In martial arts , a knifehand strike is a strike using the part of the hand opposite the thumb (from the little finger to the wrist), familiar to many people as a karate chop (in Japanese, shutō-uchi ). Suitable targets for the knifehand strike include the carotid sinus at the base of the neck (which can cause unconsciousness ), mastoid muscles of the neck, the jugular, the throat, the collar bones, ribs, sides of the head, temple, jaw, the third vertebra (key stone of the spinal column), the upper arm, the wrist (knifehand block), the elbow (outside knifehand block), and the knee cap (leg throw).
52-465: Shuto or variants may refer to: A knifehand strike , known in Japanese as shutō-uchi Shutō (seafood) , Japanese tuna liver seafood pickle Shuto Expressway (首都高速道路, Shuto Kōsoku-dōro) network of toll expressways Šuto Orizari Municipality (Macedonian: Шуто Оризари) municipality Shuuto , long "shootball" pitch in Japanese baseball People with
104-424: A "legitimate cultural past". In 1952, South Korean president Syngman Rhee witnessed a martial arts demonstration by South Korean Army officers Choi Hong-hi and Nam Tae-hi from the 29th Infantry Division. He misrecognized the technique on display as taekkyon , and urged martial arts to be introduced to the army under a single system. Beginning in 1955 the leaders of the kwans began discussing in earnest
156-495: A 4th. to 6th. dan are considered master instructors ( sabum-nim ), and are allowed to grade students to ranks beneath their own. Rules of Taekwondo Promotion Test , Kukkiwon Those who hold a 7th–9th dan are considered Grandmasters. Kukkiwon-issued ranks also hold an age requirement, with grandmaster ranks requiring an age of over forty. Three Korean terms may be used with reference to taekwondo forms or patterns. These forms are equivalent to kata in karate. A hyeong
208-658: A chain of martial arts schools in the Washington, D.C. area that practiced Traditional Taekwondo. In the 1970s, at the urging of Choi Hong-hi , Rhee adopted ITF-style Taekwondo within his chain of schools, but like the GTF later departed from the ITF due to the political controversies surrounding Choi and the ITF. Rhee went on to develop his own style of taekwondo called Jhoon Rhee-style Taekwondo, incorporating elements of both traditional and ITF-style Taekwondo as well as original elements. In 1972
260-577: A close combat instructor during the Vietnam war, instructor for the French Police Elite Unit ( RAID ) and time as a member of the Korean and French intelligence service. A Taekwondo practitioner typically wears a dobok ( 도복 ; 道服 ) uniform with a belt tied around the waist. When sparring, padded equipment is usually worn. In the ITF tradition, typically only the hands and feet are padded. In
312-433: A hand position that resembles that of the blade of a sword. This can be in a high, middle or low position but is usually extended outwards at about eye level (towards the carotid artery and carotid sinus which leads to unconsciousness – a key strike point). During practice, uke and tori will often stand opposite each other with their respective tegatana touching each other. From this position, considered by some
364-496: A method of self-defense before spreading across Northern countries such as Sweden, Norway and Denmark. It combines Taekwondo with other Korean martial arts like Hapkido and Hoi Jeon Moo Sool. It mixes striking and grappling techniques, and some schools also incorporate weapons training into it. Han Mu Do is a martial art developed by Korean practitioner Dr. Young Kimm, who founded the World Hanmudo Association to assure
416-418: A number and the term ( 급 ; 級 ; geup , gup , or kup ), which represents belt color. A belt color may have a stripe in it. Ranks typically count down from higher numbers to lower ones. For senior ranks (" black belt " ranks), each rank is called a dan 단 (段) or "degree" and counts upwards. Students must pass tests to advance ranks, and promotions happen at a progressive rate depending on
468-515: A number of major taekwondo styles as well as a few niche styles. Most styles are associated with a governing body or federation that defines the style. The major technical differences among taekwondo styles and organizations generally revolve around: "Traditional Taekwondo" refers to the 1940s and 1950s martial arts by the nine original kwans . They used a number of different names such as Tang Soo Do (Chinese Hand Way), Kong Soo Do (Empty Hand Way) and Tae Soo Do (Foot Hand Way). Traditional Taekwondo
520-581: A range of kicking, punching and blocking techniques, kyorugi involves the kind of sparring seen in the Olympics, and gyeokpa is the art of breaking wooden boards. Taekwondo also sometimes involves the use of weapons such as swords and nun-chucks. Taekwondo practitioners wear a uniform known as a dobok . It is a combat sport which was developed during the 1940s and 1950s by Korean martial artists with experience in martial arts such as karate and Chinese martial arts . The oldest governing body for taekwondo
