All Martial Arts Styles:
Japanese Aikido
European Boxing
Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu - BJJ
Capoeira
Eskrima, Arnis & Kali
Hapkido
Jeet Kune Do
Japanese Judo
Japanese Jujutsu
Karate
Kendo
Kenpo
Kickboxing
Krav Maga
Chinese Kung Fu
Military Martial Arts
Mixed Martial Arts (MMA)
Muay Thai
Ninjutsu
Russian Sambo
Korean Taekwondo
Tai Chi
Korean Tang Soo Do
Wing Chun
Wrestling
Others Martial Arts
All Martial Arts
Boot Camps:
Muay Thai Camps
Kung Fu Camps
Aikido Camps
Boxing Camps
Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (Gracie) Camps
Capoeira Camps
Eskrima, Arnis, Kali Camps
Judo Camps
Karate Camps
Kickboxing Camps
Krav Maga Camps
Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) Camps
Ninja Camps
Taekwondo Camps
Tai Chi Camps
Martial Arts Training:
All Martial Arts
Balance Skill
Blocking Techniques
Conditioning
Defense Against Weapons
Deftness Skill
Elbow Strikes Techniques
Falling Techniques
Grappling Techniques
Joint Locks
Kata Unarmed
Kata With Weapons
Kicks Techniques
Knee Strikes Techniques
Martial Arts Movies
Martial Arts Quotes
Muscle Power
Physical Fitness
Polls
Punches Techniques
Reaction Speed Training
School List
Self-Defense Techniques
Sparring & Kumite
Speed Training
Stances Skill
Strength Training
Stretching and Flexibility
Terminology & Numbers
Training Equipment
Warming-Up
Weapons of Martial Arts
Self-Defense for Women
Yoga for Martial Arts
Other topics
19 Dec 2016 13:50
List of Karate Kata (Shotokan, Kyokushin, Goju-Ryu, etc.) This section provides details on the kata used by most major Karate styles including Shotokan, Kyokushin, Goju-Ryu, Shito-Ryu and many others. The pages below include videos and/or written kata instructions for a huge number of different Karate katas. Visit each section to see all of the kata associated with that Karate style (i.e. Shotokan Karate Katas). Kata is a formalized step-by-step system usually incorporating a variety of kicks and strikes against an imaginary opponent. Some kata also use martial arts weapons as part of the routine. Kata is used extensively by most traditional Karate styles because it helps students to practice certain moves (i.e. kicking techniques, self-defense techniques and various strikes) when they are without a training partner. Kata also helps to improve a student's physical conditioning, muscle memory, focus/concentration, balance, etc. Some Karate styles use a relatively low number of kata whereas other styles use a huge variety of kata as part of their training (i.e. Shito-Ryu Katas). For the "kata" of other martial arts (i.e. Taekwondo forms), please visit the main Kata, Forms & Patterns section. Karate Kata by Style or Organization
|
|