| Shinoda OhHo |
|
|
|
|
PROFILE OF HOKUSHIN SHINOH RYU SOKE, SHINODA OHHO MASATSUNE 宗家 篠田桜峰正庸
At a young age, Shinoda OhHo Masatsune studied Kendo from the Police Kendo Instructor Ichikawa Sabanosukeuchi who was a friend of his grand father. Shinoda developed great skills and received the nick-name "Ko Tengu" from his teacher at the age of twelve. Shinoda moved to Mito to become a student of Hokushin Itto Ryu Kenjutsu under the famous master swordsman Ono Nao Uemon, who was himself, a direct student of the Founder of Hokushin Itto Ryu Kenjutsu, Chiba Shusaku Narimasa . Letters indicate that Shinoda studied Kenjutsu with Ono Nao Uemon for an undetermined length of time. Shinoda spent time in the army as an aid to General Fukushima Yasumasa and went to Manchuria where he gave Kendo and Ju-ken jutsu instruction to soldiers. Upon returning from service, he continued his studies with Hokushin Itto Ryu Kenjutsu, eventually mastering the style. Shinoda then moved to Yokohama and became a student at the Shinto Kan Honbu Dojo learning Bujutsu under the founder of that school, Soke Hibino Raifu.
His dojo was destroyed by fire in 1945 due to the allied bombing of Japan. In 1957 Tokugawa Yoshichika, a descendant of the famous Tokugawa Ieyasu family, helped Shinoda rebuild a new dojo in Nagoya. The Honbu dojo alone had 500 students and records show that there were over 20,000 students throughout Japan. In 1965, a year before his death, the last Taikai of Soke Shinoda OhHo attracted some 15,000 participants.
The portrait of Shinoda OhHo Masatsune featured at the top of this page depicts the founder proudly wearing the medal that he was awarded by the Japanese Government for "Outstanding Contribution to Japan's Cultural Heritage". |
한국어
Chinese





