Yonamine Chiru was an Okinawan martial artist in the 1800s and the wife of Matsumura Sōkon. Nicknamed Tsuru-San (“crane”) or Yonamine no Bushi Tsuru (“Yonamine the crane warrior”), she was well-regraded as an Okinawan sumo wrestler and considered a “tomboy” for her love of fighting.[1] She may have had a hand in developing the Matsumura Orthodox version of the kata Seisan, which is said by the Takae-Ryu Karate-Do Association to allow women to fight with a baby on their backs.[2]

In addition to her studies of sumo wrestling and tegumi, she was known for her skills with weightlifting.[3]

She was the daughter of a wealthy business owner[1] and she came from a prominent martial arts family,[4] but she could not find a spouse because of her love of fighting. As she aged, her parents increasingly raised the dowry to marry her, but found few takers until Matsumura learned about her.[1] While some legends describe a wrestling match between the two, Shōshin Nagamine writes that Matsumura took the more traditional route of asking her parents’ permission.[1] They may have been married in 1818.[5][4]

After their marriage, Matsumura was worried about her habit of walking home alone at night, so he pretended to be a thief to scare her; however, she was able to put up a good match against her husband, without realizing it was her husband.[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Nagamine, Shōshin (2000). Tales of Okinawa's great masters (1st ed.). Boston: Tuttle Pub. ISBN 0-8048-2089-9. OCLC 43839845.
  2. ^ "Seisan".
  3. ^ a b Kim, Richard (1974). The weaponless warriors. Los Angeles: Ohara Publications. ISBN 0-89750-041-5. OCLC 1217438.
  4. ^ a b "Sokon Matsumura".
  5. ^ Arefi, Kam. "Sokon Matsumura".