Kūsankū (kata) - definição. O que é Kūsankū (kata). Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é Kūsankū (kata) - definição

OPEN HAND KARATE KATA
Kanku sho; Kanku Dai; Kanku dai; Kusanku (kata); Kanku-Dai

Kūsankū (kata)         
Kūshankū (クーシャンク, 公相君) also called Kūsankū (クーサンクー) or Kankū-dai (観空大), is an open hand karate kata that is studied by many practitioners of Okinawan Karate, specifically styles related to Shuri-te. In many styles, such as Shotokan, there are two versions of the kata: Kūsankū-shō and Kūsankū-dai.
Kata Szidónia Petrőczy         
  • Kata Szidónia Petrőczy
HUNGARIAN WRITER
Kata Szidonia Petroczy
Kata Szidónia Petrőczy (1659–1708) was a Hungarian writer and poet. She is regarded as the first female writer of the Baroque period in Hungary and its foremost representative of Baroque prose.
Kendo Kata         
  • Kendo kata at an agricultural school in Japan around 1920 man in right foreground is in [[Chūdan-no-kamae]].
FIXED PATTERNS IN KENDO PRACTICE
User:Carmelator/draft article on Kendo Kata
Kendo Kata are fixed patterns that teach kendoka (kendo practitioners) the basic elements of swordsmanship. There are two roles, uchidachi (打太刀), the teacher, and shidachi (仕太刀), the student.

Wikipédia

Kūsankū (kata)

Kūshankū (クーシャンク, 公相君) also called Kūsankū (クーサンクー), Kōsōkun or Kankū-dai (観空大), is an open hand karate kata that is studied by many practitioners of Okinawan Karate, specifically styles related to Shuri-te. In many styles, such as Shotokan, there are two versions of the kata: Kūsankū-shō and Kūsankū-dai. The name Kūsankū or Kōsōkun (公相君) is used in Okinawan systems of karate, and refers to Kūsankū, a Chinese diplomat from Fukien who traveled to Okinawa in the 1700s. In Japanese systems of karate, the kata has been known as Kankū (translated as gazing heavenward, viewing the sky, or contemplating the sky) ever since it was renamed in the 1930s by Funakoshi Gichin. This kata is also practiced in Tang Soo Do as Kong Sang Koon (공상군) in Korean according to the hangul rendering of the hanja 公相君. Most schools of Tang Soo Do only practice the "Dai" version but a handful do practice both the latter and "Sho" versions.