Inazuma Raigorō

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Hatnote". Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template other Script error: No such module "Nihongo". was a Japanese sumo wrestler from Awazaki, Hitachi Province (now Inashiki, Ibaraki Prefecture). He was the sport's 7th yokozuna.

Early life and career

Born Script error: No such module "Nihongo"., his birth date is ambiguous. Although the date of 1802 is commonly accepted, some say he was born between 1795 or 1798. If the former is correct, he was the youngest yokozuna until the promotion of Umegatani Tōtarō II in 1903. The details of his younger days are unclear.
He entered the Sadogatake stable in 1821, under the shikona, or ring name, Script error: No such module "Nihongo"..[1] There, he began to wrestle for the Matsudaira clan, under which legendary sumo wrestler Raiden wrestled.[2] Other sources state that he only started wrestling for the Matsudaira clan after he left his stable for the Nishikiyama stables.[3] Upon promotion to komusubi in 1824, he changed his ring name to Script error: No such module "Nihongo"., meaning "lightning bolt" in Japanese. He reached the highest rank of ōzeki on ability alone, after only 6 tournaments (some ōzeki of the period were merely given the rank because of their size or status). Ōnomatsu is said to have been his rival and their competition established the golden age of sumo in the late Edo period.[3]
In 1828, the Template:Interlanguage link offered him a yokozuna license and two years later he received one from the Yoshida family, and thus has been accepted as an official yokozuna.[1]

In the top makuuchi division, he won 130 bouts and lost only 13 bouts, achieving a winning percentage of 90.9.[4]

Retirement from sumo

After his retirement, he moved to Matsue but he returned to Tokyo in the Meiji period. He was known as a good calligrapher and a skilled writer, leaving behind him a lot of haiku.[1] He died on March 29, 1877. His last words were "Lightning (Script error: No such module "Nihongo".) is passing away in the wind and the autumn sky".[1] He was buried in the graveyard of the Myoen-ji temple in Shibuya, Tokyo. A bronze statue of Inazuma was erected in front of the Inashiki Municipal Museum of History and Folklore.[5]

The sumo precepts

Inazuma is credited to have wrote the "Sumo Precepts" (sumo kun, 相撲訓), a combination of teachings related to sumo that warned rikishi against coarse behavior and taught them how to cultivate their fighting spirit. These precepts include notions like the cardinal values of Sumo (wisdom, humanity and courage) and disciplinary advices (wrestlers are not to indulge in the vices of alcohol and gambling). The "Sumo Precepts" also give advices to wrestlers when in bouts (do not show mercy to your opponent, do not underestimate him, do not fear him, do not scheme against him and follow your breathing while observing the moves).[1]

Top division record

  • The actual time the tournaments were held during the year in this period often varied.

Template:Sumo record box start pre-1875

1824 x West MaegashiraTemplate:Ifnumber
7–0–2
1h
Unofficial

  1825 West KomusubiTemplate:Ifnumber
5–2–3
  West KomusubiTemplate:Ifnumber
8–1–1
Unofficial

  1826 West SekiwakeTemplate:Ifnumber
6–1–2
1d

  West SekiwakeTemplate:Ifnumber
7–0–1
1d 1h

  1827 West SekiwakeTemplate:Ifnumber
5–0–2
Unofficial

  Not enrolled 1828 Not enrolled West ŌzekiTemplate:Ifnumber
4–1–5
  1829 West ŌzekiTemplate:Ifnumber
6–0–1
Unofficial

  West ŌzekiTemplate:Ifnumber
8–0–1
1d
Unofficial

  1830 West ŌzekiTemplate:Ifnumber
8–0–2
Unofficial

  West ŌzekiTemplate:Ifnumber
6–1–2
1h

  1831 West ŌzekiTemplate:Ifnumber
3–1–6
  West ŌzekiTemplate:Ifnumber
8–0
Unofficial

  1832 Not held West ŌzekiTemplate:Ifnumber
8–0–1
1d
Unofficial

  1833 West ŌzekiTemplate:Ifnumber
9–0
1d
Unofficial

  Not enrolled 1834 Not enrolled Not enrolled 1835 West ŌzekiTemplate:Ifnumber
5–0–3
2d

  West ŌzekiTemplate:Ifnumber
6–2–2
  1836 Sat out West ŌzekiTemplate:Ifnumber
3–0–7
  1837 West ŌzekiTemplate:Ifnumber
5–0–4
1d
Unofficial

  West ŌzekiTemplate:Ifnumber
5–1–1
2d 1nr

  1838 West ŌzekiTemplate:Ifnumber
3–0–3
  Sat out 1839 West ŌzekiTemplate:Ifnumber
1–3–5
1d

  West ŌzekiTemplate:Ifnumber
Retired
4–0–3
3d
Template:Sumo record box end pre-1890 *Championships for the best record in a tournament were not recognized or awarded before the 1909 summer tournament and the above unofficial championships are historically conferred. For more information see yūshō.

See also

References

Template:Sister project

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Template:S-breakTemplate:S-text
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check 7th Yokozuna
1830–1839 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by

Ograzogma

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wario https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kazuma_Satou https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squidward_Tentacles