Hapkido
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Added: 5 years ago
From: kaloki
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  • estas artes marciales creo q se usan mas para la guerra

  • There only ONE instructor in the USA that teach Hapkido like this that I know of. That is Master Allen in Florida. Not because I am Korean I say this, I say this because I am 99% sure of it. Master Allen teach it just like he learn it from Grandmaster Chang in Korea where the Master Allen grow up. I believe you will find his Hapkiyoosool on youtube very easily.

  • el aikido y el hapkido tienen el mismo origen,ambos fundadores fueron practicantes de Daito Ryu AikiJutsu pero son estilo diferentes si bien se basan en el mismo principio de utilizar la fuerza del oponente a su favor el hapkido es mucho mas agresivo ya que incluye golpes y luxaciones

  • Nice Hapkido Trailer:

    youtube.com/watch?v=_ugw_Cinwj­s

  • Nice Hapkido Trailer:

    youtube.com/watch?v=_ugw_Cinwj­s

  • old man's got speed!

  • muistuttaa aikidoa kuten hokurai jujutsu mutta suomessa on 9 dan mustavyö auvo niinikedolla on kouluttanut myös presidentin turvamiehiä 

  • Yoon sae kwon?

  • hapkido real!

  • haber una cosa que no entiendo es que el hapkido es lo mismo que el aikido solo que aumentas patadas y un poco de puños ¿?¿?¿? y es mejor que el tkd¿?

  • @098017429 , yo tambien quiero saber la dif; pero respecto al tkd, nada que ver; el aikido al menos es estrictamente defensa, ademas de ser una filosofía de vida, y el estudio de otras partes ademas de la marcial, como la musica, la caligrafía o la seremonia del té.

  • modern hapkido has its roots in Daito Ryu AikiJutsu

  • @1bol1 :-j jutsu is arts, tips and do is the way of st. so there was iaido => iaijutsu, kendo=> kenjutsu, judo => jujutsu, now aikido => aikijutsu. May jutsu or do came first but it's the same just the way they learn and do it.

  • Mumbo Jumbo aside....I would like to know more about this Master.....if he is still alive and where in Korea can I go to visit him...........

  • Hapkido is Pure

  • I believe that this is the main (not the only) martial art form used by the US military. As with any other combat (not sport) fighting system, techniques have have been borrowed and adapted for military use by the US.

    I will not pretend to know anything of the origins, I traain in Krav Maga and will be looking for a Wing Tsun school in another year or so when I am done with KM.

  • Not Ji Han Jae....., its Yoon Sae Kwon...

  • "Hapkido" as we know it today is from Choi Young-Sool who learned form Takeda Sokaku. There ARE documented thecniques that are the same in old Korean manuscripts but "Hapkido" is from Choi. THe human body can only manipulated in certian ways. All martial arts that use joint locks ust eh same techniques but slight different applications. Hapkido is NOT an ancient Royal Marital Art of Korea. I grew up in Korea and majoredi n Asian Studies and Martial Arts. I manot biased but honest.

  • This isnt Ji Han Jae, im not sure who this is but certainly not Ji Han Jae..

  • The 'best guess' origination theories trend toward the notion that both Hapkido and Aikido are rooted in Aiki jujutsu through Takeda, who taught the founders of each art. One interesting speculation is that Uyeshiba spent enough time in Manchuria to borrow some things from the internal Chinese systems. The 'ancient royal Korean art' connection is usually claimed (with lack of documentation) by Hwarangdo and Kuk Sool Won, not Hapkido, which gives a modern date for its founding.

  • This would be correct my friend. They are both a product of Daitō-ryū Aiki-jūjutsu. Guys can copy and paste that into your browser :=)

  • fohnjoster is exactly right about the origin of Hap-Ki-Do.

  • agree.. 0:07 says its history is bout 2000 yr old bt neh.. dats nt true.. :o even kungfu is nt dat old. btw did u know dat aikido n hapkido are named in same chinese letters? lol bt i find hapkido more effective as it includes dynamic kickings and pressure point attacks. :D

  • hapkido NEVER came from japan. its a royal martial art original to ONLY the royal families and top level generals.

