The Pinan ( 平安, Píng'ān; ピンアン, Pin'an) karate kata are a series of five empty hand forms taught in many karate styles. The Pinan kata originated in Okinawa and were adapted by Anko Itosu from older kata such as Kusanku and Channan into forms suitable for teaching karate to young students. Pinan is the Chinese Pinyin notation of 平安; when Gichin Funakoshi brought karate to Japan, he changed the kata name to , which is the onyomi pronunciation of the same kanji. Pinan or Heian means "peaceful and safe". Korean Tang Soo Do, one of 5 original kwan of Korea, also practice these kata; they are termed, Pyung Ahn ( 평안, Pyeong-an), which is a Korean pronunciation of the term "ping-an".
Since Motobu (b. 1870) began studying under Itosu at the age of 12 (East Asian age reckoning), this confirms the Channan were already in existence by the 1880s. The name "Pinan" was suggested by students of the former Okinawa Prefectural First Middle School (now Shuri High School) or Okinawa Prefectural Normal School. Itosu was a karate instructor here at the time, and adopted the name "Pinan".
The Channan is now lost, but some believe that Motobu-ryū's "Shirokuma" (白熊, ) kata may be Channan due to its similarity to Pinan.
The Pinan kata were introduced into the school systems on Okinawa in 1895. They were subsequently adopted by many teachers and schools in the 1900s. Thus, they are present today in the curriculum of Shitō-ryū, Wadō-ryū, Shōrin-ryū, Kobayashi-ryū, Kyokushin, Seido Juku, Shinki-Ryu, Shōrei-ryū, Shotojuku, Shotokan, Matsubayashi-ryū, Shukokai, Shindo Jinen Ryu, Koei-Kan, Kosho-ryū Kempo, Kenyu Ryu, Kushin Ryu and several other styles.
Funakoshi modified the Pinan forms to Heian forms, introducing his version of Kushanku (actually renamed Kanku Dai). The 5 kata were Pinans Shodan, Nidan, Sandan, Yondan, and Godan.
In certain styles, Pinan Shodan and Pinan Nidan are inverted - what certain styles call Pinan Shodan is what others call Heian Nidan, and vice versa.Funakoshi Gichin - (2016) Karate Do Kyohan - Master Text for the Way of the Empty-Hand (ISBN 1534962700), page 43, 51 For example, the kata Shotokan calls Heian Shodan, other styles, such as Shitō-ryū call Pinan Nidan.
Additionally, certain styles change the order in which the kata is taught. For example, Wado-Ryu, Shūkōkai teach Pinan Nidan first, and Pinan Shodan second, being Pinan Nidan is a more fundamental/beginner-friendly kata. The taught order is as follows.
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