Friday, November 18, 2011

What is the difference between JiuJitsu, Brazillian JiuJitsu, & Judo?

What is the difference between JiuJitsu, Brazillian JiuJitsu, %26amp; Judo?|||Jujutsu is a grappling type o thingy generally, of which there are countless schools and variations, Judo is Jujutsu minus certain moves that would cancel an open casket funeral, Brazilian Jiujitsu is another Jujutsu variation created in Brazil a while back that was made specifically to win vale tudo matches. It is very detailed and emphasized upon the endgame phase on the ground and not just groundfighting, which is an extremely vague term.|||Very briefly: classical Jujutsu is a martial art of feudal Japan (1100%26#039;s to late 1800%26#039;s). Judo was founded in the 1880%26#039;s by Jigoro Kano as a simplification %26amp; stadardization of classical jujutsu. He also removed many of the more deadly techniques so that Judo could be done at %26quot;full speed%26quot;, and also for sports competition purposes (Kano founded Judo to be both a martial art and a sport).





Most modern schools of jujutsu are actually based upon Judo, with certain modification of the techniques as well as inclusion of more techniques: either from other modern martial arts or from classical jujutsu. BJJ fits in here as well as any other jujutsu school with the word %26quot;goshin%26quot; in its title.





Classical jujutsu is not nearly as widely practiced as is Judo or modern jujutsu. An easy way to tell is that classical jujutsu does not have the belt ranking system were are accustomed to today. They simply had certificates. Also, there are no competitions or tournaments in classical jujutsu. Modern jujutsu, Judo %26amp; BJJ are dominated by competitions/tournaments.|||Jujutsu (from the Japanese 柔術 jūjutsu listen (help·info) meaning %26quot;gentle/yielding/compliant art%26quot;) is a Japanese martial art whose central ethos is to yield to the force provided by an opponent%26#039;s attack in order to apply counter techniques from the resultant ensuing situation. There are many ryu (styles) of the art which leads to a diversity of approaches. Jujutsu ryu may utilize all techniques to some degree (i.e. Throwing, trapping, locking, holding down, grappling, gouging, biting, disengagements, Strike, and kicking). Generally jujutsu ryu make limited use of strikes since they were predominantly developed in feudal Japan under the auspices of the samurai warrior class. The techniques evolved to become effective against armed opponents wearing bamboo body armour to protect vital parts of the face, throat, and body. In addition to jujutsu, many schools taught the use of weapons.





Both judo and brazilian jiu-jitsu and derived from jiu-jitsu





Judo (柔道, jūdō?), meaning %26quot;gentle way%26quot;, is a modern Japanese martial art (gendai budō) and combat sport, that originated in Japan in the late nineteenth century. Its most prominent feature is its competitive element, where the object is to either throw one%26#039;s opponent to the ground, immobilize or otherwise subdue one%26#039;s opponent with a grappling maneuver, or force an opponent to submit by joint locking the elbow or applying a choke. Kicks, punches, chops and thrusts are also practiced, but only in pre-arranged forms. They are not allowed in judo competition or freestyle practice.





Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ) is a martial art and combat sport that focuses on grappling and especially ground fighting with the goal of gaining a dominant position from which to force an attacker to submit. The system developed from a modified version of pre-World War II Judo including some techniques from Japanese Jujutsu and with a focus on ne-waza (ground technique). It promotes the principle that a smaller, weaker person using leverage and proper technique can successfully defend themselves against a bigger, stronger assailant. BJJ can be trained for self defense, sport grappling tournaments (gi and no-gi) and mixed martial arts (MMA) competition. Sparring and live drilling play a major role in training, and a premium is placed on performance, especially in competition.|||They each have their own variables. For instance, Brazillian JiuJitsu is more combat as Judo is more of the defence-type of fighting. Normal JiuJitsu has been around since ancient civilization times as a method of defence, attack, discipline, and ease.

No comments:

Post a Comment