Motobu Chōyū

Motobu Chōyū (本部朝勇, 1857-1928) was an Okinawan karate master and elder brother of karateka Motobu Chōki.

Motobu Chōyū
Born1857
Akahira Village, Shuri, Ryūkyū Kingdom
Died1928 (aged 7071)
Shuri, Okinawa, Japan
StyleShuri-te, Motobu-ryū
Teacher(s)Choshin Motobu, Matsumura Sōkon
Notable studentsSeikichi Uehara, Tsuyoshi Chitose
WebsiteMotobu-ryu

Motobu Chōyū was born in Akahira village in Shuri, Okinawa. His father, Anji (Lord) Motobu Chōshin was a descendant of Prince Shō Kōshin (1655-1687), the sixth son of Okinawan King Shō Shitsu (1629-1668). [1]

Chōyū first learned the art of Udun-ti, also known as Goten-te, (the precursor to modern karate), which was passed down within the Shō royal family from father to eldest son. [1] He then studied Shuri-te karate and koryū ("old school") Japanese martial arts under the legendary karateka Matsumura Sōkon. [2] In his final years, he was the head martial arts instructor to the last king of the Ryūkyū Kingdom, Shō Tai (r. 1848-1879), succeeding Matsumura in that position. [1]

Notes

gollark: That looks incredibly trustworthy, yes.
gollark: I think most phone infrastructure uses GPS and maybe a local atomic clock too.
gollark: I'm saying that if it became bad enough that datacentres failed, it would also break other stuff.
gollark: If you just use a pulse per second output from a GPS receiver for generic whatever it's fine. If you want to actually find your position then it would be bad.
gollark: But they do transmit the offset.

See also

Pechin/Peichin

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