The following five classical or orthodox kata are the only ones practiced in Japan today and were established in this order by the time of Yamada Heizaemon Ippusai in the late 17th century. Instead of the extension 'no kata', the kata in Yamada's book have the extension 'no bu' (之部), which means
section (of this book).
Kimiyoshi Suzuki's students in
Jikishinkan also practice these classical katas and this lineage practises its own set of katas preparing for the classical ones. Each season has a respective pace,
kōan (公案) theme, footwork, breathing, kiai, and other features reminiscent of the perceived characteristics of that season.
Spring has waza which are executed in a smooth and fast manner, accompanied by loud kiai. The kōan of spring is
eight-directions explosive-blast which can be translated as
all directions.
Summer has movements that are explosive and intense. The kōan of summer is
one-sword both-cut which can be translated as
cutting your ego.
Autumn has a varied pace, symbolizing change. The kōan of autumn is
right-turn left-turn which can be translated as
times of change.
Winter movements are slow, reserved but firm and efficient. This is even more accentuated on the footwork of each season. The kōan of winter is
long-short one-body. The following example is an illustration of this principle. Imagine a situation where one person has a
yari (槍) or
naginata (長刀 or 薙刀), which stands for long, and the other a has sword, which stands for short, but the situation is as such that there is no more discussion, any discussion at this point would be superfluous. This metaphor tries to explain the meaning behind this kōan that in this season
life and death are one. The themes of the four seasons refer to universal principles which also express themselves in other manifestations. Some of these are listed in the table below. Both uchidachi and shidachi take on a stance in spring and autumn which is called
nio dachi. This refers to the pair of guardian deities of
Buddhism called
niō (仁王), which can be found as large statues at entrances of some of the ancient Japanese temples and shrines. The right statue is called
Misshaku Kongō (密迹金剛) who has his mouth opened, this represents vocalization of "a." The left statue is called
Naraen Kongō (那羅延金剛) who has his mouth closed, represents the vocalization of "um." It is said that these two characters together symbolize the birth and death of all things, like we are born with "a" and our mouth open (inhale) and we die with "um" and our mouth closed (exhale). This is similar to "
Alpha and Omega" or "A to Z" signifying "beginning and end", "everything" or "all creation." The contraction of both is
Aum (
Devanagari ॐ), which is an important concept in Sanskrit. The stances and expressions of the statues, the sounds "a" and "um" and the symbolism behind this are very import in the hōjō no kata. The 15th headmaster wrote this on the meaning of the hōjō no kata:
Fukuro shinai no kata (tō no kata) The
fukuro shinai no kata (韜之形), or
tō no kata as it is also named, is the second kata of the Jikishinkage-ryū style. The kanji 韜 is rare and old and is able to read as "tō" but has the meaning of fukuro (袋). This kata is composed of fourteen stages, divided in six groups. Each stage has about four movements. This kata is characterized by very fast waza. Both the uchidachi and the shidachi use
fukuro shinai (袋竹刀) which explains the origin on the name.
Kodachi no kata The third kata in the ryū, the
kodachi no kata (小太刀之形) has six stages. Shidachi uses a large heavy wooden kodachi (like the name of the kata), and uchidachi uses a standard kendo style bokuto or a fukuro shinai. All the three stages of this kata have shidachi running into "combat" with uchidachi. Jikishinkage-ryū is unique because the kodachi is used with two hands on the tsuka.
Habiki no kata The fourth kata is called
habiki no kata (刃挽之形) or
Koryū (古流) kata and it is a blend of concepts from hōjō no kata and fukuro shinai no kata. Both shidachi and uchidachi use habiki (a sword without a sharp edge) in this kata set. In several places both shidachi and uchidachi end up on one foot after cutting. There are four kata (the second and the third stages are in one block) in habiki no kata, and they are the old version of hōjō no kata.
Marubashi no kata The
marubashi no kata (丸橋之形) is the most advanced kata, it focuses on very difficult kiai and subtle movement. To the casual observer it looks as though nothing is happening in the kata at all. Shidachi uses kodachi and uchidachi uses odachi. Like the last set of kata both use shinken. This kata used to be a secret. It is not clear when the secrecy was lifted but the kata is, like the other five, described with text and photographs in the book of Yamada Jirokichi that was published in the early 20th century (1927). == List of representatives ==