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EMAILABOUT US TOYAMA RYU KENPOJUTSU TAIJUTSU  SCHEDULE  EVENTS
YOSHINKAN HAKKO RYU YAKUMARU JIGEN RYU ASAYAMA ICHIDEN RYU HAKKO SHIN KAI  KUNIBA KAI
DAIT0 RYU AIKIJUJUTSU   KEISHI RYU MUSO SHINDEN RYU Nanban Satto Ryu Kenpo SAN SHIN KAI NMAA NKJUI
HISTORY SHOGO KUNIBA MUGAI RYU IAI HYODO CHINESE ARTSCHIN NATAI CHI KOROHO.COM
LINEAGES TAMESHIGIRI 8 PIECES OF BROCADE LINKSVIDEO SERVICES
WHITE TIGER TAE KWON DO OKADA RYU SHIELD OF FAITH TAICHI GOLD MOUNTAIN FORGE
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Tameshigiri is the Japanese art of target test cutting. The Kanji literally mean "test cut". This practice was popularized in the Edo period (17th century) for testing the quality of swords and continues through the present day.

During the Edo period, only the most skilled swordsmen were chosen to test swords, so that the swordsman's skill was not a variable in how well the sword cut. The materials used to test swords varied greatly, but the generally preferred targets were condemned criminals and cadavers. The other substances were wara (rice straw), goza (the top layer of Tatami mats), bamboo, and thin steel sheets.

In addition, there were a wide variety of cuts used on the cadavers, from tabi-gata (ankle cut) to O-kesa (diagonal cut from shoulder to opposite hip). The names of the types of cuts on cadavers show exactly where on the body the cut was made. Older swords can still be found today that have inscriptions on their nakago (tang) that say things such as, "5 bodies with Ryu Guruma (hip cut)".

Aside from specific cuts made on cadavers, there were the normal cuts of Japanese swordsmanship, i.e. downward diagonal (Kesa), upward diagonal (Kiri-age), horizontal (Yoko), and straight downward (Jodan-giri, Happonme, or Dotan). These cuts would then be cut on the cadavers (ex: A swordsman would do a Jodan-giri cut on 3 bodies at the hips. the inscription would then be, "3 bodies Ryu Guruma"). The easiest cut is the downward diagonal, followed by the upward diagonal, followed by the straight downward cut, and finally the hardest cut, the horizontal.

LEARN TAMESHIGIRI FROM MASTER DANA ABBOTT

 

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