The Dai Nippon Butokukai (大日本武徳会) is where the two survival channels of the preceding sections — the commercial gekken-kōgyō and the state police-gekken — terminate in a single standardized kendō, and where the “office, not license” logic traced through the Kōbusho and the Keishichō reaches its institutional form as a national system of grades and titles.
Founding
The Dai Nippon Butokukai was established in Kyoto in April 1895 (Meiji 28), its stated purpose to encourage budō, cultivate martial virtue (butoku 武徳), and rouse the national spirit; an imperial endowment of ¥20,000 followed in 1909 (Meiji 42) (Dai Nippon Butokukai Budō Senmon Gakkō 1927). The first Butoku-sai (武徳祭) that year conferred the earliest seirenshō (精錬証), among them Matsuzaki Namishirō, Okumura Sakonta (奥村左近太), and Tokunō Sekishirō (得能関四郎).1
From Jikishinkage-ryū, Naganuma Kazusato (長沼和郷) of Mino-Kano Domain (幕末に直心影流を修行し) is said to have been awarded a kendō hanshi (武徳会から剣道範士号) in 大正14年(1925年).
The Shōgō System
The Butokukai’s ranking machinery is the terminus of the arc’s through-line. It began with the single seirenshō, added the hanshi (範士) and kyōshi (教士) titles around the years 1902 to 1903, and the renshi (錬士) title in 1934 (Dai Nippon Butokukai (大日本武徳会), n.d.). This is a conferred national title graded by a central body — the same office-and-grade principle as the Kōbusho appointment ranks and the Keishichō gekken kyūi (撃剣級位), not a ryūha transmission — now detached from any single school and administered nationally.
The 1927 Busen handbook shows this system in full administration: a fifteen-step dan/kyū ladder (jūdan 十段 down to gokyū 五級), the titles hanshi, kyōshi, and seirenshō held by examiners, and the examination and local-review (chihō shinsakai 地方審査会) procedures that governed grading (Dai Nippon Butokukai Budō Senmon Gakkō 1927).
The Butokuden and the Honbu Teaching Staff
When the Butokuden (武徳殿) was completed in Kyoto in 1899, the Butokukai named five men to its teaching staff — Okumura Sakonta, Mitsuhashi Kan’ichirō (三橋鑑一郎), Naitō Takaharu (内藤高治), Sasaki Masayoshi (佐々木正宜), and Koseki Norimasa (小関教政) — the step that began converting the honbu from a tournament site into a teaching institution (Naitō Takaharu (内藤高治), n.d.). The accompanying recruiting telegram to Naitō is flagged in his own entry as traditional embellishment and is not treated here as documentary.
The Busen
The teaching institution proper evolved through four names, and its own chronology corrects the common conflation of the 1899 honbu appointment with the founding of the training school. The Butokukai formally established the Bujutsu Kyōin Yōseijo (武術教員養成所) — a teacher-training institute for kendō and jūdō — on 1 October 1905 (Meiji 38), six years after the 1899 Butokuden staffing (Dai Nippon Butokukai Budō Senmon Gakkō 1927). The institute was reorganized as the short-lived Butoku Gakkō (武徳学校) in 1911, chartered under the Senmon Gakkō-rei as the Bujutsu Senmon Gakkō (武術専門学校) in January 1912, and finally renamed the Budō Senmon Gakkō (武道専門学校, “Busen”) in February 1919 (Dai Nippon Butokukai Budō Senmon Gakkō 1927).
That last renaming is telling: the school became a budō rather than a bujutsu school in Taishō 8, the same year the Butokukai unified the terms kenjutsu and gekken under the single name kendō. The disciplinary relabeling and the institutional one are a single movement.
Naitō served as chief kendō instructor and formed the interwar generation, including the future tenth-dan holders Mochida Moriji (持田盛二) and Saimura Gorō (斎村五郎) (Naitō Takaharu (内藤高治), n.d.). That interwar-generation detail is developed in the Busen section, so as not to duplicate the Naitō and Chiba entries; this section carries only the institutional placement.
