for guidance only


Tozando Facebook Tozando Twitter

Join our mailing list!




Contact Tozando

Skype Me


You are here: Home > KYUDO
Yumi Ya Yugake Kyudo Gi
Kyudo Hakama Kyudo DVD Miscellaneous
Sort By:
Page of 4
Giriko Powder
Giriko Powder
List Price: ¥500.00
Our Price: ¥750.00

The actual design may be different from the image.
Giriko Powder Case
Giriko Powder Case
List Price: ¥800.00
Our Price: ¥800.00

Only Black Color available.
Muneate
Muneate
List Price: ¥800.00
Our Price: ¥800.00

Budo tabi
Cotton Tabi
Our Price: ¥1,260.00

Sold as pair.
The sizes listed are just indicating the measures in centimeters  from the tip of the big toe to the beginning of the heel (measure taken in a straight line).
Budo tabi
Tetron Tabi
Our Price: ¥1,260.00

Sold as pair.
The sizes listed are just indicating the measures in centimeters  from the tip of the big toe to the beginning of the heel (measure taken in a straight line).
Tsuru
Tsuru
Our Price: ¥1,330.00

Sold as a set of two pieces.
Makiwara Ya
Makiwara Ya
List Price: ¥1,500.00
Our Price: ¥1,500.00

Made of duralumin.
The actual color may be different from the image.
Cotton Wrapping Cloth For Yumi
Cotton Wrapping Cloth For Yumi
List Price: ¥1,500.00
Our Price: ¥1,500.00

100 % cotton. The actual color and design may differ from the image.
Synthetic Leather Yumi Bag
Synthetic Leather Yumi Bag
List Price: ¥1,800.00
Our Price: ¥1,800.00

Made of durable synthetic leather. The actual color may be different from the one shown.
Rattan Tsurumaki
Rattan Tsurumaki
List Price: ¥1,800.00
Our Price: ¥1,800.00

   
 
Kyudo, the Way of the Bow, is the oldest of Japan's traditional martial arts. The bow has been used in Japan since prehistoric times. From the fourth to the ninth century, close contacts between China and Japan had a great influence on Japanese archery, especially the Confucian belief that through a person's archery their true characters could be determined. Over hundreds of years archery was influenced by the Shinto and Zen Buddhist religions along with the pressing practical requirements of warriors. Court nobles concentrated on ceremonial archery while the warrior class emphasized kyujutsu, the martial technique of using the bow in actual warfare.

With the introduction of firearms the bow as a weapon was neglected and almost died out all together until Honda Toshizane, a kyudo instructor at Tokyo Imperial University, combined elements of the warrior style and the court ceremonial style into a hybrid style which ultimately became known as the Honda Ryu (Honda martial school). This style found great favor with the general public and he is generally credited with saving Japanese Archery from oblivion. With the American occupation banning all martial art instruction, Kyudo, as opposed to kyujutsu, became widely practiced and the Zen Nihon Kyudo Federation (All Japan Kyudo Federation) was established in 1953, publishing the standard kyudo textbook called the Kyohon, and overseeing Kyudo development both in Japan and internationally up to the present time.

Kyudo is a highly meditative martial art whose ultimate goals are Shin (Truth i.e. the ultimate reality), Zen (Goodness) and Bi (Beauty). When asked the question "What is Truth?" a master archer would pick up a bow and arrow and shoot it, without saying a word, allowing the level of mastery of the bow to serve as the gauge of the archer's progress along the "way" thereby showing the archer's knowledge of reality i.e. "Truth" itself.