Alexander Ivanovich Tanushushkin ( June 20, 1950 ) - the famous Soviet and Russian karate master of the Kyokushinkai style, holder 7 is given IFK , one of the first initiators of karate development in the USSR and Russia [1] . Founding President of the Kyokushinkai Federation of Russia, judge of the international category in kata , chairman of the certification committee of the FCR
| Alexander Ivanovich Tanyushkin | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Birth name | Alexander Ivanovich Tanyushkin | ||
| Date of Birth | June 20, 1950 (69 years old) | ||
| Place of Birth | the USSR | ||
| Citizenship | Russia | ||
| Style | Kyokushinkai | ||
| Teachers | Andrzej Drewniak | ||
| Degree of mastery | 8 dan Kyokushin IFC | ||
| Ranks | Founding President of FCR | ||
| Progress | |||
founder of the Kyokushinkai Federation of the USSR | |||
Chairman of the Kyokushinkai Federation of the USSR (until 1991 ). Since 1996 - Founding President of the FKR [2] .
Biography
The design engineer by profession, Alexander Tanyushkin, first saw karate techniques in the movie "The Genius of Judo" in 1969 , after which he himself wanted to master this art [3] . At the age of 19, student exchange Tanyushkin came to Poland , where he studied in the judo section. Later I met with the first teachers of karate [4] , studied with the master Andrzej Drevnyak and received a brown belt [1] .
In 1973, Tanyushkin graduated from the Cracow Mining and Metallurgical Academy and returned to Moscow , where he opened the Kyokushinkai section.
In 1976, Alexander Tanyushkin passed the first dan exam to Luke Hollander and became the representative of the European Kyokushinkai organization in the USSR [5] . At the same time, he maintained contacts with the Polish mentor, traveled to Poland for training camps, and also participated in the Polish championships, where he once won a prize [3] .
By the end of the 1970s, the Kyokushinkai school was formed in the country, with representatives in all major regions. But at the same time, athletes could not participate in all-Union competitions under the auspices of the USSR Karate Federation, since the Federation held competitions only by contactless rules. In turn, according to Tanyushkin, after the ban on karate in the USSR in 1984, this did not affect Kyokushin at all, since this style was not developed in Moscow, but in Siberia and the Far East [3] .
In the 80s he worked in Poland, where Kyokushinkai continued to practice, and also helped to train the Soviet athletes. Tanyushkin passed the exam for the second dan in 1981 to Howard Collins , for the third - in 1983 again to Luke Hollander.
At the end of 1989, he became the founder and chairman of the Kyokushinkai Federation of the USSR.
In the early 1990s, the contradictions between Tokyo Honbu and the European Kyokushinkai organization, which included the USSR Kyokushinkai Federation, led to the expulsion of European Federation President Steve Arneil from IKO and the creation of the International Karate Federation (IFK), which included the USSR Kyokushinkai Federation. In connection with these events, Tanyushkin was expelled by Oyama from IKO.
The fourth dan Tanyushkin received already from IFK in 1993 , and the fifth dan in 1998. The certificate for the sixth dan was awarded to Alexander Tanyushkin on January 25, 2003 . He became the first Russian holder of the sixth Dan IFK and the first person to whom IFK assigned the 6th Dan [2] . At the traditional FKR Summer School 2011 (Sredneuralsk) from July 27 to 31, 2011, Hansi Steve Arneil (10th dan, Great Britain) on behalf of the IFK International Federation presented the 7th Kyokushinkai to the shihan Alexander Tanyushkin [2] . 8th Dan IFC assigned in August 2019 [6] .
In 2007, at the ceremony of the 2nd National Prize in the field of martial arts “Golden Belt”, RSBI was awarded the Order of the RSBI “For Merits” under the number “1” [7] .
By order of the Ministry of Sports and Tourism No. 69-ng of May 4, 2012, Alexander Tanyushkin was awarded the title of Honored Trainer of Russia [8] .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 Tanyushkin Alexander Ivanovich . Archived on June 17, 2012.
- ↑ 1 2 3 Tanyushkin Alexander Ivanovich on the website of the Cayman school (Inaccessible link - history ) .
- ↑ 1 2 3 Oransky I. Alexander Tanyushkin: The Way to the Monastery // Sport Express. - 1993. - No. 296-297 (December 9). - with. four.
- ↑ Sohareva N. The Way of Shihan // Altai Truth: Newspaper. - Barnaul, March 24, 2007. - No. 85–86 .
- ↑ Kyokushinkai in Russia . Date of treatment December 25, 2009. Archived September 1, 2009.
- ↑ Congratulations to Tanyushkin Alexander Ivanovich with the assignment of VIII Dan! .
- ↑ Article "Plus 100 Black Belts" (inaccessible link) . Date of treatment April 9, 2012. Archived June 17, 2012.
- ↑ Order of the Ministry of Sports and Tourism 69-ng (unavailable link) . Date of treatment May 10, 2012. Archived June 6, 2012.