I have been doing Karate as long as I can remember and studied its history, masters and such and always find it interesting when I get to meet a master of the art or one of their prodigy. I am often approached to write or talk about Karate because I have studied it so long and more times than not, if they like it or not, I find someone to chat to about Karate and martial arts. Also, more times than not when I mention I do Karate someone will say “Oh, Tae Kwon Do” to which I say No, Karate. We tend to be snobby and disagree with them when they suggest we are basically the same thing and even get rather offended. Maybe we shouldn’t however.
The truth is Tae Kwon Do or TKD
is more like us than we want to believe, I mean after all…modern Tae Kwon do
was created from the genes of Karate. Its
hard to deny that TKD and Karate (Specifically Shotokan too) look a bit
alike. Some back ground on current TKD
practices, most of them wear white Keikogi they call Dobok and we call Dogei
some times. They use the same belt rank system we use (Stole that sucker from
Judo) and for the most part they “borrow” some of our practices….like most if
not all. They use Forms or Pumsae (we call Kata), they do Gyeorugi (Kumite or
sparring) they Gyeokpa (Tamishiwari – breaking) and they do lots of drills and
repetitions of basics as well as using different equipment to hone their skills
like striking pads, punching bags ext…..sound familiar yet?
TKD’s history is said to have started around the 18th
century when a striking art was created name Subak. This art focused on
striking with open hands (slaps really) and lots of kicking and tripping. Each
area of Korea had this type of system and each of them were slightly different
but they also had lots of similarities. Each area of Korea would compete with
each other, sending champions around to compete for who was best. Several of
the kings in the region were big supoorters of the sport and as such it grew,
and over time changed and split into a more sport, less combat focused
activitie. From what I can see on paper
the system, that existed during the Yi period, looked a lot more like a cross
between French Savate and Sumo wrestling.
During the Joseon Period Subak transformed
in practice and name from a sport minded practice to a softer style calling
itself Yusul, meaning soft art. Yusul was more like Jujutsu (Japanese grappling
art). Subak fell pray to the loss of Confucianism
as a main gate keeper in solidity. Prior to the Joseon period you had to be in
Subak as a fighter to join the military and earn money as a soldier, when this
fell away with Confucianism’s grasp on the Korean people the art became little
more than dance and a grappling art that morphed in to Ssireum, a game of
grappling skills similar to wrestling in high school. Traditional Subak died
out replaced more recently by systems borrowing the name or reimagining the
system. So, you could say that the early history of Subak and its original
fighting are could have influenced modern TKD but honestly its more that the
collective memory of the art may bring about pride if you link it emotionally
to the history of TKD but we have very little actual proof or evidence it
influenced it technically or directly.
Next potential Korean parent
system is/was Taekkyeon or Taekgyeon/Taekkyeon. Some tie this system directly
to Subak, but no real evidence exists that this art came from the ancient art
which morphed into a grappling art and they honestly don’t look at all alike. To
be honest I don’t really feel that the Korean historians can be trusted nor can
the practitioners of this art be trusted when they say its not only the parent
of modern TKD nor when they assert that Subak was its parent. Granted the
historians are quick to point out there is actually no real records of
Taekkyeon or its creation. Most of what they know or suggest as a history is
from folklore and myth. From what I can gather from the very scant truths about
Taekkyeon it was formed centuries after Subak fell to the Confusion influence
and was basically a foot fighting art that appeared at the end of the Joseon dynasty.
Two versions of this system existed
during the late Joseon period, one was used by the military as a fighitn art
and the other was a game played by wealthy athletes for entertainment.
Taekkyeon also suffered a lot as Neo-Confucianism became wide spread in Korea
and near the start of the 20th Century it was all but extinct. By the time the Japanese took over Korea in 1910
Korean martial arts were all but gone. So, Taekkyeon is also not the grand
parent of Tae Kwon Do…so….how did it happen then?
Prior to World War II the
Japanese military invaded Korea (1910-1945) and ran the country as its
own. The military brought about cultural
exchanges and not only did the Korean people pass on some of their culture to the
Japanese, the Japanese also did the same back. In fact, many of the young
Koreans flocked to Japan to study in their universities and take up military
training when they could. This practice
did not end after the war as well. Several of the students of a particular
famous Karate master moved back to Korea after studying in Japan and brought a
curious system of fighting back with them. They opened Kwon/Kwoon or Clubs to
teach what they had learned, all under the watchful eye of the government, who
was plotting and planning to shuck off the Japanese rule and influence when
ever they could.
Soong Moo Kwan, chung Do Kwan,
Moo Duk Kwan, Ji Do Kwan and Chang Moo Kwan all opened up in Korea to spread
the system of fighting. Soong Moo Kwan
was formed by Master Ro Byung Jik who had studied under Gichin Funakoshi of
Shotokan Karate fame (and its founder). He studied along with Chung Do Kwan
founder Lee Won Kuk in Japan while at the universities. Both men opened clubs
in Kaeson in march of 1944. Moo Duk Kwan was formed a year later by Hwang Kee
who had studied Tai chi and kung fu in China and who had no luck opening a
Korean Kung fu school in Korea and after realizing that most Koreans would
never study a Chinese based system he incorporated most of the Japanese
influence from the first two clubs. They had called their art Tang Soo Do or
Tang hand but it was straight out of the Shotokan play book for them.
Ji Do Kwan or Jidokwan was
opened by Chun Sang sip. His club the Chosun yu mu kwan kong soo do club had
actually been the original Kodokan Judo school in Korea and had existed for
nearly 30 years. Sip had also studied Shotokan under Funakoshi while he was in
Japan and choose to teach Karate under the name Kong Soo Do, however the club
voted to change the focus of the Jidokwan after the Korean war to teach only
the striking art after Chun Sang Sip disappeared in the Korean war. The last
club or the Chang Moo Kwan was opened in the YMCA Kwon Bop club in 1946 by Yoon
Byung in, who had studied Karate under Kanken Toyama at the Nihon University.
