If and when you are sliced by a sword would you pause on the way to exsanguination,a pause to contemplate who first made it.? Thrice sliced and diced,you the racialist need to take a memo. Not cool not good.
Master Yoon Jakyung has such amazing footwork and agility even in such a loose and flowy dress. It's more amazing since she can do all these amazing things with a sword in a world full of people who barely have the dexterity to make a pot of coffee in their pajamas.
This is a Korean creative dance only for performance, and It's one of Korea's fake martial arts.
This fake martial art were started as plagiarism of Japanese Kendo only 30 years ago though, but in now, it has become a strange dance, because Korean people have no culture of real sword fighting at all.
It's not a matter that Koreans copy foreign cultures and develop (or degrade). But I guess it's so wrong to falsify the origin and pretend to be their own traditional culture.
@Ebutuoy2004 you are obviously a japanese imperialist or a brain washed puppet thereof. what you are spewing out here is precisely the impression that the japanese wanted to create when they brutally colonized korea and destoryed/stole as much of her culture and cultural artifacts as possible to hide the fact that most of the japanese art/culture originated from korea and china (via korea).. they even made it illegal to speak korean in korea.
@Ebutuoy2004 Japan with their false superior race imperialism, was the NAZI of asia during the second world war, committing untold atrocities, but unlike germany japan has yet to even acknowledge, let alone apologize and make amends for her crime to humanity.
On top of all that for you to slander other asian countries like this with your continued imperialist brainwashing is beyond the pale.
IT's like finding a German Nazi still denigrating jews as pigs as they used to do
@bassuan Your baseless comments are no welcomed, you magikarp shit. You shall shut up before your little lame brain juice get dried up trying to think of a perfect counter for my flaming, but couldnt think of any substantial reply except, "Learn to write properly", even though there was absolutely non existing of any improper literature in my post. And then you carried on to write some insult on my channel that stupid 10yo fags write when they still havent acquired enuff vocabulary skills in sch
that's racist. If you are so proud, you should educate not condemn. an it says not to use to post racist content...your words are racist. Please report this user. Please remove the content.
man caim down i thought the koreans were nice and humble people so as the japanese they're respected ppl any way i'm not from east asia so that i can tell the diffrince between the two.
I hate it when people talk about Japan coming from Korea or Japanese martial arts came from Korea or vice versa. Look, Japan is not Korea, never was, never will be. It was a seperate country with a different language. Japanese didn't come from Korea, they came from Mongolia "using" Korea as a a route, and came from Russia and some were even there in the beginning. From Japan's POV, it was just a nearby trading country for goods only.
What the hell are you talking about. The Japanese Emperor admitted that he has Korean ancestors. Japanese people have Korean mDNA... exactly the same mDNA as Koreans, not Mongolian, not Chinese.
well they do deserve some credit. tkd shared influence since they use the same system of belts and levels. also uniform since they do where a gi. same with gum do since it is influenced in the ranking system and dress. like in sparrying matches with armor on you can't tell the difference between a gum do match and kendo. plus i doubt a hakkama is tradition korean clothing since it was invented by samurai
I'm pretty sure the samurang aren't a hoax. (This was suggested earlier.) Not that I myself have evidence to prove it, but I take Haidong Gumdo at a Korean Martial Arts Academy near where I live (admittedly, in America) and it seems to be genuine stuff. Whether or not they taught or even influenced the Samurai, I've not the faintest idea. I'm not a history major. Or, it is possible that I misinterpereted the message, in which case, I apologize.
"many modern Korean Martial arts derrive from Japanese ones mainly due to Japanese outlawing KMA and burning records with KMA infomation." That is true. But Japanese martial arts has its origin in ancient korea. Because Japan became independent from Korea About 7C. Previous to that time, Japan was just one of the states called Baekje Empire.
Hwarang was not influened by the Samurai as the Hwarang were largely gone by the time Samurai came into power, seeing how the Samurai weren't formed/organized/written down etc till the 12th century or so no alot adds up there, BTW all Martial Arts build off of each other Karate comes from Okinowa [sp I know] not Japan many modern Korean Martial arts derrive from Japanese ones mainly due to Japanese outlawing KMA and burning records with KMA infomation.
