Kusarigamajutsu Explained
is the art of using the Japanese weapon kusarigama.
Kusarigamajutsu is featured in several separate martial arts such as Tendō-ryū, Suiō-ryū and Shintō Musō-ryū. The kusarigama is made up of three parts: the kama (a wooden handle with a curved blade (traditionally straight) protruding at a right-angle on one end, and a small loop at the other), and the kusari (a chain attached to the kama) and a weight at the end of the chain. In a confrontation the kusari is swung in wide sweeping arcs to distract and entangle the opponent and the kama is used to deliver a fatal strike.[1]
Popular culture
See also
- Araki-ryū – Koryū that includes the use of the kusarigama
- Suiō-ryū – Koryū that includes the use of the kusarigama via the attached school of Masaki-ryū Fukuhara-ha kusarigamajutsu
- Toda-ha Bukō-ryū – Koryū that includes the use of the kusarigama
- Isshin-ryū kusarigamajutsu – School of kusarigamajutsu found in Shintō Musō-ryū
- Tendō-ryū kusarigamajutsu – School of kusarigamajutsu found in Tendō-ryū bujutsu
Sources
- Pascal Krieger: Jodô – la voie du bâton / The way of the stick (bilingual French/English), Geneva (CH) 1989,
Notes and References
- http://www.martialartsaus.com/index.php?page=25&ssid=5&mid=5 Kusarigamajutsu