Yoshinkan

Yoshinkan Aikido
Yoshinkan eagle logo
Yoshinkan eagle logo
Also known asAikido Yoshinkai Foundation (AYF), Yoshinkai, International Yoshinkan Aikido Federation (IYAF)
Date founded1955
Country of originJapan Japan
FounderGozo Shioda
(塩田 剛三, Shioda Gōzō, 9 September 1915–17 July 1994)
Arts taughtAikido
Ancestor artsDaitō-ryū Aiki-jūjutsu, Aiki Budō
Descendant schoolsYoshokai, Renshinkai, Shudokan, Shinwakan, Shoot Aikido
PractitionersKiyoyuki Terada, Kyoichi Inoue, Tsutomu Chida, Tsuneo Ando, Amos Lee Parker, Jacques Payet, Joe Thambu, Robert Mustard, Keith Taylor
Official websitewww.Yoshinkan.net

Yoshinkan (養神館 Yōshinkan lit. "Hall of Spirit Cultivation") Aikido is a style of aikido that developed after World War II in the Yoshinkan Dojo of Gozo Shioda (1915–1994). Yoshinkan Aikido is often called the "hard" style of aikido because the training methods are a product of Shioda's grueling life before the war. Shioda named his dojo "Yoshinkan" after a dojo of the same name that was built by his father, a physician, who wanted to improve both physical and spiritual health.[1] The Yoshinkan style is currently the second largest aikido organization worldwide.[2]

  1. ^ Shioda, G. Aikido Jinsei: My Life in Aikido. Trans. Payet & Johnston.
  2. ^ Pranin, S. "Morihei Ueshiba and Gozo Shioda Archived 2014-08-11 at the Wayback Machine." Aikido Journal, December 2011.