow cool skills and martial arts

  • @moonishkalicheran3470
    @moonishkalicheran3470Ай бұрын

    Thats different and that cool because it is relevant to the modern times, there are functional traditions and there are dead traditions. This is an example of how old traditions needs to be adapted into modern times so that they would not become dead traditions like most other martial art schools. 💪🏻

  • @tochiro6902
    @tochiro69022 ай бұрын

    Thank you very much.

  • @Ki_Hon
    @Ki_Hon2 ай бұрын

    It is nice to see, that this "modern" life hack is actually 400 years old. Works with earpods and drag-leashes (for small dogs) as well.

  • @tochiro6902
    @tochiro69022 ай бұрын

    Thank you all very much, I think it's very nice that something like this is shown, it's not always about fighting, the little things are usually crucial. Thank you 💪

  • @getlostrobyn5498
    @getlostrobyn54982 ай бұрын

    All Koryu must be passed on directly otherwise it is meaningless

  • @natoriryu
    @natoriryu2 ай бұрын

    That’s really not true at all. In fact research shows that’s the opposite

  • @user-lq2yi8op7w
    @user-lq2yi8op7w22 күн бұрын

    @@natoriryu What research? Your amateurish guesswork? Please cite any valuable, authoritative source that can corroborate your claim!

  • @Student_of_history
    @Student_of_history2 ай бұрын

    A modern military habour area is very temporary, weather it be an 8 man section or a battalion, guards, patrols, observation posts. The only real difference is 21st century weaponry.

  • @Student_of_history
    @Student_of_history2 ай бұрын

    Although some ww2 katana have a cord at the kashira.

  • @Student_of_history
    @Student_of_history2 ай бұрын

    Hello Antony Tied through/onto the Tsuba? European sabres tie through the guard, so it makes sense to do the same here. Many thanks for the videos. Jonny #320

  • @natoriryu
    @natoriryu2 ай бұрын

    If you are in england contact me.

  • @Student_of_history
    @Student_of_history2 ай бұрын

    @@natoriryu I'm in Wales, but always happy to travel.

  • @aaronconnolly521
    @aaronconnolly5213 ай бұрын

    Guys for the love of god traditional japanese martial art had no left hand

  • @Jiko-ryu
    @Jiko-ryu3 ай бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/eHuomMmqe7Xamrw.html kzread.info/dash/bejne/rK5llMiTZKeXg5s.html kzread.info/dash/bejne/oH13tNuDp7u5dbQ.html kzread.info/dash/bejne/l4OItpR-qJrTcbA.html

  • @saadahmad438
    @saadahmad4383 ай бұрын

    My favourite books

  • @AnthonySforza
    @AnthonySforza3 ай бұрын

    Ohhh... you obtained the, what was it, tenth scroll? That has all the medicines and such? Very nice.

  • @spartan-s013
    @spartan-s0133 ай бұрын

    good stuff, and sword wound medicine should be divided in multiple sections too: members wounds (hands and legs) where you can emplois turniquet or semblance, corps wound (belly, lungs),ect. #311

  • @tochiro6902
    @tochiro69023 ай бұрын

    Thank you very much.

  • @CitronCoffee
    @CitronCoffee3 ай бұрын

    I’m a Japanese who practice Shinkage ryu. I’m surprised these moves in this video are very localized and changed. Many people will say “this is not Shinkage ryu”. I agree with it. But if these localized moves are effective and practical, it’s a new good martial arts. Some moves are very interesting for me because the story of the moves are changed. I’ll try to win them in my mind.

  • @natoriryu
    @natoriryu2 ай бұрын

    These are direvt interpretations of the emokuroku so please read the original.

  • @user-lq2yi8op7w
    @user-lq2yi8op7w22 күн бұрын

    @@natoriryu Guys, do yourselves a favour and stop misleading people. The text you are referring to was not meant for practitioners of Shinkage Ryu. It was only meant to give a vague idea, a hint at what the kata may look like. But it is not instructional , because it leaves out important details which are part of the transmission process (hence the word "Kuden").

  • @QueensStandUp
    @QueensStandUp3 ай бұрын

    Magnificent. And somebody with menkyo to teach the Shinkage-Ryu has a dojo in Philadelphia.

  • @Danetto
    @Danetto4 ай бұрын

    did u just say we can become samurais by following ur social media? XD

  • @2bjjones
    @2bjjones4 ай бұрын

    I've always been nuts about Yagyu Shinkage ryu. The kata and bunkai are completely no nonsense and need little to no interpretation.

  • @tochiro6902
    @tochiro69024 ай бұрын

    Thank you very much.

  • @natoriryu
    @natoriryu4 ай бұрын

    Please join our online group here facebook.com/groups/409017382568561/

  • @NitenNoYume
    @NitenNoYume4 ай бұрын

    What a amazing dojo ! beautiful !

  • @jdaimaoh765
    @jdaimaoh7654 ай бұрын

    Isn't that the guy from Ogawa Ryu?