572-612: A single, precise-looking but relatively weak strike to the side of an opponent's neck, which instantly renders them unconscious but otherwise unharmed. (In some versions, the blow is instantly fatal.) This is frequently done from behind to an unaware adversary, often an enemy guard. The move became a staple of the spy genre in the 1960s and 1970s. Taekwondo This is an accepted version of this page Taekwondo ( / ˌ t aɪ k w ɒ n ˈ d oʊ , ˌ t aɪ ˈ k w ɒ n d oʊ , ˌ t ɛ k w ə n ˈ d oʊ / ; Korean : 태권도 ; [t̪ʰɛ.k͈wʌ̹n.d̪o] )
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#1732858117117624-458: Is a Korean martial art and combat sport involving punching and kicking techniques. "Taekwondo" can be translated as tae ("strike with foot"), kwon ("strike with hand"), and do ("the art or way"). In addition to its five tenets of courtesy, integrity, perseverance, self-control and indomitable spirit, the sport requires three physical skills: poomsae ( 품새 ), kyorugi ( 겨루기 ) and gyeokpa ( 격파 ). Poomsae are patterns that demonstrate
676-720: Is a hybrid style of Taekwondo created by a Malayan martial artist called Grandmaster Lee in 1989. He opened his first school in Penang, and originally developed this system as a self-defense technique, mixing Taekwondo with a multitude of other martial arts, such as Kendo, Bokken, Wado Shimpo, Kickboxing and Karate. It is mainly governed by the World Hupkwondo Council (WHC). Han Moo Doo is a hybrid martial art created by Korean practitioner Yoon Sung Hwang in 1989, in Kauhava, Finland. Like other variations of Taekwondo, it first started out as
728-604: Is a systematic, prearranged sequence of martial techniques that is performed either with or without the use of a weapon. Different taekwondo styles and associations (ATA, ITF, GTF, WT, etc.) use different taekwondo forms. Different styles of Taekwondo adopt different philosophical underpinnings. Many of these underpinnings however refer back to the Five Commandments of the Hwarang as a historical referent. For example, Choi Hong-hi expressed his philosophical basis for taekwondo as
780-430: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Knifehand strike In many Japanese , Korean , and Chinese styles, the knifehand is used to block as well as to strike. Tegatana ( 手刀 : てがたな , Japanese for hand-sword ) is a term from Japanese martial arts like aikido and Chinese- Okinawan martial arts like karate and Shorinji Kempo referring to
832-435: Is still practised today but generally under names like Tang Soo Do and Soo Bahk Do . In 1959, the name taekwondo was agreed upon by the nine original kwans as a common term for their martial arts. As part of the unification process, The Korea Taekwondo Association (KTA) was formed through a collaborative effort by representatives from all the kwans , and the work began on a common curriculum, which eventually resulted in
884-629: Is that of the Kukkiwon, with the notable exception of half the Oh Do Kwan which joined the ITF instead and therefore uses the Chan Hon curriculum. International Taekwon-Do Federation (ITF)-style Taekwondo, more accurately known as Chang Hon-style Taekwondo, is defined by Choi Hong-hi 's Encyclopedia of Taekwon-Do published in 1983. In 1990, the Global Taekwondo Federation (GTF) split from
936-756: Is the Korea Taekwondo Association (KTA), formed in 1959 through a collaborative effort by representatives from the nine original kwans , or martial arts schools, in Korea. The main international organizational bodies for taekwondo today are various branches of the International Taekwon-Do Federation (ITF), originally founded by Choi Hong-hi in 1966, and the partnership of the Kukkiwon and World Taekwondo (WT, formerly World Taekwondo Federation or WTF), founded in 1972 and 1973 respectively by
988-528: The Five Tenets of Taekwondo : These tenets are further articulated in a taekwondo oath, also authored by Choi: Modern ITF organizations have continued to update and expand upon this philosophy. The World Taekwondo Federation (WTF) also refers to the commandments of the Hwarang in the articulation of its taekwondo philosophy. Like the ITF philosophy, it centers on the development of a peaceful society as one of
1040-533: The International Taekwon-Do Federation (ITF)— a separate governing body devoted to institutionalizing his Chan Hon-style of taekwondo in Canada. Initially, the South Korean president gave Choi's ITF limited support, due to their personal relationship. However, Choi and the government later split on the issue of whether to accept North Korean influence on the martial art. In 1972, South Korea withdrew its support for