They believe it was to get t he Korean government to accept Gumdo as an intangible art, which the Korean government has not done. Gumdo is modern and was from Japanese Kendo. It's the same reason that the government doesn't recognize Taekwondo. Only Taekkyon and Ssireum have been recognized from what I can tell, possibly one of the archery martial arts too...Pakchiki is not known if it exists still or not
World Haidong Gumdo Federation. Had come up with that story and most historians have called it false. Not only that the so called taxt claimed that the Samurang taught and influenced the Samurai...I stopped doing research on that group as it pointed to being false and created in the 20th century.
From my studies and from what I've learned the Samurai came about after a group of early Japanese warrios-some have called the proto-saumurai-were defeated by the Chinese Tang and the Hwarang. This created great reforms and the Samurai was created.
that is the style of the samurang, not the hwarang, many peapole is very comfused about that, the samurang wasnt train by the samurai they where traind by the chinese and mongolian arts yes but the hwarang was innflued by the samurai and the chinese warriors no mongolian!!!
The Samurang was a claim by the World Gumdo Federation in which they claimed that the Samurai had recieved alot of their ideas from the Samurang. The word samurang wasn't even used until the 12th century. Most historians including Korean and Japanese historians believes it's a 20th century hoax.
I've been doing research on this for ten years now and everyone I've spoken to including Japanese friends say the Hwarang came before the Samurai...I'm seeing more of a Chinese and Mongolian influence by what I've been researching.
You mentioned the Edo period. Samurai were in existance during that period, but were in decline. Given the dates. The samarai were being formed and reorganized during the Taika reforms in 645 A.D.
The Hwarang were during the Silla Dynasty 57 BCE - 935 CE. A prot-samurai type had been defeat by the Tang and Silla dynasty, which created great reform in Japan, which eventually led to the creation of the Samurai.
For example Hwarang drawings resemble chinese martial arts more than Japanese martial arts. The hwarang were not a full time military group. They trained along with the Korean military, but were probably citizens with great national pride. Some hwarang did eventually join the military, but not all of them. Their system of training based on many historians I've read says their training resembled Chinese and Mongolian's training.
the kumdo style of korea is a copy of the japanese kendo,and the kendo was the samurais martial arts,hapkido is an copy of the japanese aikido,i have done some reasearch on the net and there was many korean styles that wasent even korean,almost all vere japanese and chinese martial arts styles,but this movie is great i agree,im just saying korean warrior are heavy innflued by the japanese samurais(please forgive my english ;) )
I think early folding techniques originate from China went into Korean then Japan. This seems to be more likely. As for the history of the Samurai they were formed in about the 6th and seventh century. The Hwarang were formed in the fifth and sixth century and lasted till the 10th century. By the sixt century the Hwarang were already well in place. This makes the Hwarang unlikely to have been the pupils of the samurai.
The Hwarang dates to about the 5th century. The Samurai appears around the 6th century. The sword folding techniques I tend to believe originated from China and spread into north Korea.
Edo period was in about 1600 and Heian period was about 800. Making it unlikely that the Hwarang were the Samurais pupils.
Yes, the defeat of early Japanese warrior at the hands of the Tang and Hwarang is probably why the Samurai was formed. They saw a need for an organized military it should be noted that the hwarang were not actually part of the Korean military that they worked with the korean military and it was not a life time position. more like they were people with strong national identity that trained along with the military in ancient times
do you think the samurais livd in the edo period....bullshit i study the samurai, and the samurai has been a warrior class four over thousends of years, the korean samurang wasnt train by the samura!!!!but the warang was!!!
No that is not what I'm saying. I'm saying that Edo period was a later period and the Hwarang existed before the Edo. By accounts of historians, most of which I read from Japan say the Hwarang were before the Samurai. The hwarang had a different way of training as well
nonono there was two types of korean warriors 1.the samurang and 2.the warang the samurang was before the samurai and hwarang is not older than the samurai
yes you right! the hwarang was folowing the way of the japanese sword,the jingum is a japanese sword thath the korean makes,the warang was trained by the samurais in the heian or edo period or something i dont know
I personally think and that the Chinese had a sword folding technique that early north koreans began to use, which eventually spread to japan. The difference is that the korean sword making technique is more crude then the Japanese technique and KOrean swords did not contain a blood groove. The swords had different shapes and sizes so Koreans really didn't have a set standard on how the swords should be made. Some were nearly as well as later Japanese swords and other weren't as well designed.
