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Some misinformation

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Ming Dynasty already end in 1644. So Kusanku is definetely not sent to Okinawa by Ming dynasty. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Congi77 (talkcontribs) 12:04, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

At the same time, I don't think a shaolin monk would train a Qing official. Qing forces sacked the Shaolin temple. Not only that, but Fukien also had a lot of support for Ming dynasty, even during the Qing dynasty it had loyalties with the Ming. Also, all the posted links indicate he was in the Ming army. I agree, however, this is pretty strange. ElbowLick (talk) 02:03, 13 March 2011 (UTC)[reply]
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Kusanku Kata history

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Whoever added this history of Kusanku kata, it seems more fitting to add in the separate, existing article for that kata.

"This kata was passed down from Kusanku's student Tode Sakugawa. Many variations of Kusanku kata exist, however the most unique one is known as "Tachimura no Kusanku" in KishimotoDi, this version was passed on by a student of Kanga Sakugawa known as Bushi Tachimura, a contemporary to the more famous Bushi Matsumura. The kata of KishimotoDi remain unaltered by Anko Itosu."

It needs references though, particularly for the claims about Koshimoto Di. This version reads like an advert. Scrubbed it from here, for now. Enreh (talk) 12:53, 29 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]