He also went missing after the Korean war and his club was reopened by his top
student Lee Nam Suk who changed the name of the school and the syllabus to fall
in line with the other five original Kwon.
These were the first five clubs. That were formed from students who may have studied a bit of Chinese kung fu and even played a bit with some ancient games….but they studied Shotokan or Shudokan in one case and opened up clubs, teaching things that looked like Karate, used Korean Karate terminology, took the Kata from Shotokan and Created Poomes and even borrowed the gear that Karate guys used (specifically the belts and white Keikogi). They changed terms only to make them more understandable to the Korean people but other than that…it was for all intensive purposes….Karate. None of the famed Subak or Taekkyeon existed in the system as demonstration or otherwise, pure Japanese Karate…with Korean terms.
After the Korean war four more
clubs were opened up to form the full 9 original Kwans of TaeKwonDo. Students from the different clubs founded
their own schools. The Han Moo Kwan was founded in 1954 by Lee Kyo Yoon as an
off shoot of the Jidokwan, Oh do Kwan was formed a year later by Choi Hong Hi
who was studied in Japan and at the Chung Do Kwan, Kank Duk waon was formed by
Park chui Hee and Hong Jong Pyo as an off shoot to Chang Moo Kwan and the last
club to open was Jung Do Kwan which was founded by Lee Yong Woo in 1956 as an
off shoot of Chung Do Kwan as well. These four clubs were formed by students of
the original clubs but all traveled to Japan to study the real original art
Shotokan. At this point the clubs were not using the name Tae Kwon Do or way of
the foot to give name to the system, they were still all basically using Tang
Soo Do or way of the Tang hand, which was Karate’s original and used name at
the time. In the ‘60’s the number of clubs in Korea went from 9 to 40 and then
shortly after the Korean war it blew up, but the Korean government consolidated
them all under the KTA heading (Korean Tae Kwon Do association) …but Im getting
ahead of myself.
After the Japanese occupation
and the forming of the Kwons in Soul and the other big cities by individuals
who had studied Chinese and most importantly (as it had the biggest influence)
Japanese Karate. By this point the indigenous systems were all but forgotten
and mostly practiced for folk tradition more than anything. The systems
themselves did change slightly with what most Karate folk would say was a
de-focusization (Made that word up so I hope you like it) on form and technical
skills and more of a focus on speed and flash. In 1952 South Korean president
Syngman Rhee watched a Tang Soo Doo demonstration by ROK Army officer Choi Hong
Hi and Nam Tae-hi. He felt that the art needed to be supported and also altered
to allow the general public to view it as uniquely Korean and less Japanese.
By the 1950’s the Kwon leaders
were all trying to unify the art and create a unque system that looked a lot
less like Japanese Karate and more like its own system. They also had to take
into account that by then the term “Tang hand” was no longer used by Karate
systems as they changed to “Empty hand” and they were still using the old name
to describe the system.
General Choi put forward the use
of the name Tae Kwon Do as it described the system they were working on and it
also sounded very close to Taekkyeon, which the new president had liked. The
leaders of the Kwons originally hated the new name, but the Korean military
began teaching the art and if the masters called what they taught Tae Kwon Do
the money they would see for teaching it would make it worth the change,
personal objections were put aside.
In 1959 General Choi established the first National TKD Federation he named the KTA (Korean Tae Kwon Do Association ) with a mandate to unify Korean martial arts and systematically change the practice, rules and standards of the arts. This meant squashing old practices and old styles of fighting and creating one unified front. He felt that all systems and the original 9 styles or Kwons should adopt his system of Chan-hon style of Tae Kwon do he taught at the Oh Do Kwan. As you can imagine, this did not go over very well with all the masters. The infighting was horrible and then Choi also felt a need to spread TKD to North Korea (a major no no) and also the world. By 1966 he was under personal attack politically in TKD circles and politically. He broke with the KTA and formed the ITF or international Tae Kwon Do Federation after he fled to Vancouver Canada.
By 1972 the South Korean
government withdrew its support of the ITF and the KTA was abolished just prior
to that. The South Korean government noticed that General Choi had a great deal
of support from North Korea and other countries and they did not want this to
influence their martial arts so they formed the WTF or world TKD Federation.
The federation was formed directly inside the government and all Korean
instructors in South Korea were members. They also established the National
Academy of TKD or the Kukkwon. In 2017 the WTF was renamed World Tae Kwon Do
due to the “confusion” of the initials used by the group. This new group took
the sport morphing changes to a new level and pushed for TKD to be in the
Olympics and to be a sport or the focus to be on sport mostly. The Olympic
style of TKD was reinforced after it had been made an Olympic sport in 1988. It
had been a Pan Am game event as well as a common wealth game
prior…interestingly…..So was Karate.
Now to show the tight link
between TKD and Karate, some of the original Forms that were used to teach TKD
were taken directly from Shotokan Karate. These are normally refered to as
Hyeong in Korean. Poomsae were created
by the kukkiwon style and ATA style TKD and Teul were used by the ITF style
TKD. All of the forms follow the same
primary ideas of Karate Kata however.
It is safe to say that Karate, Shotokan
specifically is the parent style of TKD and that any of the changes that came about
could have been due to politics or just instructors coming up with their own
ideas, but the fact is that the masters who created TKD started off with a
Shotokan root system and built what we now know as TKD from that source.
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