1092-566: The Japanese occupation , new martial arts schools called kwans opened in Seoul . These schools were established by Korean martial artists with backgrounds in Japanese and Chinese martial arts . Early progenitors of taekwondo—the founders of the nine original kwans —who were able to study in Japan were exposed to Japanese martial arts , including karate, judo, and kendo , while others were exposed to
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#17328581171171144-604: The Korea Taekwondo Association (KTA) Central Dojang opened in Seoul; in 1973 the name was changed to Kukkiwon . Under the sponsorship of the South Korean government's Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism the Kukkiwon became the new national academy for Taekwondo, thereby establishing a new "unified" style of Taekwondo. In 1973 the KTA established the World Taekwondo Federation (WTF, now called World Taekwondo , WT) to promote
1196-455: The Korea Taekwondo Association . Gyeorugi ( [kjʌɾuɡi] ), a type of full-contact sparring , has been an Olympic event since 2000. In 2018, the South Korean government officially designated taekwondo as Korea's national martial art. The governing body for taekwondo in the Olympics and Paralympics is World Taekwondo . Beginning in 1945, shortly after the end of World War II and
1248-561: The Pan Am Games , and became an official medal event at the 2000 games in Sydney. In 2010, taekwondo was accepted as a Commonwealth Games sport. Taekwondo is characterized by its emphasis on head-height kicks, jumping and spinning kicks, and fast kicking techniques. In fact, WT sparring competitions award additional points for strikes that incorporate spinning kicks, kicks to the head, or both. While organisations such as ITF or Kukkiwon define
1300-811: The ATA is called Songahm Taekwondo . The ATA went on to become one of the largest chains of Taekwondo schools in the United States. The ATA established international spin-offs called the Songahm Taekwondo Federation (STF) and the World Traditional Taekwondo Union (WTTU) to promote the practice of Songahm Taekwondo internationally. In 2015, all the spin-offs were reunited under the umbrella of ATA International. In 1962 Jhoon Rhee , upon graduating from college in Texas, relocated to and established
1352-537: The ITF due to the political controversies surrounding the ITF; the GTF continues to practice ITF-style Taekwondo, however, with additional elements incorporated into the style. Likewise, the ITF itself split in 2001 and again in 2002 into three separate federations, headquartered in Austria, the United Kingdom, and Spain respectively. The GTF and all three ITFs practice Choi's ITF-style Taekwondo. In ITF-style Taekwondo,
1404-506: The ITF. The ITF continued to function as an independent federation, then headquartered in Toronto , Canada. Choi continued to develop the ITF-style, notably with the 1983 publication of his Encyclopedia of Taekwon-Do . After his retirement, the ITF split in 2001 and then again in 2002 to create three separate ITF federations, each of which continues to operate today under the same name. In 1972,
1456-467: The KTA and the South Korean government's Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism established the Kukkiwon as the new national academy for taekwondo. Kukkiwon now serves many of the functions previously served by the KTA, in terms of defining a government-sponsored unified style of taekwondo. In 1973 the KTA and Kukkiwon supported the establishment of the World Taekwondo Federation (WTF), which later changed its name to "World Taekwondo" (WT) in 2017 due to
1508-524: The Kukkiwon and the Kukki Style of Taekwondo. The original kwans that formed KTA continues to exist today, but as independent fraternal membership organizations that support the World Taekwondo and Kukkiwon. The kwans also function as a channel for the issuing of Kukkiwon dan and poom certification (black belt ranks) for their members. The official curriculum of those kwans that joined the unification
1560-539: The Kukkiwon/WT tradition, full-contact sparring is facilitated by the employment of more extensive equipment: padded helmets called homyun are always worn, as are padded torso protectors called hogu ; feet, shins, groins, hands, and forearms protectors are also worn. The school or place where instruction is given is called a dojang ( 도장 ; 道場 ). Taekwondo ranks vary from style to style and are not standardized. For junior ranks, ranks are indicated by
1612-492: The base of the small finger and the wrist ( abductor digiti minimi ). It is used as both an offensive and defensive technique and can be executed as a high, low, middle, side, inward, outward, rising or circular strike. Use of this technique as both a strike and block is featured prominently in many of the WTF Taegeuk poomsae . Knifehand chops were successfully used in mixed martial arts by Kazushi Sakuraba . He utilized
