Yuk Ro E dan , forma creada por el Maestro Hwang Kee ,fundador de Moo Duk Kwan ,es la segunda forma de la linea Yuk ro .
Пікірлер: 7
@Samperor3 жыл бұрын
Awesome!!!
@DavidLee-eh4dw4 жыл бұрын
I've never seen that form before but really enjoyed it.
@kodanja28444 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your comment. This form was created by Master Hwang Kee, founder of Moo Duk Kwan and is part of the study program of those who train Soo Bahk Do and Tang soo do, Korean martial arts. It is the second, of 6 of the Yuk Ro line (six paths) and it is called Jung jol, cutting the middle would be the translation.
@DavidLee-eh4dw4 жыл бұрын
@@kodanja2844 I spent 15 years in Tang Soo So but many organizations have branched off wildly on execution and uniformity. It is still a really nice form. If you have the rest of the series up I'd love to see them as well. Tang Soo!
@MyKarateca4 жыл бұрын
Yuk Ro (Six Path) & Chilsungse or Chil Sungs (Seven Star) were created before KJN HK. They are in the book: Muye Dobo Tonji: The Complete Illustrated Manual of Martial Arts of Asian Korea written around 1758.
@kodanja28444 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your comment . I own a copy of the MYDBTG books. Although Master Hwang Kee did a great job translating it, most of the books deal with military techniques with weapons, but there is also a chapter dedicated to the Kwon bup and breathing and flexing movements. The grandmaster extracted postures from that book, but the sequences of the forms or hyungs chil song and yuk Ro were not sequenced in those books. I hope you have had the opportunity to see the book's schematics and symbology, at least I haven't found them in those books. If you observe the end of this second Yuk Ro: joon jol, the last movements belong to the Pyong Ahn Sa dan form, form of Okinawan origin, also in the other Yuk Ro there is influence from the rest of the Okinawan forms of Karate Do schools . This indicates that the grandmaster combined movements of different origins when he created them.