  • @natoriryu
    @natoriryu2 ай бұрын

    Yes

  • @josephstewart1562
    @josephstewart15624 ай бұрын

    A formula 1 driver in an average car can out drive an average driver in a formula 1 race car. Testing the sword requires the swordsman’s technique to be perfect.

  • @georgefreesamurai
    @georgefreesamurai4 ай бұрын

    Fantastic! All Kata from this book in this very good quality.

  • @user-st8jy6mi4e
    @user-st8jy6mi4e4 ай бұрын

    A shining example of why traditional Japanese martial arts have to be orally transmitted, teacher to student. Unless you just want to make stuff up that has no resemblance to the techniques of the actual tradition, aside from the names.

  • @CitronCoffee
    @CitronCoffee3 ай бұрын

    I agree

  • @eriglebrundelabouexiere472
    @eriglebrundelabouexiere4722 ай бұрын

    There is no such a thing as "the actual tradition", when it comes to kenjutsu. Japan displays (at least) 700 traditional kenjutsu or bugei ryuha. Each one is "the actual tradtion" of itself. Some are absolutely realistic and obviously efficient, somme don't look like they are to people who are not taught in them, some have obvously totally drifted from the original teachings. I have been taught in more than one kenjtusu ryuha and I have been lucky to practice the Kobayashi Ryu no aïkiken for twenty years. The many similarities in these kata from shinkage ryu and what was taught by Kobayashi Hirokazu and is still taught by André Cognard demonstrates perfectly the filiation between Shinkage and O Senseï Ueshiba's aïkiken (jujst as his Aîkijo comes from jukenjutsu and Hozeoïn ryu no Sojutsu)... The extreme efficience of Kobayashi Ryu aïkiken taught through more than 120 kihons speaks for itself and for Shinkage. THIS IS A REAL THING.

  • @user-lq2yi8op7w
    @user-lq2yi8op7w22 күн бұрын

    @@eriglebrundelabouexiere472 You're dead wrong with your assessment. Of course there are 'actual traditions' to pass on, otherwise there would be no need to label them e.g. as Katori, Kashima or in this case Shinkage Ryu. And Morihei Ueshiba didn't have Menkyo (license) in any Kenjutsu tradition. So it's quite amateurish to cite him or his students as authorities in this regard when they're factually not.

  • @eriglebrundelabouexiere472
    @eriglebrundelabouexiere47222 күн бұрын

    @@user-lq2yi8op7w You obviously didn't notice that it's not the same to write "the actual tradition", and "actual traditions". Please, read my comment again with a little more desire to understand it. Domo arigato!

  • @user-lq2yi8op7w
    @user-lq2yi8op7w22 күн бұрын

    @@eriglebrundelabouexiere472 I would recommend the same to you since you seem not to have a proper understanding of Koryu and their transmission. For example, there is an official line of Katori Shinto Ryu, which is endorsed by the current Soke and which differs from other lines in execution and other details. Still this line can be rightfully called "the actual tradition" (of Katori Shinto Ryu that is), because they can prove Menkyo Kaiden among other things. The same goes for other traditions like Shinkage Ryu where the Soke line, the main line, is still extant and can rightfully be called the actual tradition (of Shinkage Ryu in this case). So please stop your silly semantics game.

  • @johncartwright8154
    @johncartwright81544 ай бұрын

    Most interesting; precise and dynamic! I've not seen grip-switching in kata before! Looks most effective for confusing ones opponent.

  • @natoriryu
    @natoriryu4 ай бұрын

    Please see the full documentary here for your questions answered. kzread.info/dash/bejne/n2qn3LSidq3NidY.html

