International Taekwon-Do Federation

(Redirected from ITF taekwondo)

International Taekwon-Do Federation (ITF) is an international taekwondo organization founded on March 22, 1966, by Choi Hong Hi (Korean최홍희) in Seoul, South Korea.[1] The ITF was founded to promote and encourage the growth of the Korean martial art of taekwon-do.[2][3][4]

International Taekwon-Do Federation
AbbreviationITF
Formation22 March 1966
TypeSports Organisation
PurposeSelf defense martial art
Region served
Worldwide

The ITF's main functions include coordinating and approving tournaments and seminars, setting standards for teaching (patterns, sparring, destruction), collaborating with affiliated member organizations, and providing services members in regard to rank and certifications.

After Choi's death in 2002, there was controversy around the election of his successor that led to multiple organizations claiming the ITF mantle.

Patterns

edit

Patterns, or tul (틀) in Korean, originally called hyeong (형), form an important aspect of training in taekwon-do. They are equivalent to the kata in karate. The majority of the patterns (except Yul-Gok, Ul-Ji and Tong-Il) start with a defensive move, which emphasizes taekwon-do's defensive nature. All of the patterns start and end at the same location. This ensures that the practitioners' stances are the correct length, width, and in the proper direction. Additionally, students are taught to understand the purpose of each movement and recognize how each motion connects to theories of power.[5]

There are 24 patterns in the official ITF syllabus; this is symbolic of the 24 hours in a day. One additional pattern, Ko-Dang (or Go-Dang), was retired/replaced by Juche in 1986 by General Choi Hong Hi. The names of these patterns typically refer either to events in Korean history or to important people in Korean history. Elements of the patterns may also be historical references, such as the number of moves, the diagram, the way the pattern ends, and so on.

Patterns (tul) are performed in accordance with "The Encyclopedia of Taekwon-Do" in 15 volumes written by General Choi Hong Hi, the latest edition being from 1999 (later editions have been published, but the 1999 editions were the last General Choi Hong Hi was directly involved with). This comprehensive work contains 15 volumes with volumes 8 to 15 dedicated to the 24 patterns and containing descriptions of the pattern movements as well as pictures showing possible applications of some of the movements. There is also the book entitled "The Korean Art of Self Defense" (the 1999 edition, the latest used by ITF under Chang Ung), also known as the Condensed Encyclopedia, written by General Choi Hong Hi. This is a single condensed encyclopedia of approximately 770 pages with a section dedicated to the 24 original patterns.

There are also three fundamental exercises, named Saju Jirugi (Four Direction Punch), Saju Makgi (Four Direction Block) and Saju Tulgi (Four Direction Thrust). Saju Jirugi and Saju Makgi are basic defence exercises taught to beginners of the martial art. Saju Tulgi is less well known and is generally taught to 2nd Kup students just prior to Hwa-Rang. Saju Tulgi is not presented in the Condensed Encyclopedia but is present in the 15 Volume Encyclopedia (see: Volume 10, page 122).[6]

The 24 patterns in taekwon-do ITF are:

Number Hangeul Romanized Movements Rank
1 천지 Chon-Ji 19 9th gup
2 단군 Dan-Gun 21 8th gup
3 도산 Do-San 24 7th gup
4 원효 Won-Hyo 28 6th gup
5 율곡 Yul-Gok 38 5th gup
6 중근 Joong-Gun 32 4th gup
7 퇴계 Toi-Gye 37 3rd gup
8 화랑 Hwa-Rang 29 2nd gup
9 충무 Choong-Moo 30 1st gup
10 광개 Kwang-Gae 39 1st dan
11 포은 Po-Eun 36 1st dan
12 계백 Gae-Baek 44 1st dan
13 의암 Eui-Am 45 2nd dan
14 충장 Choong-Jang 52 2nd dan
15 주체 Juche 45 2nd dan
16 삼일 Sam-Il 33 3rd dan
17 유신 Yoo-Sin 68 3rd dan
18 최영 Choi-Yong 46 3rd dan
19 연개 Yeon-Gae 49 4th dan
20 을지 Ul-Ji 42 4th dan
21 문무 Moon-Moo 61 4th dan
22 서산 Seo-San 72 5th dan
23 세종 Se-Jong 24 5th dan
24 통일 Tong-Il 56 6th dan

The retired pattern in taekwon-do ITF is

  1. Kodang (고당) (39 movements)
  2. Woo-Nam (우남) (42 movements)

Sparring

edit
 
Common styles of ITF point sparring equipment

The International Taekwon-Do Federation's sparring rules are:

  • Hand attacks to the head are allowed.[7]
  • The scoring system (by ITF chaired by Prof. Ri Yong Son, based in Vienna)[8] is:
  • One (1) point will be awarded for:
    • Hand attack directed to the head or body.
  • Two (2) points will be awarded for:
    • Foot attack directed to the body.
  • Three (3) points will be awarded for:
    • Kick to the head.
  • The competition area is typically a 10×10 meter square in international championships.