    There is proof in the catacombs of the dynasties. the other variations of hapkido other than traditional would be the mixed breeds, ie ur japanese mixed version

  • fohnjoster is exactly right about the origin of Hap-Ki-Do....

  • nonsense.

  • Hapkido Is Korean.. Isnt It?

  • @anbuyoshi Actually, that is only true for the more traditional hapkido, which has been around in korea for hundreds of years. However the modern hapkido has definite roots from japanese aiki-jiujitsu. The modern art really starts during the japanese occupation in which korea fighting styles were banned, and thus hapkido was changed so that it would be legal as well as more effective. But feel free to correct me if im wrong ^^

  • @NinrateCommando

    There has never been any proof of hapkido existing before Choi. This ideology comes from people who want to make the art more special in their mind by giving it more age and history.

    I am a 5th dan in Hapkido and in my 31 years in the martial arts I have yet to find anything in my research that shows Hapkido to be anything more than a modern art. I'm proud of that fact to. Even with the Samurang B.S. THere has never been any proof that the Samurang were Korean Samurai.

  • basically it was passed from one person to the next until it became massed somehow.

    the Aikido version that you are referring to is AFTER the korean/japenese war. and trust me koreans hate the japanese so they'd never admit to their arts being derived from japan.

    my master is the ONLY 8 dan grandmaster in hapkido in california from the Korea Hapkido Federation and he HATES all the other variations of hapkido that stray from the traditional korean style.

  • WRONG homies,

    Hap Ki Do is originally a korean ROYAL martial art that was only taught to the royal family and high generals.

    there is proof in the catacombs of the original korean dynasties. once korea was unified, the original masters picked 1 student and adopted him like his own child and took him with him.

  • Hapkido royal martial art connection is just a fairy tale invented by Korean Nationals to disconnect the art from its true Japanese heritage. And NO this is Not Dojunim Ji Han Jae. Still this Korean master is extremely skilled and knowledgeable in the art of Hapkido. I believe that he is around 80 years of age.

  • That's wishful thinking, anbuyoshi. That's the typical "party line" that is spread by some Korean stylists, who don't want to admit Hapkido's origin because of the widespread hatred of Japan in Korea. However, the facts are that the core of Hapkido is joint-locking techniques straight from Daito-Ryu Jujitsu. Honestly, everyone knows this. Then, others such as GM Ji added many native Korean striking techniques to form modern Hapkido.

  • @wael77

    Hey Wael, its Dan. This is so true. People want to give the art some ancient mythical history cause they feel that it needs it. The truth is that in my mind, modern arts are more complete for the most part cause of our ability and willingness to share knowledge. Though I know this not to be a 100% true statement, I believe it to be more so than not.

  • es chon yong sool?

  • I'm not sure but this may be Ji Han Jae.

    regards

  • its not Ji Han Jae

  • Not Ji Han Jae, It is Yoon Sae Kwon. I know him. He is very good. Smae like Grandmaster Chang Young-Shil. Old School Hapkido. Way to go!

  • He's not neither Choi, Young Sool, neither DJN G.M. Ji, Han-Jae. I can be sure he's not DJN Ji because I trained whith him, and he's not G.M. Choi, because he's simpy not old enough, there's a video of him out there, check it out!!!

  • im so lucky...my master is the head of the australian association of hapkido

  • Actually, Hapkido was derived from Daito-ryu Aiki Jujitsu. Choi Yong Sul, the founder of Hapkido, studied with Sokaku Tekada who was also the teacher of the founder of Aikido. There are very few pieces of historical documentation to support this, it is however very clear that the movements came from the same "Tree" as Aikido. It certainly is not a copy of Aikido, but is an independent art with it's own styles.

  • as i saw the hapkido i do not see that much difference to the basic application from aikido. no doubt of it s relations compare to other harder martial arts. the further difference lies to the social, cultural, economical conditions. some use it primaly for their physical health and to gain mental calmness, while to others are for purely engaging to the forthcoming physical aggression. depends to the rate of crime and poverty in your area i guess.