well it depends, I know some Tang swords and Korean swords did incorperate the ridge/groove (not sure what you mean by blood grove though). And basically all swords in East Asia uses the metal folding technique. (except the wushu-ceremonial flappy swords which are really crappy and are for show only)
The Edo period was in the 1600's, which again would mean that it was unlikly that the Hwarang were trained by Samurais if you pick the Edo period. The Heian period is from about 800.Information on the Hwarang goes back to the eighth century, which is about 700-800, although they found evidence of the begining of the hwarang in the sixth century. Approximately year 500-600. This would make it highly unlikely then that the Hwarang were the Samurai's pupils.
There was no such thing as nihonto when the hwarang were around. Go learn some history. The jingum has been around before the existence of samurai by a thousand years. What kind of a idiot are you?
did u guys know thath the korean martial arts is japanese influed martial arts, anyway the korean warrior was cald the samurai pupils, the warrang was trained by the japanese sword style :)
Modern korean martial arts were influenced by Japan, if you're talking about the Hwarang they predate the Samurai in written records in China and Korea.
The Samurai were formed after Japanese loss to the Tang of China and Silla of Korea. The Hwarang dates about one hundred to two hundred years before these early Samurai so it's not probable that the Hwarang was trained by these early Japanese Samurais. Likely the Hwarang got many of their skills from China then to Japan and Modern Korean martial arts came from Japan. Only 3 or 4 martial arts (games really) survived from that period.
Are you stupid. Koreans taught Japanese how to make metal, steel, ceramics, etc.. Koreans and Chinese were making these swords thousands of years before the Japanese.
And it all began in. Al..Kebu Lan.Africa to all the cognoscenti.
khamsin1948 5 days ago
If and when you are sliced by a sword would you pause on the way to exsanguination,a pause to contemplate who first made it.? Thrice sliced and diced,you the racialist need to take a memo. Not cool not good.
khamsin1948 5 days ago
朝鮮王朝實録:The Annals of the choson Dynasty (The True Record of the Korean Dynasty)
【June 11, 1480】矧惟國人, 不慣槍劍, 專業弓矢, 爲禦敵之備
The people are not accustomed to use of sword or spear, defended from enemies only by archery...
【October 13, 1592】上敎政院曰“我國絶無劒手”
The king said “There is no swordman in our country at all”...
【July 11, 1594】我國自古劍術不傳
Any sword art has not been succeeded from ancient time in our country...
enushisama 5 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Please watch this video.
watch?v=uQ5zOKB3yzw
武藝圖譜通志Muye Dobo Tongji (1790) : Comprehensive Illustrated Manual of Martial Arts in Korea
【It is The official document at Korean Dynasty 】
Introductory chapter :
我國練兵之制三軍練于郊,衛士練于禁苑,其禁苑練兵盛自 光廟朝,然止弓矢一技而已如槍劍法技,既未之聞焉,
“Archery was the only martial art that had been practiced by Korean soldiers. They have no skills of sword or spear fighting”
It is plagiarism from Japan that Gumdo is traditional martial arts in Korea 1000years or more.
enushisama 5 months ago
gumdo??
lidolivio 6 months ago
I want to duel her 1v1 with my pink sword :) lol
KensaiZen 8 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Check out our channel for our own 360 Kick! Hope you like it!
JETKnockout 8 months ago
Foolish South Korean. Thief South Korean. Deceitful Korea.
arata9 8 months ago
@bassuan
i hope god don't hear ass wipe wishes like yours
japan for the win shit head asshole bassuan peace of shit
esmaelooo 1 year ago
@bassuan
basterd korean hope you loose asia cup you homo
esmaelooo 1 year ago
@bassuan
mother fuckin gooks
koreans are idiots and japs rule the world of electronics
joreans are japs bitches
esmaelooo 1 year ago
Master Yoon Jakyung has such amazing footwork and agility even in such a loose and flowy dress. It's more amazing since she can do all these amazing things with a sword in a world full of people who barely have the dexterity to make a pot of coffee in their pajamas.
swordsmanfabian18 1 year ago
This is a Korean creative dance only for performance, and It's one of Korea's fake martial arts.
