Gojūshiho (五十四歩, lit. 54 steps) is a kata practiced in karate. Gojushiho was developed by Sokon Matsumura, one of the key founders of Okinawan martial arts and named it "Uesheishi", which literally means 54 methods in Chinese. In some styles of karate, there are two versions of this kata - Gojūshiho Shō and Gojūshiho Dai. An advantage of the two versions of the kata is to better master the difficult techniques presented therein, but not without facing some confusion, for many sequences are the same and others only slightly different. The embusen of both Gojūshiho Shō and Gojūshiho Dai are nearly identical. Gojūshiho Shō begins straight off with a wide variety of advanced techniques and, as such, is highly recommended for study. Gojūshiho Dai consists of many advanced open-handed techniques
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| - Gojūshiho (de)
- Gojūshiho (en)
- Gojushiho (fr)
- Gojūshiho (it)
- Gojushiho (pt)
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| - Gojūshiho (jap. 五十四歩, dt. 54 Schritte) sind im Shōtōkan-Karate zwei Kata-Varianten:
* Gojūshiho dai (jap. 五十四歩大, dt. Große [Kata der] 54 Schritte)
* Gojūshiho shō (jap. 五十四歩小, dt. Kleine [Kata der] 54 Schritte) (de)
- Gojushiho (54 pas) est un kata pratiqué dans le karaté. (fr)
- Gojushiho (五十四歩 Gojūshiho?, cinquenta e quatro passos) é um kata do caratê, que foi introduzido em Oquinaua por intermédio de praticantes do Tomari-te. Como havia efetiva troca de conhecimentos com os paraticantes do te em Shuri, devido principalmente à proximidade entre as urbes, existiu sua prática contemporânea mo estilo Shuri-te. (pt)
- Gojūshiho (五十四歩, lit. 54 steps) is a kata practiced in karate. Gojushiho was developed by Sokon Matsumura, one of the key founders of Okinawan martial arts and named it "Uesheishi", which literally means 54 methods in Chinese. In some styles of karate, there are two versions of this kata - Gojūshiho Shō and Gojūshiho Dai. An advantage of the two versions of the kata is to better master the difficult techniques presented therein, but not without facing some confusion, for many sequences are the same and others only slightly different. The embusen of both Gojūshiho Shō and Gojūshiho Dai are nearly identical. Gojūshiho Shō begins straight off with a wide variety of advanced techniques and, as such, is highly recommended for study. Gojūshiho Dai consists of many advanced open-handed techniques (en)
- Gojūshiho (五十四歩 lit. 54 passi?) è un kata praticato nel karate, che trae origine dallo stile Phoenix Eye. Il suo nome deriva sia dai movimenti ripetitivi di un picchio che becca su un ramo di un albero o da un ubriaco che barcolla. In molti stili di karate, ci sono due versioni di questo kata - Gojūshiho Shō e Gojūshiho Dai. Un vantaggio dell'esistenza dei due stili di kata è di migliorare la padronanza delle tecniche qui presentate, ma non senza dover affrontare alcuna confusione, perché molte sequenze sono le stesse e le altre sono leggermente differenti. L'embusen del Gojūshiho Shō e del Gojūshiho Dai sono quasi identici. Gojūshiho Shō inizia con una grande varietà di tecniche avanzate, come tale, viene raccomandato il suo studio. Gojūshiho Dai è formato da molte tecniche a mano aperta (it)
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| - Useishi, Sushiho, Hotaku, O Sip Sa Bo (en)
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| - Gojūshiho (jap. 五十四歩, dt. 54 Schritte) sind im Shōtōkan-Karate zwei Kata-Varianten:
* Gojūshiho dai (jap. 五十四歩大, dt. Große [Kata der] 54 Schritte)
* Gojūshiho shō (jap. 五十四歩小, dt. Kleine [Kata der] 54 Schritte) (de)