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1664-433: The general style of taekwondo, individual clubs and schools tend to tailor their taekwondo practices. Although each taekwondo club or school is different, a student typically takes part in most or all of the following: Though weapons training is not a formal part of most taekwondo federation curriculum, individual schools will often incorporate additional training with weapons such as staffs , knives, and sticks. There are
1716-410: The hand. Having the thumb tucked in, leaving the fore finger side of the hand free, allows that side of the hand to be used as a striking surface. This is called an inside knifehand where as the pinkie finger side is called an outside knifehand . In taekwondo , a knifehand strike ( son-nal mok chigi or sonkal taerigi ) is executed by striking with the muscle at the side of the hand located between
1768-421: The ideal combative distance for two unarmed opponents, many balance-breaking, striking and throwing techniques can be applied. In karate, the handsword collarbone chop ( tegatana-sakotsu-uchi ), the handsword collarbone strike ( tegatana-sakotsu-uchikomi ) and the handsword face chop ( tegatana-ganmen-uchi ) all use this fundamental strike as a basis for attack. The knifehand strike can be used with either side of
1820-506: The kind known in professional wrestling as " Mongolian chop ", where he would strike with both hands at the sides of his opponent's neck. The popularity of Asian martial arts in the West in the mid to late 20th century gave rise to an exaggerated version of a knifehand strike widely used in American and British cinema, television, and animated cartoons. In common depictions, a character will deliver
1872-503: The martial arts of China and Manchuria. Discussions around the historical influences of taekwondo have been controversial, with two main schools of thought: traditionalism and revisionism. Traditionalism holds that the origins of taekwondo are indigenous while revisionism, the prevailing theory, argues that taekwondo is rooted in karate. In later years, the Korean government has been a significant supporter of traditionalist views as to divorce taekwondo from its link to Japan and give Korea
1924-542: The name [ edit ] Shuto Abe ( 安部 柊斗 , born 1997) , Japanese footballer Shuto Ando (1994) Japanese basketball player Shuto Inaba (1990) Japanese footballer Shuto Kawai (1993) Japanese footballer Shuto Kono (1993) Japanese footballer Shuto Machino (1999) Japanese footballer Shuto Takajo ( 髙城俊人 , born 1993) , Japanese professional baseball player Shuto Yamamoto (1985) Japanese footballer Ukyo Shuto ( 周東 佑京 , born 1996) , Japanese professional baseball player Topics referred to by
1976-642: The opponent as quickly as possible, although it was also used in sports competition. It is a hybrid style that mixes Taekwondo, Judo, Hapkido, Sanda (and other Chinese wushu styles) and Korean Kickboxing and it follows the Yin-Yang and five elements philosophy. Its origins date back to the 1960s–70s, but it was only introduced in special forces training in 1979. Hoshin Moosool is a martial art and combat system founded by Taekwondo Grandmaster Kwan-Young Lee . Its techniques and method are inspired from Master Lee's experience as
2028-488: The other kwans instead wanted a unified style to be created based on inputs from all the kwans , to serve as a way to bring on the heritage and characteristics of all of the styles, not just the style of a single kwan . As a response to this, along with political disagreements about teaching taekwondo in North Korea and unifying the whole Korean Peninsula, Choi broke with the (South Korea) KTA in 1966, in order to establish
2080-410: The overarching goals for the practice of taekwondo. The WT's stated philosophy is that this goal can be furthered by adoption of the Hwarang spirit, by behaving rationally ("education in accordance with the reason of heaven"), and by recognition of the philosophies embodied in the taegeuk (the yin and the yang, i.e., "the unity of opposites") and the sam taegeuk (understanding change in the world as
2132-607: The patterns (tul) defined in the Encyclopedia, with some exceptions related to the forms Juche and Ko-Dang . In 1969, Haeng Ung Lee , a former Taekwondo instructor in the South Korean military, relocated to Omaha, Nebraska and established a chain of martial arts schools in the United States under the banner of the American Taekwondo Association (ATA). Like Jhoon Rhee Taekwondo, ATA Taekwondo has its roots in traditional taekwondo. The style of Taekwondo practised by