  • @Jiko-ryu
    @Jiko-ryu4 ай бұрын

    The best part of this video is the fairly accurate interpretation of the section which is identified as Okugi-no-tachi, which shows what Matsudaira actually wrote rather than how modern videos of Shinkage-ryū show Okugi-no-tachi. Apart from the video link given above, this other video ( kzread.info/dash/bejne/oniupdOsepWxibw.html ) effectively addresses the objections that the interpretation of the Okugi-no-tachi is inaccurate by showing the actual descriptions of Matsudaira and comparing it with the actual performance of the present Shinkage-ryū and the recreation. In particular, the video shows that the modern performance of the following Okugi techniques--Kōjō, Gokui, and Shinmyōken--differ radically from the description found in the e-mokuroku as written by Matsudaira, while the above reconstruction is arguably closer to the e-mokuroku. However, although this video has striven to interpret as accurately as possible the descriptions by Matsudaira Nobusada, the interpretations are not as accurate as they should be for two main reasons. First, the interpretation does not take into account the actual surviving kuden of Shinkage-ryū as preserved by the modern school and presented in the school's various videos. This is seen especially in the first kata, Ittō-ryōdan, which does not follow Matsudaira’s description at all. But most importantly, the interpretation seems to be reliant on a translation or translators who are unaware of Yagyū Shinkage-ryū's actual terminology, e.g., the translators are unaware that the stance in Yaegaki is indeed called Hasso, as what other schools call Hasso is called In-no-kurai in Shinkage-ryū, and Shinkage-ryū’s Kasumi-dachi looks way different from other schools’ Kasumi. Also, the Jōdan of Shinkage-ryū is actually a high “Chūdan” (i.e., Jōdan-no-seigan) wherein the kissaki points up, while what other schools call Jōdan is actually called Raitō, and so when in Usen-saten the text says “打太刀より上段の清眼に” the video above incorrectly shows the uchidachi raising his sword to Raitō. And there are many more instances like this. Also, there is the issue of how 十太刀 and 和卜 are transcribed as "Jūtachi" and "Waboku" respectively rather than the proper "Tōdachi" and "Kaboku" respectively, which seems to betray a reliance on the translation of Sato Hiroaki than independent translators who are familiar with how Shinkage-ryū terms are properly pronounced. But that being said, the above video is a better approximation of what the kata of Yagyū Shinkage-ryū appeared as at least in 1707 when Matsudaira wrote in the descriptions than to how Yagyū Shinkage-ryū does it in 2024, and I would argue that this video is closer to what Yagyū Sekishūsai intended in the e-mokuroku.

  • @Jiko-ryu
    @Jiko-ryu3 ай бұрын

    Also, in the original e-mokuroku, what is now known as the "Okugi-no-tachi" was not labeled as such, instead it was considered part of the Tengu-shō, with the 4th kata series called the "Ni-jū-nana-kajō-kiriai" (廿七箇条截相), which at that time was considered the actual Okugi-no-tachi of Yagyū Shinkage-ryū and which was taught solely by oral tradtion, or kuden (口伝). I had hoped that this video could have at least mentioned the existence of this particular kata set which in the e-mokuroku differed considerably from Yagyū Munenori's list in the Heihō Kaden-sho or in Yagyū Jūbēi's Tsuki-no sho.

  • @jluistl
    @jluistl4 ай бұрын

    El señor de la derecha parece estar más tenso que su bokken.

  • @TheWasteOfTime
    @TheWasteOfTime4 ай бұрын

    I had no idea there was a backup channel this has been cross posted to. I blame myself. I must have tripped some algorithm that this has been recommended to me. Well whatever, no reason to repeat myself here. Well, maybe just the cliffnotes: This isn't Yagyu Shinkage Ryu. If ye want that it's still around & going strong. Numerous lines of it even! Find a group & go train.

  • @natoriryu
    @natoriryu4 ай бұрын

    Instead of trolling join the conversation. Please forward where you think it differs in the text in Japanese please

  • @TheWasteOfTime
    @TheWasteOfTime4 ай бұрын

    @@natoriryu I've already joined the conversation, at length, on 3 videos on the other channel. Is this jawn run by someone other than Mr. Cummins or something? But in answer to the question it differs at the part where it says "this is an oral transmission." I'm aware Mr. Cummins likes to downplay the importance of Kuden as "just more details" but since he is not a koryu practitioner, and seems to neither know nor care how Yagyu Shinkage Ryu is actually trained, he's got no idea what he's talking about. Even if I didn't think it was a problem getting to the broad strokes of how Owari Yagyu does things now from most of these descriptions (naturally changes have happened), what these gentlemen are doing is bereft of the underlying logic of what makes something Shinkage Ryu.

  • @FunkyBukkyo
    @FunkyBukkyo4 ай бұрын

    Looking at this, it makes sense back then the kata would be more pragmatic and less esoteric

  • @henrikbjork5975
    @henrikbjork59754 ай бұрын

    Looks like bad translation… i mean they dont have the wings or the nose from the pictures… 🤣

  • @natoriryu
    @natoriryu4 ай бұрын

    Haha sorry

  • @Theswordundrawn
    @Theswordundrawn4 ай бұрын

    Having just obtained a copy of "The Sword and the Mind", this is absolutely what I needed to see as an accompaniment to these techniques! Thank you so much for your work on this.

  • @MokuraiDojo
    @MokuraiDojo4 ай бұрын

    Quite interesting. thank you very much for posting these

  • @zenshinacademy4096
    @zenshinacademy40964 ай бұрын

    I can see this as a video I will reference for further research. As I am told, my first sword instructor had a background in Yagyu Shinkage Ryu. Can't really be sure we did not train these kata and he did have a tendency to exaggerate and out right fabricate his background, to make himself sound much more educated and skilled than he really was. Not taking anything away from him, he was a very skilled martial artist and taught very good classes.

  • @zenshinacademy4096
    @zenshinacademy40964 ай бұрын

    I knew they had D&D LARP but I didn't know they now have Samurai LARP. Man, if I were still young and uneducated in the ways of combat, life and oh yeah women I would really get into this, I think. I really hope this is a really good gag video and not something intended on being real. Well at least they don't have mages and dragons so no spells coming my way if this was a serious video.