  • @fohnjoster

    why did choi created hapkido if aikido already existed?

  • @jin54363 just my humble view, but hapkido is it's own art, BASED on aikiJUTSU, not aikido. it also contains many elements from existing Korean arts. again just my opinion, but it is more a offensive style if you will, versus a defensive style. many more strikes then you are seeing in this video. korean martial arts have been much maligned since ww2, and it is difficult to learn the true history, but it can be done. hope this was helpful.

  • @jin54363 firstly, Aikido and Hapkido are no where near the same. The first difference is in the fact that hapkido emphasizes striking to a far greater extent. The second is in the form of the techniques. Aikido use a great deal of flow and primarily focuses on flow, while hapkido is a quick and much smaller circle with less flowing movement. Secondly, Hapkido was a way of fighting against the japanese during the occupation of Korea. It was a sign of national pride to have there own fighting art

  • @jin54363 You also combine this with the idea that hapkido has much different philosophical views from aikido and you have a totally different art with different applications. Plus the two arts were actually developed at the same time, so aikido would not have already existed.

  • @fohnjoster

    So true. I have heard of other hapkido practitioners who have went to Japan and trained with DRAJJ practitioners and the DRAJJ guys have said how eerily similar HKD is to DRAJJ.

  • The onus is on you for claiming that there is validity to demonstrate it.

  • can someone translate what the master says.?

  • that is a bit shortsighted. You could say that it evolved from aikido as aikido evolved from the older jujutsu schools. You also can't say that Japan is a copy of Korea, or that Korea is a copy of China just because Japan learned Chinese writing from Koreans and Korea adopted it from China.

  • no not true they have their own language called hangul they use to speak chinese like 500 years ago and also korean have circle in their characters chinese doe not

  • It's definitely influenced but you know nothing about aikido or hapkido if you think it's a copy.

  • vai encararrrrrrrrrrrr

  • que estilo de Hapkido es este de este maestro?

  • es un excelente arte marcial, buena exibición

  • Originaraimente japoneses aprendieron el arte en corea, luego algunos maestros japonese alcanzan la maestría y uno de ellos le enseña a un coreano (Daito Ryu significa escuela coreana)y este luego de volver a corea lo enseña y busca sus orígenes en Corea. No lo olvides

  • i like that

  • They're Korean, actually.

  • ACtually, it's origins are from Japan.

    What else is Korea going to steal?

    /user/uriginalcollection

  • El Hapkido es Coreano y punto.

  • tis is one old man tat u definitely wont wanna rob late at nite :p

  • zeeaapppeee,

    Es mas que movimiento y equilibrio -- es tambien la structura del cuerpo. Para hacer "aiki" ("hapki"), tiene que comprendar el relacion entre el espinazo, las caderas, las piernas, y la tierra. El cuerpo se mueve como una unidad, y la fuerza origina en la tierra.

    (!Mis apologias por me pobre espanol!)

  • Qué opinas del AIKIDO?

  • Me parece un arte marcial elevado el cual ha hecho un estudio riguroso de la energía (ki) y también se ocupa del desarrollo trascendental del individuo. Me agrada mucho

  • Perdón mi ignorancia como se llama este maestro?

  • ste es el gran Maestro Yoon Se Kwon

  • you see those little kids in the background!? (1:00) are they blackbelts????!!!!

  • Gracias por tu comentario, estoy de acuerdo contigo

  • me gustan mucho mas los viejos maestros de hapkido que los nuevos,en ellos se nota la herencia de Daito Ryu y su tecnica es mucho mas depurada,los practicantes modernos de este arte confian mas en la fuerza muscular y en el dolor de las luxaciones que en la calidad del movimiento y el equilibrio correcto.gran video de un gran maestro.

  • ohhhhhhhhhhhhhh mannnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn

  • 所詮亜流

  • well, if you reached 6Dan in hapkido under 6 years. Then you probably payed your instructor a large amount of money... or have an instructor that does not demand as much of your techniq that others do. Maybe you should try practise for some other instructor to learn real hapkido.