The 1911 Kendō-kata
An intermediate step preceded it: in 1906 a body of the first-generation hanshi — Mitsuhashi Kan’ichirō and Watanabe Noboru among them — framed a Dai Nippon Butokukai kenjutsu-kata (大日本武徳会剣術形), the immediate forerunner from which the 1911 committee worked. (Japanese Wikipedia, n.d.)
In 1911 a committee including Monna Tadashi (門奈正), Naitō Takaharu, Ozawa Ichirō (小澤一郎), and Sasaki Masayoshi drafted the Dai Nippon Teikoku Kendō Kata (大日本帝国剣道形). The standardized forms then promulgated in 1912 as the Butokukai consolidated the many shinai-kenjutsu lines into one kendō (Mito Tōbukan (水戸東武館), n.d.). This is the same cross-school integration logic the Keishi-ryū kata prototyped a generation earlier: the police composite of 1886 is the forerunner of the national composite of 1911–12.
The 1919 Unification
In 1919 (Taishō 8) the Butokukai unified the terms kenjutsu and gekken under the single name kendō, completing the disciplinary relabeling that ran parallel to the school’s own renaming that year (Dai Nippon Butokukai (大日本武徳会), n.d.). The reform was pan-disciplinary rather than kendō-specific: the same jutsu→dō (術→道) relabeling recast jūjutsu as jūdō and kyūjutsu as kyūdō, and the Butokukai promulgated a standardized form for each art, not only the sword. For archery it issued the Dai Nippon Butokukai kyūdō yōsoku (大日本武徳会弓道要則) and a unified shooting form (武徳会形), codified — in the words of a contemporary manual — to unify shooting technique (shakei tōitsu 射形統一): the archery analogue of the 1911 kendō-kata, so that the same single standardized art emerged from many older lines here as with the sword (Kyūdō Kyōiku Kenkyūkai 1933).
Colonial and Overseas Honbu
The Butokukai’s reach extended into the empire through full colonial headquarters, not mere branches: a Taiwan honbu (台湾本部) was established in April 1906 (Meiji 39), one of three colonial honbu alongside the later Manchuria and Korea bodies, and its machinery ran on the police — prefectural and local governors headed the branches, and solicitation was carried mainly by police officers. In the colony this is more than a funding detail: kendō diffused through the police-and-school apparatus that was the instrument of colonial control. The Kawashima Takashi entry develops the Taiwan case as the concrete mechanism — his route to Jikishinkage-ryū under Yamada Jirōkichi ran through a Hualien-area kendō instructor under the Butokukai’s Taipei (Taihoku 台北) branch, placing a leading Tainan kendō figure inside, or immediately adjacent to, that police-and-school structure.
Jiki Figures
加藤完治の系統は、茨城・日本武道修練会、日本伝統文化保存会椎名市衛、千葉・人間禅付属剣道場宏道会、広島・保仁館道場に伝えられている。
大西英隆の系統は、直心影流百錬会、法定会、高崎経済大学剣道部他各地に伝えられている。
大森曹玄の系統は、高歩院鉄舟会や茨城・小座山道場に伝えられている。
これ以外には、備前岡山新田藩(鴨方藩)伝の直心影流を修行し奥村二刀流を開いた奥村左近太は直心影流と奥村二刀流の両流を指導していた。
また、播磨龍野藩伝の直心影流を伝えた富山圓の系統もある。
師範家の美濃加納藩の長沼家(長沼国郷の実子・徳郷の家系)から長沼和郷を輩出している。
長沼和郷は幕末に直心影流を修行し、大正14年(1925年)に大日本武徳会から剣道範士号を授与された。
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The 1927 handbook is the school’s own chronology — primary for the founding date, purpose, and 1909 endowment, but silent on founding governance (first president, patronage, the Heian-sentō 1100th-anniversary context). Please consult Gainty, Martial Arts and the Body Politic in Meiji Japan or a Butokukai general history for more details on its founding. ↩
