Noriaki Inoue

Noriaki Inoue

Noriaki Inoue (1902-12-03, Tanabe – 1994-04-13, Kunitachi) was a Japanese martial artist, who was in his early years closely associated with the spiritual and technical development of aikido along with his uncle Morihei Ueshiba. Inoue is the founder of Shinwa Taidō, a martial art which he later renamed to Shin'ei Taidō.

He was the fourth child of Zenso Inoue, the patriarch of the wealthy Inoue family of Tanabe, and of Tame Ueshiba, the eldest sister of Morihei. Much of Noriaki's childhood was spent in the company of Ueshiba. He joined his uncle at Shirataki in a settlement expedition in the north of the island of Hokkaidō (1912–1919) and studied the Daito-ryu Aiki-Jutsu with him under Sokaku Takeda. He was also closely associated with the discovery by Ueshiba of the Omoto sect in Ayabe and his encounter with its spiritual leader Onisaburo Deguchi which had a decisive influence in Ueshiba's later philosophy[1].

Inoue then actively collaborated with his uncle into the spreading of aikibudō, the art derived from the daitō-ryū that Ueshiba has perfected. In 1927, the two men settled in Tokyo, teaching at various locations until the construction in 1931 of Ueshiba's first permanent dojo, the Kobukan. However, after the second Omoto incident (1935) when the military government suppressed the Omoto sect, a breach developed between Ueshiba and his nephew, the latter accusing the former of betraying the cause of the sect by not sharing the fate of its leaders, and the two eventually parted ways with mutual resentment. After the war, Inoue continued to teach in Tokyo independently from Ueshiba, instructing US Air Force officers.

While the original aikibudō has now evolved into aikido under Ueshiba, Inoue kept teaching his art as such until 1956 when he changed its name into Shinwa Taidō and finally Shin'ei Taidō. He had little interaction with the Aikikai organization which followed the death of Ueshiba and continued teaching actively until his death. He considered himself a co-founder of aikido along with Ueshiba although that is disputed by the Ueshiba family.

Inoue used various names throughout his life: Kitamatsumaru (1902), Yoichiro (1909), Yoshiharu (1920), Seisho (1940), Hoken (1948), Teruyoshi (1971), and finally Noriaki (1973)[2].

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Inoue — Family name name = image size = caption = pronunciation = meaning = region = language = related names = search = prefix = footnotes = Inoue (井上 above the well ) is the 17th most common Japanese surname. It can also be romanized as Inouye.People… …   Wikipedia

  • Noriaki Fukuyama — Nacimiento 1912 Fallecimiento …   Wikipedia Español

  • Inoué — Bleach (manga) Pour les articles homonymes, voir Bleach. Bleach …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Taijutsu — 体術 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Morihei Ueshiba — In this Japanese name, the family name is Ueshiba . Morihei Ueshiba 植芝 盛平 Ueshiba Morihei Morihei Ueshiba Born December 14, 1883( …   Wikipedia

  • Aikido styles — There are a variety of aikido styles. The larger and better known styles each have their own headquarters in Japan and an international breadth. The first generation style aikikai is still associated with the family of the founder of… …   Wikipedia

  • Нориаки Иноуэ — (jp. 井上鑑昭, Noriaki INOUE), родился в Японии 3 декабря 1902 г. в городе Вакаяма, в богатой семье, имеющей бизнес в торговле с заграницей. Иноуэ был известен под несколькими именами (на востоке это обычная практика): Китамацумару (Kitamatsumaru) –… …   Википедия

  • Frankenstein Conquers the World — Infobox Film name = Frankenstein Conquers the World image size = caption = Theatrical poster for Frankenstein tai Chitei Kaijū (1965) director = Ishirō Honda producer = Tomoyuki Tanaka Henry G. Saperstein writer = Reuben Bercovitch Takeshi Kimura …   Wikipedia

  • Kushindo — (also Koshindo) is not a martial art discipline with an own identity but a martial training, part of a philosophical tradition with similar name, which created roots in the southern Ryukyu Islands coming from China and with early influence from… …   Wikipedia

  • Aikido — Aikidō Aikidō [aikidoː] (jap. 合気道 oder 合氣道) ist eine betont defensive moderne japanische Kampfkunst, die Anfang des 20. Jahrhunderts von Morihei Ueshiba als Synthese verschiedener Aspekte unterschiedlicher Budō Disziplinen, vor allem aber als… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”