This fake martial art were started as plagiarism of Japanese Kendo only 30 years ago though, but in now, it has become a strange dance, because Korean people have no culture of real sword fighting at all.
It's not a matter that Koreans copy foreign cultures and develop (or degrade). But I guess it's so wrong to falsify the origin and pretend to be their own traditional culture.
Ebutuoy2004 1 year ago
@Ebutuoy2004 you are obviously a japanese imperialist or a brain washed puppet thereof. what you are spewing out here is precisely the impression that the japanese wanted to create when they brutally colonized korea and destoryed/stole as much of her culture and cultural artifacts as possible to hide the fact that most of the japanese art/culture originated from korea and china (via korea).. they even made it illegal to speak korean in korea.
Rainyfield 1 year ago 3
@Ebutuoy2004 Japan with their false superior race imperialism, was the NAZI of asia during the second world war, committing untold atrocities, but unlike germany japan has yet to even acknowledge, let alone apologize and make amends for her crime to humanity.
On top of all that for you to slander other asian countries like this with your continued imperialist brainwashing is beyond the pale.
IT's like finding a German Nazi still denigrating jews as pigs as they used to do
Rainyfield 1 year ago 8
@bassuan Your baseless comments are no welcomed, you magikarp shit. You shall shut up before your little lame brain juice get dried up trying to think of a perfect counter for my flaming, but couldnt think of any substantial reply except, "Learn to write properly", even though there was absolutely non existing of any improper literature in my post. And then you carried on to write some insult on my channel that stupid 10yo fags write when they still havent acquired enuff vocabulary skills in sch
TalesIncs 1 year ago
@bassuan lol. Wad a stupid comment. They came from China.. You nub
TalesIncs 1 year ago
korean?
Why Japanese sword
bosswnsket 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
@bosswnsket
Because Korea has no culture of sword fighting.
Ebutuoy2004 1 year ago
me like female warriors :)
GamingTard 1 year ago
that's racist. If you are so proud, you should educate not condemn. an it says not to use to post racist content...your words are racist. Please report this user. Please remove the content.
mdportsf 2 years ago
she is pride of Korea
eastyunasea 2 years ago
man caim down i thought the koreans were nice and humble people so as the japanese they're respected ppl any way i'm not from east asia so that i can tell the diffrince between the two.
esmaelooo 2 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
i think that koreans are descendents of the japanese
esmaelooo 2 years ago
I can't believe that this kinnd of K-martial-arts, can play "Circus"! no one can ever made before as i seen
markandoyo 2 years ago
WOW!!! (She's like Okita Soujiro of Shinhingome!
maybe she is reincarnated Japanese!
LOL
I hope we meet her;
-mark
Hijikata-san reincarnated!
markandoyo 2 years ago
Wow! She is outstanding!!! I love her!
Thank you for sharing.
tayounorise 2 years ago
i als loved when she cut the candlelights off!!!!!!!
tayounorise 2 years ago
hi beaut... ugh! *neck slitted* LOL!!
icecrimson 3 years ago
she rocks I want more!! ps: yeah would be nice to see the whole episode
SelaineCosplay 3 years ago
she is awesome!
pantherkim 3 years ago 2
5 stars, favored, shared, thank you so much for posting your awesome videos, my world is enriched with art in motion. your friend much peace, Pagan
LadyHeathen 3 years ago
Does anybody know the link to the whole TV show Thanks Joe
joecaudill2001 3 years ago
She's so hot!
rudican 3 years ago
日本人から言わせてもらうと 別に韓国に武道があってもおかしいとは思わない。武道の無い国の方が稀だしね。
しかし韓国の武術と日本の武術は別物だろ。伝来がどうとかこうとか起源がどうとかおかしいだろ?
そんなもの元をたどれば皆、中国だ
大事なことはどう生まれたかではなく、どう育ったか。
韓国人は起源とか言ってないで自分の国の武術を誇ってほしい。
sako2kai 3 years ago 2
i wanna see the whole episode
kpride220 3 years ago
I'd also appreciate a little help on identifying this show (TV special?) and what episode this is from.
amorphous 3 years ago
OMG!!
I've been looking for this show on youtube for MONTHS.
I saw it while I was in Korea on Holiday and I got completely hooked. So funny even if I couldn't understand a single word.
