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Hōten-ryū
is a Japanese martial art founded in 1600 ''CE''. It is a school founded on the use of the sword, however it has several different ''kobuki'' (old weapons) in its curriculum. It is also notable for its hidden weapons (''hibuki'') or items that appear to hide among everyday things. ==History== According to legend, Hōten-ryū was created by a Takizawa Minokami Hōten in the Kii mountain range (Nanzen) of Japan at the end of the Sengoku era. Takizawa was a bushi of the Tachibana family and allegedly a friend of Sesshusai Yagyū of Yagyū Shinkage-ryū fame. Takizawa had learned the martial arts taught in his han (prefecture) and then went to mount Kiso Ontake to study better himself. He made a pilgrimage to Ontake Shrine and Ontake waterfall in an attempt to purify his spirit and body. At Ontake it is believed that Takizawa decided to become a mountain priest. He then created the techniques for Hōten-ryū based on Shinto teachings and Shugendo practices; conforming his methods to the "laws of nature" that mountain aesthetics adhere to.〔Nobuyuki, Hiragami. 2003. ''Budo and Bujutsu Magazine''. Issue # 4, April. Gekan Hiden, Tokyo.〕 The school was taught privately in a shrine near the Kiso-Ontake until the 13th inheritor Totsugawa Hōten made his way to Kyōtō and found a student in a very young Kazuo Taniguchi. Totsugawa, the 13th Soke, became frail with age and Kazuo succeeded him as the 14th soke when he was 19 years old, just before being conscripted into the Japanese military during World War II. As the soke of Hōten-ryū Kazuo he took on the name ''Tachibana Kujuuin Hoten'' and today he resides in Kyoto, Japan where he has been teaching Hōten-ryū and Shodō since the end of World War II.〔Nobuyuki, Hirgagami. 2003. Budo and BujutsuMagazine. Issue # 5, May. Gekan Hiden, Tokyo.〕
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Hōten-ryū」の詳細全文を読む
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