  • That is a MCdojo for sure! LOL! Fast food teachings!

  • Very much so.. my former hapkido instructor who learned from a man named Mike McCarty(incredible) who trained under Ji Han Jae.. he told me that traditionally, once you become a dan.. it takes 2 years to test for your 2nd degree, 3 yrs for 3rd, so on and so forth.

  • ur not talking bout the guy in the vid rite?

  • Who is the guy in the video and where is his school at? (obviously Korea, but where in Korea)? Thanks

  • Okinawan and Hokkaido dwellers are for the most part the original JapaneseA(Ainu). The Japanese (if you want to be literal) DId learn everything from the Koreans, Chinese, and Mongols. Miyagi learned Karate from the Chinese in 1600's. Japan did NOT teach it. Now Japan claims they taught teh Koreans how to make Kimchi. I am not to proud of my heritage. Honestly.

  • Being Japanese and not as closed minded as the other Japanese posters. Hapkkido IS from Daito-Ryu. It was called Hapkiyoosool(Aikijujutsu). The Japanese started out with the original Ainu people and the modern Japanese of the day are fomr Korea, China, and Mongolia as prisoners shipped off to kill each other. Much like Australia started.

  • Yo estudio Wing Chun pero admiro a todos los artes. Este viejito es un monstro! Me gusta como el muestra su arte. Lo que no me convence es que no e visto a nada que quiere agarrar a otra persona de la muneca para comencar un pelea. Imagino que eso lo practicaban para los tiempos de antes cuando andaban espadas y cuando la querian sacar, el enemigo le agarraba la mano. No se pero esto adivinando que esa es la razon porque practican eso. No es ideal en los tiempos de hoy y pienso.

  • Gracias por tu comentario. Aprovecho para aclararte la práctica de agarres: 1º) con ella nos acostumbramos a utilizar el ki 2º) aprendemos a desequilibrar, sintiendo como sacamos al otro de su eje (momento en que empiezan todas las técnicas de HKD 3º)Nosotros utilizamos agarres en combate

  • en realidad las tecnicas de agare pueden ser apicadas en cualquier momento en que se entre en distancia de grappling (lucha)para aplicar una llave o proyección.

  • @todei79

    Coincido contigo que no es comun que te tomen de la muñeca hoy en día, a menso que el que toma sea muy fuerte, o el tomado muy debil (por ejemplo una mujer) Pero ello no quita que se pueda utilizar la técnica de contraataque de todos modos, aún cuando no te hayan tomado de todos modos. A mi también me gusta el Wing Chun.

  • Ok two things, the first, Hapkido comes from japan of the Daito Ryu, but that is not the point, Hapkido is a great martial art, and korea have great masters, and Samurang is the term for the warriors elite of korea in silla dinasty, don't forget what samurai and samurang comes from chinese, a both are warriors elites.

  • Yes and no, the self defense basic is from daito ryu but, all technichs have been modified throught Hapkido developpement by many korean master. Daito ryu don't have kicks, kicking techniques is from Taekwondo and grappling techniques is from Judo. The weaponnery as nunchaku and staff or cane come from kungfu. Soo Hapkido is actually some kind of Old Mixed Martial Art.

    By the way, I am holding 5.dan black belt in Taekwondo and 4.dan black belt in Hapkido.

    Best regards

  • Hapkido's roots were originated in Japan because Choi Yung Sool was a Korean who was raised in Japan.. true the wrist locking/throwing portion originates from aiki-jujitsu, but there are major variations in the technique. Plus a lot of the strikes are different and the kicks are completely Korean.. (tang so doo/TKD snap kicking technique) I've trained in hapkido and aikido.. similar but different.. both are great styles.

  • the hwarangdo was the predecessor of the samurai... they were around 200-300 years earlier

  • Very Good Hapkido video by Grandmaster Yoon Se Kwon.

  • I think this is Grand Master Yoon Se Kwon (not sure of spelling). At something like 80 years old, he is amazing. A really famous Master in Korea.

  • Excelente velocidad del Maestro...

  • estas en lo correcto, es samurang (y son anteriores al samurai)

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