Competitors do not wear the hogu (although they are required to wear approved foot and hand protection equipment, as well as head guards). This scoring system varies between the different ITF organisations.

A continuous point system is utilized in ITF competition, where the fighters are allowed to continue after scoring a technique. Full-force blows are not allowed, and knockouts result in a disqualification of the attacker; although these rules vary between ITF organizations. At the end of two minutes (or some other specified time) the competitor with more scoring techniques wins.

Fouls in ITF sparring include heavy contact, attacking a fallen opponent, leg sweeping, holding/grabbing, intentional attack to a target other than allowed (for example below the belt, attacks to the back).[9]

ITF competitions also feature performances of patterns, breaking, and 'special techniques' (where competitors perform prescribed board breaks at great heights).

ITF competition sparring rounds are 2 minutes, and, in national and international levels of competition, they hold two rounds each 2 minutes with a one-minute rest in between. Certain rules are no strikes below the belt, no elbow strikes, brawling, no falling down, no going outside of the ring, hit to the groin and knee strike are not allowed. The ring is a 9 metre by 9 metre (8 × 8 metre optional) ring marked by square mats or tape instead of a traditional style kickboxing rings with ropes. It has no sides allowing the fighter to move out of bounds. Whenever a fighter creates an infraction of the rules the centre referee will issue a warning to the fighter who created the infraction. 3 warnings equals a minus point. If a fighter uses excessive contact, he or she will be given a foul, which is an automatic minus point; three fouls in a bout results in disqualification. ITF taekwon-do is fought in continuous point sparring. Four judges score the fights in each of the corners in the square ring. After the fight, a judge votes for which ever fighter has the most points and a winner is declared. In the case of a draw the fighters go to a one-minute overtime round. If there is another draw the fighters go to a sudden death round where the fighter who scores first is declared the winner.

The official rules for ITF sparring competition are available at the ITF website.[10]

Ranks

edit

The ITF ranking system consists of six solid colour belts; white, yellow, green, blue, red, and black.[11]

Coloured belt ranks are called in English grades and in Korean geup () (often romanized as gup or kup), whereas black belt ranks are called ranks/dan ():

  Grade Level Description
  10th geup White – Signifies innocence, as that of the beginning student who has no previous knowledge of taekwon-do – 3 months min requirement.
  9th geup White with yellow tip. 3 months min. requirement
  8th geup Yellow – Signifies the earth from which a plant sprouts and takes root as the foundation of taekwon-do is being laid – 4 months minimum requirement.
  7th geup Yellow with green tip. 4 months minimum requirement
  6th geup Green – Signifies the plant's growth as taekwon-do skills begin to develop – 4 months minimum requirement.
  5th geup Green with blue tip. 4 months minimum requirement
  4th geup Blue – Signifies the Heaven towards which the plant matures into a towering tree as training in taekwon-do progresses – 4 months minimum requirement.
  3rd geup Blue with red tip – 5 months minimum requirement
  2nd geup Red – Signifies danger, cautioning the student to exercise control and warning the opponent to stay away – 6 months minimum requirement.
  1st geup Red with black tip. 1 year requirement
  1st dan Black – Opposite of white, therefore signifying maturity and proficiency in taekwon-do; also indicates the wearer's imperviousness to darkness and fear. (must remain at this rank at least one and a half (1½) years). The practitioner is given the title of "Bosabum-nim"
  2nd dan Assistant Instructor (must remain at this rank at least 2 years)
  3rd dan Assistant Instructor (must remain at this rank at least 3 years)
  4th dan International Instructor (must remain at this rank at least 4 years). Minimum age is 21. The practitioner becomes a "Sabum-Nim"
  5th dan Instructor (must remain at this rank at least 5 years)
  6th dan Instructor (must remain at this rank at least 6 years)
  7th dan Master Instructor (must remain at this rank at least 7 years). The practitioner becomes a "Sakhyo-nim". Minimum age is 40
  8th dan Master Instructor (must remain at this rank at least 8 years)
  9th dan Grand Master - "Sasung-nim". Minimum age is 60

The reason for nine black belt degrees is that the number nine is not only the highest of the single-digit numbers, but also is the number of three multiplied by three. In the Orient, three is one of the more esteemed numbers. The Chinese character for 3 is three horizontal lines, one above the other: . The bottom line represents earth; the middle line represents mortals; the upper line represents heaven.[12] It was believed that a man who could unite the three realms in himself, would aspire or be reborn into a king; this is shown by the vertical line connecting the realms in the character for king: .