Does anyone know what the show is called? I've been trying to find out for AGES!
Ingeborglh 3 years ago
very impressive
ngnjaguar 3 years ago
I hate it when people talk about Japan coming from Korea or Japanese martial arts came from Korea or vice versa. Look, Japan is not Korea, never was, never will be. It was a seperate country with a different language. Japanese didn't come from Korea, they came from Mongolia "using" Korea as a a route, and came from Russia and some were even there in the beginning. From Japan's POV, it was just a nearby trading country for goods only.
ifdc 4 years ago
koreans are molgols too x)
(practically)
kondal91 4 years ago
What the hell are you talking about. The Japanese Emperor admitted that he has Korean ancestors. Japanese people have Korean mDNA... exactly the same mDNA as Koreans, not Mongolian, not Chinese.
melonbarmonster 3 years ago
man I'm sick of martial arts politics just enjoy what your watching and leave it at that. this is a cool video nufsaid.
batterieacid 4 years ago 10
lol i saw this in a korean channel it was awesome and funny too
BlackTemplars5 4 years ago
Sweet... Definitely some great skills...
kickinfamily 4 years ago
The dance part had me fooled, I was gonna dimiss her as a bunch of crap but I have to admit I'm impressed with her cutting skills.
bladesaint21 4 years ago
Awsome cutting
JNR007 4 years ago 2
THATS FUCKING AWESOME
youdontunderstand 4 years ago 3
japs always try to take credit for everything.
syi706 4 years ago
well they do deserve some credit. tkd shared influence since they use the same system of belts and levels. also uniform since they do where a gi. same with gum do since it is influenced in the ranking system and dress. like in sparrying matches with armor on you can't tell the difference between a gum do match and kendo. plus i doubt a hakkama is tradition korean clothing since it was invented by samurai
bluceree 4 years ago 2
I'm pretty sure the samurang aren't a hoax. (This was suggested earlier.) Not that I myself have evidence to prove it, but I take Haidong Gumdo at a Korean Martial Arts Academy near where I live (admittedly, in America) and it seems to be genuine stuff. Whether or not they taught or even influenced the Samurai, I've not the faintest idea. I'm not a history major. Or, it is possible that I misinterpereted the message, in which case, I apologize.
uberpizza 4 years ago
That is why japanese fight with Dang and silla dynasty which destroyed Baekje Empire
mis45jk 4 years ago
"many modern Korean Martial arts derrive from Japanese ones mainly due to Japanese outlawing KMA and burning records with KMA infomation." That is true. But Japanese martial arts has its origin in ancient korea. Because Japan became independent from Korea About 7C. Previous to that time, Japan was just one of the states called Baekje Empire.
mis45jk 4 years ago
Hwarang was not influened by the Samurai as the Hwarang were largely gone by the time Samurai came into power, seeing how the Samurai weren't formed/organized/written down etc till the 12th century or so no alot adds up there, BTW all Martial Arts build off of each other Karate comes from Okinowa [sp I know] not Japan many modern Korean Martial arts derrive from Japanese ones mainly due to Japanese outlawing KMA and burning records with KMA infomation.
EasternKnight 4 years ago
well karata comes from india ... get your facts right
BloodFeather 3 years ago
Heard about that. A bhuddist monk from India took up martial arts as a way to hone the mind.
johntheactor 3 years ago
well its true ;)
BloodFeather 3 years ago
They believe it was to get t he Korean government to accept Gumdo as an intangible art, which the Korean government has not done. Gumdo is modern and was from Japanese Kendo. It's the same reason that the government doesn't recognize Taekwondo. Only Taekkyon and Ssireum have been recognized from what I can tell, possibly one of the archery martial arts too...Pakchiki is not known if it exists still or not
mastertae 4 years ago
World Haidong Gumdo Federation. Had come up with that story and most historians have called it false. Not only that the so called taxt claimed that the Samurang taught and influenced the Samurai...I stopped doing research on that group as it pointed to being false and created in the 20th century.
mastertae 4 years ago
all I'm saying though is that modern Korean martial arts mostly came from Japan. There are some that originated from China as well.
mastertae 4 years ago
From my studies and from what I've learned the Samurai came about after a group of early Japanese warrios-some have called the proto-saumurai-were defeated by the Chinese Tang and the Hwarang. This created great reforms and the Samurai was created.
