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  1. Nakayama graduated from Takushoku University in 1937. [2] That same year, he travelled to China as a military interpreter during the Japanese occupation of China. [3] By the time World War II began, Nakayama had attained the rank of 2nd dan. [8] Nakayama returned to Japan in May 1946, after the war. [1]

  2. His ancestors were highly-skilled instructors of kenjutsu (the art of swordsmanship). Upon entering Takushoku University in 1932, Master Nakayama immediately joined the university’s karate club, studying under Master Funakoshi Gichin and one of the master’s sons, Funakoshi Yoshitaka.

  3. Masatoshi Nakayama was born on April 14, 1913, in Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan. His early life was marked by a strong interest in martial arts, and he began his training in judo and kendo during his school years.

  4. In 1972, Nakayama, with some help from one of his students, Hirokazu Kanazawa, set up a personal dojo in the basement of his apartment building, naming it "Hoitsugan." This dojo is located in Ebisu, Tokyo, a short distance from the JKA honbu (headquarters) dojo.

  5. Nakayama was born on April 13, 1913 Yamagushi prefecture, Japan. He began studying karate after he enrolled in Takushoku University in 1932 under supervision of Gichin Funakoshi. In May 1949, Nakayama and colleagues helped establish the Japan Karate Association (JKA).

  6. Jan 24, 2018 · Sensei Nakayama has been credited for the ushiro geri (back kick) and gyaku mawashi geri (reverse roundhouse kick) as well as taking karate abroad and explaining martial arts to Westerners. He mainly taught in an American army base in Japan but later started teaching in universities.

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  8. In 1955, Masatoshi Nakayama assumed leadership of JKA. This event gave Nakayama the opportunity to carry out his plans to improve karate teaching methods and popularity. In 1956, Masatoshi Nakayama formulated his elite instructor program with the help of Teruyuki Kozaki.

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