Black belt promotion

edit

Up to 7th dan, all ranks require the student to perform a test of all skills and knowledge up to their rank to be promoted. 8th and 9th dan may be awarded with consent of the promotion committee with no physical test required, due to the nature and responsibilities of a master no longer being centered on the physical development. However, if the recipient desires, a demonstration may be performed. 9th degree (being the highest) can only be awarded when the special committee examines and reaches a unanimous consent.

According to an ITF Encyclopedia 4th degree may grade students up to 2nd degree. A 6th degree International Instructor may grade students up to 3rd degree, while a 7th degree Master may grade students up to 4th degree. An 8th degree Master may grade students up to 6th degree. A 9th degree Grand Master may grade students up to 7th degree. Promotion to 8th degree or above must be done by the ITF's Master Promotion Committee.[13]

History and schism

edit

After the South Korean Government abandoned the ITF, the government established the World Taekwondo Federation to continue the mission of taekwondo's globalization.[14] Once Choi Hong Hi was exiled out of South Korea, he established the new headquarters of the ITF in Vienna, Austria and the organization settled there.[15] In the years that followed, many of the founding masters of the ITF and several other instructors would leave the organization to form their own independent organizations following disagreements with Choi.[16]

Choi subsequently died in June 2002. Disputes over his successor as ITF president lead to splits in the organization. As of 2021 there are two main organizations claiming the ITF mantle. One headed by Ri Yong Son, with offices in Vienna,[17] and another group currently headed by Paul Weiler, headquartered in Lublin, Poland.[18]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Taekwon-Do History". International Taekwon-Do Federation, President Trân Triêu Quân. Retrieved 2017-02-10.
  2. ^ "The agreement between ITF and WTF". Taekwondo Times. Archived from the original on 2015-01-02. Retrieved 2015-01-02.
  3. ^ "Breakthrough deal to allow N. Koreans to compete in Olympic taekwondo competitions". English.yonhapnews.co.kr. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  4. ^ Green, Thomas A.; Svinth, Joseph R. (2010). Martial Arts of the World. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 9781598842432. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  5. ^ Choi, Hong Hi (April 13, 2019). ITF Taekwon-Do Condensed Encyclopedia. Vienna, Austria: International Taekwon-Do Federation.
  6. ^ "Martial Arts Planet - View Single Post - ITF and Chang Hon...Question!". Martialartspanet.com. Retrieved 21 December 2014.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ "itf-information.com". Itf-information.com. Archived from the original on 13 June 2012. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  8. ^ https://www.itf-tkd.org/api/download-document/40b2cc42-9a19-4d7c-8cf4-5191e0bae2f7
  9. ^ ITF World Junior & Senior Tournament Rules - Rules and Regulations
  10. ^ "Competition Rules and Regulations" (PDF). International Taekwon-Do Federation. 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-02-18. Retrieved 2015-02-17.
  11. ^ "Guide to TKD - Reference : Belt colours". Com-Do Corp. Archived from the original on 2008-01-18. Retrieved 2007-12-02.
  12. ^ "Guide to TKD - Reference : System of rank". Com-Do Corp. Archived from the original on 2008-01-18. Retrieved 2007-12-02.
  13. ^ "Current Fee Structure" (PDF). January 2009. Retrieved 2009-03-22.
  14. ^ "최홍희 캐나다 망명하고 1년 뒤, 박정희 '김운용의 WTF' 띄워". JoongAng Ilbo. 2009-09-17. Archived from the original on 2011-08-09. Retrieved 2011-03-23.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  15. ^ "ABOUT GENERAL CHOI, HONG HI, AUTHOR OF THE TAEKWON-DO ENCYCLOPAEDIA". itf-information. 1999. Archived from the original on 2009-09-18. Retrieved 2011-03-23.
  16. ^ "Blown apart: the divided world of taekwondo". 22 September 2017. Retrieved 27 November 2017.
  17. ^ "President's Message". www.itf-tkd.org. itf-tkd.org. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  18. ^ "ITF Office". itftkd.sport. International Taekwon-do Federation. Retrieved 19 November 2023.