mastertae 4 years ago
I'm not saying that you're wrong. I'm saying that all my research and interview historians point to the Hwarang existing before the samurai.
mastertae 4 years ago
that firs she do in the vid innt even martial arts,its a korean shindon(sword dance)!!
henkihareid 4 years ago
Even the system I've studied that they used were Chinese and Mongoloian influence and the Dates all point to before the Japanese Samurai.
mastertae 4 years ago
that is the style of the samurang, not the hwarang, many peapole is very comfused about that, the samurang wasnt train by the samurai they where traind by the chinese and mongolian arts yes but the hwarang was innflued by the samurai and the chinese warriors no mongolian!!!
henkihareid 4 years ago
The Samurang was a claim by the World Gumdo Federation in which they claimed that the Samurai had recieved alot of their ideas from the Samurang. The word samurang wasn't even used until the 12th century. Most historians including Korean and Japanese historians believes it's a 20th century hoax.
mastertae 4 years ago
I've been doing research on this for ten years now and everyone I've spoken to including Japanese friends say the Hwarang came before the Samurai...I'm seeing more of a Chinese and Mongolian influence by what I've been researching.
mastertae 4 years ago
the warang was before the samurai but was trained by them!!!! im half japanese and i live in norway
henkihareid 4 years ago
You are a retard. Go learn some history.
melonbarmonster 3 years ago
You mentioned the Edo period. Samurai were in existance during that period, but were in decline. Given the dates. The samarai were being formed and reorganized during the Taika reforms in 645 A.D.
mastertae 4 years ago
645 A.D. --- Taika Reforms began.
702 A.D. --- Taiho law codes established the Great Council of State.
710 A.D. --- Nara rule began with first permanent capital.
781 A.D. --- Emperor Kammu came to power and moved capital to Kyoto a few years later.
794 A.D. --- Heian period began.
mastertae 4 years ago
The Hwarang were during the Silla Dynasty 57 BCE - 935 CE. A prot-samurai type had been defeat by the Tang and Silla dynasty, which created great reform in Japan, which eventually led to the creation of the Samurai.
mastertae 4 years ago
For example Hwarang drawings resemble chinese martial arts more than Japanese martial arts. The hwarang were not a full time military group. They trained along with the Korean military, but were probably citizens with great national pride. Some hwarang did eventually join the military, but not all of them. Their system of training based on many historians I've read says their training resembled Chinese and Mongolian's training.
mastertae 4 years ago
the kumdo style of korea is a copy of the japanese kendo,and the kendo was the samurais martial arts,hapkido is an copy of the japanese aikido,i have done some reasearch on the net and there was many korean styles that wasent even korean,almost all vere japanese and chinese martial arts styles,but this movie is great i agree,im just saying korean warrior are heavy innflued by the japanese samurais(please forgive my english ;) )
henkihareid 4 years ago
how is every one
mastertae 4 years ago
sorry if there are multiple posts it seems my copmuter is messing up...
mastertae 4 years ago
I think early folding techniques originate from China went into Korean then Japan. This seems to be more likely. As for the history of the Samurai they were formed in about the 6th and seventh century. The Hwarang were formed in the fifth and sixth century and lasted till the 10th century. By the sixt century the Hwarang were already well in place. This makes the Hwarang unlikely to have been the pupils of the samurai.
mastertae 4 years ago
The Hwarang dates to about the 5th century. The Samurai appears around the 6th century. The sword folding techniques I tend to believe originated from China and spread into north Korea.
Edo period was in about 1600 and Heian period was about 800. Making it unlikely that the Hwarang were the Samurais pupils.
mastertae 4 years ago
Then certinaly from Tang-China cuz the Heian period of culture in Japan was when Chinese influence reached its peak.