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2184-446: The possibility of creating a unified Korean martial art. Until then, " Tang Soo Do " was the term used for Korean karate, using the Korean hanja pronunciation of the Japanese kanji 唐手道 . The name "Tae Soo Do" ( 跆手道 ) was also used to describe a unified style Korean martial arts. This name consists of the hanja 跆 tae "to stomp, trample", 手 su "hand" and 道 do " way, discipline ". Choi Hong-hi advocated
2236-501: The preservation of his style. Its ideals are mostly based on the Han philosophy, mainly about the mind balance of the practitioner. Young Kimm studied Taekwondo, Tang Soo Do, Kuk Sul, Hapkido, Korean Judo and Kum Do, mixing all of their techniques together to create his own style. Teukgong Moosool is a combat system developed in South Korea by the special forces units that is projected to stop
2288-546: The previous initialism overlapping with an internet slang term . While the Kukkiwon focus on the martial art and self-defence aspects of Kukki-Taekwondo, the WT promoted the sportive side, and its competitions employ a subset of the techniqes present in the Kukkiwon-style taekwondo. For this reason, Kukkiwon-style Taekwondo is often referred to as WT-style Taekwondo, sport-style Taekwondo, or Olympic-style Taekwondo, though in reality
2340-575: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Shuto . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Shuto&oldid=1159986415 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with given-name-holder lists Japanese masculine given names Masculine given names Hidden categories: Articles containing Japanese-language text Short description
2392-712: The school. Titles can also come with ranks. For example, in the International Taekwon-Do Federation , instructors holding 1st to 3rd dan are called boosabum ( 부사범 ; 副師範 ; "assistant instructor"), those holding 4th to 6th dan are called sabum ( 사범 ; 師範 ; "instructor"), those holding 7th to 8th dan are called sahyun ( 사현 ; 師賢 ; "master"), and those holding 9th dan are called saseong ( 사성 ; 師聖 ; "grandmaster"). In WT/Kukki-Taekwondo, instructors holding 1st. to 3rd. dan are considered assistant instructors ( kyosa-nim ), are not yet allowed to issue ranks, and are generally thought of as still having much to learn. Instructors who hold
2444-460: The sportive side of Kukki-Taekwondo. The International Olympic Committee recognized the WT and Taekwondo sparring in 1980. For this reason, the Kukkiwon-defined style of Taekwondo is sometimes referred to as Sport-style Taekwondo , Olympic-style Taekwondo , or WT-style Taekwondo , but the style itself is defined by the Kukkiwon, not by the WT, and the WT competition ruleset itself only allows
2496-465: The style is defined by the Kukkiwon, not the WT. Since 2000, taekwondo has been one of three Asian martial arts (the others being judo and karate), and one of six total (the others being the previously mentioned, Greco-Roman wrestling, freestyle wrestling, and boxing) included in the Olympic Games . It started as a demonstration event at the 1988 games in Seoul, a year after becoming a medal event at
2548-459: The use of a very small number of the total number of techniques included in the style. Extreme Taekwondo is a hybrid style created in 2008, by Taekwondo practitioner Shin-Min Cheol, who also founded Mirme Korea in 2012, a production company that helped spreading his style. His company is based on promoting TKD tournaments, in a style which mixed other martial arts like Karate and Capoeira. Hup Kwon Do
2600-452: The use of the name "Tae Kwon Do", replacing su "hand" with 拳 kwon ( Revised Romanization : gwon ; McCune–Reischauer : kwŏn ) "fist", the term also used for "martial arts" in Chinese ( pinyin quán ). The name was also the closest to the pronunciation of "taekkyon", The new name was initially slow to catch on among the leaders of the kwans . During this time taekwondo
2652-535: The word used for "forms" is tul ; the specific set of tul used by the ITF is called Chang Hon . Choi defined 24 Chang Hon tul. The names and symbolism of the Chang Hon tul refer to elements of Korean history , culture and religious philosophy. The GTF-variant of ITF practices an additional six tul. Within the ITF taekwondo tradition there are two sub-styles: Some ITF schools adopt the sine wave style, while others do not. Essentially all ITF schools do, however, use
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#17328581171172704-518: Was also adopted for use by the South Korean military, which increased its popularity among civilian martial arts schools. In 1959, the Korea Tang Soo Do Association (later Korea Taekwondo Association or KTA) was established to facilitate the unification of Korean martial arts. Choi wanted all the other member kwans of the KTA to adopt his own Chan Hon-style of taekwondo, as a unified style. This was, however, met with resistance as
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