Both are fine weapons, suited for different fighting styles. The katana seems more suited for relative range combat and dueling. Classically samurai. The hwando looks more suited for point-blank melee combat. Dirty field fighting. Pragmatic.
@toppokiman.japan1
Ай бұрын
Recently, Korean swords that have been shown in TV dramas are actually copies of Japanese swords. Originally, Korean swords were straight and double-edged.
@stevejung6470
Ай бұрын
I think that is silla korea not joseon.
@kenadrian27
29 күн бұрын
there are so many korean sword artifacts that are curved and single edged (do) . very few double edged (goems). I've seen them in a museum when I visited korea.
@tebeschris
17 күн бұрын
애초에 카타나자체가 조선장검을 모방해서 만든것이다
@codylontoc8065
9 ай бұрын
I'm surprised the scales on the armor are not real iron.
@joshumabv7642
9 ай бұрын
Muy interesante, gracias por destacar las diferencias.
@blakebailey22
5 ай бұрын
Is a Yedo a short sword or is it the name for a sword technique?
@wevv-i7t
3 ай бұрын
It is the techniques collection.
@P.ilhaformosatherium
Ай бұрын
Gươm, Hwando, Miao dao, Tachi, Da'a/Daap ect. > Katana Weeabos ruined the Uchikatana and O katana for me
@bangisamu6851
9 күн бұрын
May I ask? Why does Korean style have a spinning motion in it?
@wtfll
8 күн бұрын
style points lol
@georgeperez1839
Ай бұрын
The korean swords just look cooler to me
@kenadrian27
29 күн бұрын
korean swords have alot of variety. there are korean swords that look like the one in the video, and korean swords that look exactly like katana (jingum). Japan copied just a small subset of korean swordmaking.
@ruru1514
9 күн бұрын
This is a Katana collected from the Imjin war. Some Japanese smiths were left behind on the Korean peninsula.
@donmelon718
7 ай бұрын
.........OK
@ahmadalzuway8425
3 ай бұрын
The circling that the Korean dude in white pajama is doing! This is not how to fight with a sword unless it is a video game or a Hollywood movie. Maybe he is performing a ceremonial dance rather than showing actual fencing techniques. Circling in a fight means that you gave your enemy an opening to strike your arse and/or back. Turning your back to an enemy with a blade is either a great sign of fear or an open invitation to get yourself shredded from the back.
@Jyuan315
2 ай бұрын
Hello, that circling is very tradition , remember that the korean was very good at archery and sword, including naval combat. They know what they were doing at the time. Circling is also practice in dancing for culture heritage it goes way way back to dance with ghost. You should look this up. It's very cool!
@masizzungchocowooyoo3546
2 ай бұрын
@@Jyuan315 Well, as far as I know, even in Korea, opinions are divided about the rotating movement of traditional swordsmanship. First of all, unfortunately, Korea lost much of its traditional culture during the Japanese colonial period, and one of them was swordsmanship, which was also lost along with the disbandment of the military. In the end, all of Korea's traditional swordsmanship today is restored by interpreting documents, and problems arise depending on how the illustrations and texts are interpreted. Some interpret certain movements as spinning, while others say that it would not have been done for practical reasons, but the person in the video seems to follow the former interpretation.
@Katcom111
2 ай бұрын
The circling is based on the Korean military manual called the Muyedobotongji. Some techniques were taken from Chinese General Qi Jiguang military manual Jixiao Xinshu. Back then, pirates were causing problems in China, Korea, Japan and Southeast Asia.
@lupimali9504
2 ай бұрын
@ahmadalzuway8425 It is an absolutely cardinal rule not to turn one's back on his opponent while they are fighting (wheter it is a fighting with empty hands or with a sword). Most likely Koreans merely follow some flashy movements seen in Japanese samurai movies or Chinese wuxia films.
@Submission_Fighter
Ай бұрын
There was a time in the beginning MMA days when spinning attacks were considered absolutely useless. But then, more and more people started getting knocked out with spinning elbows/backfists and spinning back kicks in the UFC or other sanctioned MMA competition. And many of those times, people never saw it coming. If you can catch people unaware with spinning elbows and back kicks, then I am sure that you can catch people unaware with spinning sword attacks too. Therefore, it would indeed have its uses in combat.
@lmunawaroh835
4 ай бұрын
Japanese modern now from tribe Yamato Korean Joseon 🤔.Ainu tribe the native Japanese 😅🎉
@Aka-gm4im
4 ай бұрын
Modern Japanese people still have the Jomon bloodline, the first tribe to inhabit Japan.
@GreaterAfghanistanMovement
Ай бұрын
The Japanese royal family are of Jomon ancestry. Their haplogroup is D which is Ainu/Emishi origin.
@Submission_Fighter
Ай бұрын
The Japanese royal family are of Korean ancestry from their Korean bloodline. Amenohiboko, Empress Jingū, Emperor Ōjin, Emperor Kanmu, Emperor Akihito, and many others all have Korean ancestry. And many Baekje nobles became Japanese noble families.
@GreaterAfghanistanMovement
Ай бұрын
@@Submission_Fighter Wrong. They are Jomon through DNA testing. Koreans are a mixture between Han Chinese and Japanese people.
@Submission_Fighter
Ай бұрын
@@GreaterAfghanistanMovement Wrong. Yapping nonsense doesn't make it true. Those royal families I mentioned are all Korean. Look it up. World scholars also widely agree that Yayoi/Kofun/Munmun spread to Japan through the Korean peninsula. DNA testing also shows that modern Yamato Japanese have very little Jomon blood in them, only about 10%.
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