Intranetusa 4 years ago
Yes, the defeat of early Japanese warrior at the hands of the Tang and Hwarang is probably why the Samurai was formed. They saw a need for an organized military it should be noted that the hwarang were not actually part of the Korean military that they worked with the korean military and it was not a life time position. more like they were people with strong national identity that trained along with the military in ancient times
mastertae 4 years ago
do you think the samurais livd in the edo period....bullshit i study the samurai, and the samurai has been a warrior class four over thousends of years, the korean samurang wasnt train by the samura!!!!but the warang was!!!
henkihareid 4 years ago
No that is not what I'm saying. I'm saying that Edo period was a later period and the Hwarang existed before the Edo. By accounts of historians, most of which I read from Japan say the Hwarang were before the Samurai. The hwarang had a different way of training as well
mastertae 4 years ago
nonono there was two types of korean warriors 1.the samurang and 2.the warang the samurang was before the samurai and hwarang is not older than the samurai
henkihareid 4 years ago
You are a flaming moron. Hwarang predates samurai by a thousand years.
melonbarmonster 3 years ago
yes you right! the hwarang was folowing the way of the japanese sword,the jingum is a japanese sword thath the korean makes,the warang was trained by the samurais in the heian or edo period or something i dont know
henkihareid 4 years ago
the katana itself is based off of straight edged single sided swords of the Tang dynasty. As is the typical steel folding technique.
Depending on if the hwarang was invented in modern or ancient times...
Intranetusa 4 years ago
I personally think and that the Chinese had a sword folding technique that early north koreans began to use, which eventually spread to japan. The difference is that the korean sword making technique is more crude then the Japanese technique and KOrean swords did not contain a blood groove. The swords had different shapes and sizes so Koreans really didn't have a set standard on how the swords should be made. Some were nearly as well as later Japanese swords and other weren't as well designed.
mastertae 4 years ago
well it depends, I know some Tang swords and Korean swords did incorperate the ridge/groove (not sure what you mean by blood grove though). And basically all swords in East Asia uses the metal folding technique. (except the wushu-ceremonial flappy swords which are really crappy and are for show only)
Intranetusa 4 years ago
The Edo period was in the 1600's, which again would mean that it was unlikly that the Hwarang were trained by Samurais if you pick the Edo period. The Heian period is from about 800.Information on the Hwarang goes back to the eighth century, which is about 700-800, although they found evidence of the begining of the hwarang in the sixth century. Approximately year 500-600. This would make it highly unlikely then that the Hwarang were the Samurai's pupils.
mastertae 4 years ago
lol why the hell would the hwarang be trained be trained by the samurai?
koreanhawkashbringer 4 years ago
There was no such thing as nihonto when the hwarang were around. Go learn some history. The jingum has been around before the existence of samurai by a thousand years. What kind of a idiot are you?
melonbarmonster 3 years ago 2
did u guys know thath the korean martial arts is japanese influed martial arts, anyway the korean warrior was cald the samurai pupils, the warrang was trained by the japanese sword style :)
henkihareid 5 years ago
Modern korean martial arts were influenced by Japan, if you're talking about the Hwarang they predate the Samurai in written records in China and Korea.
mastertae 5 years ago
The Samurai were formed after Japanese loss to the Tang of China and Silla of Korea. The Hwarang dates about one hundred to two hundred years before these early Samurai so it's not probable that the Hwarang was trained by these early Japanese Samurais. Likely the Hwarang got many of their skills from China then to Japan and Modern Korean martial arts came from Japan. Only 3 or 4 martial arts (games really) survived from that period.
mastertae 4 years ago
Are you stupid. Koreans taught Japanese how to make metal, steel, ceramics, etc.. Koreans and Chinese were making these swords thousands of years before the Japanese.
melonbarmonster 3 years ago
what is the name of the dress/costume she is wearing?
stefaniemichelle 5 years ago
she is wearing a traditional hanbok
henkihareid 5 years ago
For some reason I can't play this video, not even after reseting my PC... help.
IAsimov 5 years ago
Ah! I finally see it... BEAUTIFUL! I've never seen someone display so much skill with the sword!
IAsimov 5 years ago
Yoon rocks...
irishjeff1 5 years ago
She's good!
Camua 5 years ago
What kind of sword is she using?
Camua 5 years ago
Should be a Haidong Gumdo Federation issued sword, which is a little different from a Japanese Katana
irishjeff1 5 years ago
i think she is using haidong gumdo or haidong jingum :)
henkihareid 5 years ago
wat show and what episode?
jyun1226 5 years ago
Excellent!
TaekwonMojo 5 years ago
whoa shes so pro.... wish we had that tv in australia XD
Suavsilk 5 years ago