- Gojūshiho (五十四歩, lit. 54 steps) is a kata practiced in karate. Gojushiho was developed by Sokon Matsumura, one of the key founders of Okinawan martial arts and named it "Uesheishi", which literally means 54 methods in Chinese. In some styles of karate, there are two versions of this kata - Gojūshiho Shō and Gojūshiho Dai. An advantage of the two versions of the kata is to better master the difficult techniques presented therein, but not without facing some confusion, for many sequences are the same and others only slightly different. The embusen of both Gojūshiho Shō and Gojūshiho Dai are nearly identical. Gojūshiho Shō begins straight off with a wide variety of advanced techniques and, as such, is highly recommended for study. Gojūshiho Dai consists of many advanced open-handed techniques and attacks to the collar-bone. Gojushiho movement is quite similar with Aikido grappling technique in terms of flowing knife hand or "tate-shuto-uke" or vertical knife hand block. "Tate-shuto-uke" does not resemble other shuto uke which resemble as "block technique". Rather it was throwing technique in "aiki-jujutsu". Another "shuto" technique as "shuto-nagashi-uke" or "knife-hand-flowing-block" has become the unique characteristic of Gojushiho because of flowing movement which is not merely interpreted as "block", but "throw". Gojūshiho Shō and Gojūshiho Dai are two versions in Shotokan of the Shōrin-ryū kata called Useishi (54) or Gojūshiho. The oft-repeated story about the JKA having to rename the Gojushiho kata due to a tournament mix-up; and Kanazawa Hirokazu, because of his seniority, keeping the original names in his SKIF organisation is without foundation. In fact, Kanazawa is on record as saying that when he formed SKIF he changed the names of the two kata as he felt that the “sho” designation suited the smaller, more difficult, kata better. Kanazawa also mentioned that this kata was introduced into the JKA before its sibling, and this explained why the JKA decided to call it “dai” when they introduced the second Gojushiho into the syllabus. This kata is also practiced in Tang Soo Do and is called O Sip Sa Bo in Korean. And it is said that it also has some influences of Ng Ying Kungfu (Chinese: 五形功夫). Due to its difficulty, this kata is often reserved for advanced students, usually for those who are 6th degree black belts and above. Gojushiho is also practiced in Goshin Kagen Goju Karate, a modified style of Goju founded by Hanshi Gerald Thomson (en)
- Gojushiho (54 pas) est un kata pratiqué dans le karaté. (fr)
- Gojūshiho (五十四歩 lit. 54 passi?) è un kata praticato nel karate, che trae origine dallo stile Phoenix Eye. Il suo nome deriva sia dai movimenti ripetitivi di un picchio che becca su un ramo di un albero o da un ubriaco che barcolla. In molti stili di karate, ci sono due versioni di questo kata - Gojūshiho Shō e Gojūshiho Dai. Un vantaggio dell'esistenza dei due stili di kata è di migliorare la padronanza delle tecniche qui presentate, ma non senza dover affrontare alcuna confusione, perché molte sequenze sono le stesse e le altre sono leggermente differenti. L'embusen del Gojūshiho Shō e del Gojūshiho Dai sono quasi identici. Gojūshiho Shō inizia con una grande varietà di tecniche avanzate, come tale, viene raccomandato il suo studio. Gojūshiho Dai è formato da molte tecniche a mano aperta e da attacchi alla clavicola. Gojūshiho Shō e Gojūshiho Dai sono due versioni della medesima cosa nello Shotokan, nei singoli kata Shōrin-ryū vengono chiamati Useishi (54) o Gojūshiho. Originariamente i nomi furono invertiti in modo che il Dai fu chiamato Shō e Shō fu chiamato Dai. Parrebbe che la modifica del nome sia avvenuta negli anni 1960 o 1970. Nella federazione internazionale Shotokan Karate-dō di Kanazawa Hirokazu, le forme "Dai" e "Shō" sono invertite. (it)
- Gojushiho (五十四歩 Gojūshiho?, cinquenta e quatro passos) é um kata do caratê, que foi introduzido em Oquinaua por intermédio de praticantes do Tomari-te. Como havia efetiva troca de conhecimentos com os paraticantes do te em Shuri, devido principalmente à proximidade entre as urbes, existiu sua prática contemporânea mo estilo Shuri-te. (pt)
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