Iba Hideaki
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Iba Hideaki (1648-1717) was a famed swordsman during the Edo period (17th century) of Japan. Hideaki had been a adept of the Shin kage ryu at an early age, but later concluded to himself that the school had not reflected realistic fundamentals, which is why he then chose to travel around and look for a school that would better fit him. Hideaki had then followed in a certain duel with an unknown swordsman skilled within the Enmei ryu in the Kyushu region. Hideaki had lost the duel, in which he chose to become a disciple under the man that had defeated him. Years later, Hideaki would change his name to Iba Zesuiken, in which Hideaki founded the Shin gyoto ryu school of swordsmanship, which was basically a merging of the Shin kage and Enmei ryu's way of the sword. The name of Hideaki's school had meant "School of the Sword That Shapes the Mind". What Hideaki had truly meant by having such a name was the fact that within the time of combat, one will be amongst two states of mind--that of attacking the opponent or fleeing out of fear. Through this, Hideaki employed the principle that one should always attempt to deepen their level of technical accomplishment in order to create within themselves an unshakable form.
[edit] Reference
Miyamoto Musashi - Life and Writings