earliest american report of karate, 1899

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    Earliest American report of Karate, 1899

    Vintage image of Okinawan karatekas, date unknown. Source: http://karatedo.hakuakai-matsubushidojo.com/history.html

    Most sources charting the history of Karate in America reach no further

    back than the period immediately following World War II, when American

    servicemen began returning from their time spent in Okinawathehomeland of the art. The earliest report, however, of the existence of

    Karate date to nearly fifty years earlierfrom 1899, when Dr. William

    Furness presented an account of his 1896 visit to the Ryukyu islands to

    the University of Pennsylvanias Museum of Science and Art. These

    islands, which include Okinawa, were then referred to as the Loochoo,

    Luchu, or Lewchew islands by American and British writers.

    http://karatedo.hakuakai-matsubushidojo.com/history.htmlhttp://karatedo.hakuakai-matsubushidojo.com/history.htmlhttp://karatedo.hakuakai-matsubushidojo.com/history.htmlhttps://martialartsnewyorkdotorg.files.wordpress.com/2014/11/karateokinawa.jpghttp://karatedo.hakuakai-matsubushidojo.com/history.html
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    Above: The title page of Dr. Furnesss 1899 report.

    Furness provides the following background in the opening pages of his

    report:

    Each year finds the Luchu Islands more and more important,

    commercially, to the Japanese government, although, as yet, they are but

    little known to the busy world which sails past them to and from the

    markets of China, Japan, and the far East. After careful search, I have been

    unable to find any detailed account of these islands, or of the people,

    before the visit paid to them by Captain Basil Hall, of H. M. S. Alceste, in1816. His accounts of the people agree in every particular with what Dr. H.

    M. Hiller and myself observed in 1896 (eighty years after Captain Halls

    visit), albeit during these four-score years the independent rule of a king

    has been abolished, and the islands are now entirely under the

    https://martialartsnewyorkdotorg.files.wordpress.com/2014/11/luchutitle.jpg
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    government of Japan. In view of this fact, the conclusion seems warranted

    that all changes in manners and customs in this small country are slow,

    compared with the rapid advance which is going on all around them.

    What was true in 1816 was most probably true a hundred years before.According to their own traditions, they never have been a warlike people,

    and have mingled no further with their near neighbors than the payment

    of a yearly tribute both to China and to Japan

    After devoting several pages to the various cultural institutions of

    Okinawa and other neighboring islands, Furness proceeds to the martial

    arts:

    We were told that the young men occasionally engage in boxing bouts,

    with bare knuckles; all blows are struck with the right hand, while the left

    is used solely as a guard. Clinching and wrestling for a fall are considered

    legitimate features of the sport. Rokshaku is another manly sport of the

    order of single-stick, with a staff about six feet long. Non-shaku is played

    with a stick about three feet long to which is attached a rope. The object

    of this game is to disarm the opponent by whipping the stick out of his

    hands. With these games and sports the youth of the islands pass their

    time

    Although the report is scant in its detail, it does appear to represent the

    first account of the existence of the martial arts of the Ryukyu by

    an American.

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    https://martialartsnewyorkdotorg.files.wordpress.com/2014/11/luchu_plate1.jpg