Ko-ryū (Japanese: 古流, 'old school') is a Japanese term for any kind of Japanese school of traditional arts. The term literally translates as "oldschool" (ko—'old', ryū—'school') or "traditional school". It is sometimes also translated as "old style".
Martial Arts
Koryū is often used as a synonymous shorthand for Ko-budō (古武道), ancient Japanese martial arts that predate the Meiji Restoration of 1868.[1][2][3] In English, the International Hoplology Society draws a distinction between Koryū and Kobudō martial arts based on their origin and the differences between their ranking of priorities concerning combat, morals, discipline, and/or aesthetic form.[4]
Ikebana (Flower-Arranging)
Ko-ryū is one of the oldest and most traditional schools of Ikebana. From it, various other schools have formed that carry its name, such as the Nihon Ko-ryū, Katsura Ko-ryū, Miyako Ko-ryū, Ko-ryū Shōshōkai, and Ko-ryū Shōōkai (古流松應会).[5][6][7][8][9][10]
Sources
Draeger, Donn F. Classical Bujitsu (Martial Arts and Ways of Japan). Weatherhill, 1973, 2007. ISBN978-0834802339
Hall, David A. Encyclopedia of Japanese Martial Arts. Kodansha USA, 2012. ISBN978-1568364100
^Japanese-English Dictionary of Kendo. All Japan Kendo Federation. Tokyo. Japan. 2000. Page 52.
^Armstrong, Hunter B. (1995). The Koryu Bujutsu Experience in Koryu Bujutsu - Classical Warrior Traditions of Japan. Koryu Books. pp. 19–20. ISBN1-890536-04-0.