This list includes 6 martial arts that start with A, from “Aiki-jujutsu” to “Ashihara Karate”. They range from classical jujutsu schools to modern full-contact karate, used for self-defense, sport, and teaching.

Martial arts that start with A are styles, systems, or schools whose common names begin with the letter A. Many reflect regional traditions; for example, Aiki-jujutsu influenced later aikido and other jujutsu-derived practices.

Below you’ll find the table with Name, Origin, Focus, Founding period, and Notes.

Name: The martial art’s common name used in sources; you use it to identify and research the style.

Origin: Country or region where the style developed; you use it to understand cultural and historical context.

Focus: Primary emphasis such as Striking, Grappling or Hybrid; you use this to compare training and competition uses.

Founding period: Approximate year, decade or century when the style began; you use it to judge age and development.

Notes: Short clarifications like alternate names, notable founders, or disputed origins; you use them for quick context.

Martial arts that start with A

Name Country/Region of Origin Founding (year/decade/century) Primary Focus Description
Aikido Japan 1920s Grappling Modern Japanese art by Morihei Ueshiba, developed in the 1920s. Uses throws, pins and joint locks to neutralize attacks by blending and redirecting force; emphasizes harmony and non‑aggression.
Aiki-jujutsu Japan 19th century Grappling Classical Japanese grappling tradition emphasizing joint locks, throws and subtle aiki principles. Ancestor of modern aikido with formalized schools like Daitō‑ryū in the 19th century.
Arnis Philippines 16th century Weapons Filipino stick-and-blade fighting system documented from the 16th century. Focuses on weapon training, fluid weapon-to-empty-hand transitions, footwork and practical street application.
American Kenpo United States 1940s Striking Ed Parker’s Americanized Kenpo, developed in the 1940s in the U.S. Fast, linear striking with rapid counters and practical self‑defense principles drawing from karate and Chinese boxing.
Ashihara Karate Japan 1980s Striking Full-contact Japanese karate founded by Hideyuki Ashihara in the 1980s. Emphasizes realistic sparring, sabaki (off-line movement) and practical, efficient techniques for self-defense.
Araki-ryu Japan 17th century Hybrid Classical koryū school dating to the 17th century covering armed and unarmed methods—sword, spear and empty-hand—focused on battlefield practicality and traditional kata curricula.

Descriptions

Aikido
Aiki-jujutsu
Arnis
American Kenpo
Ashihara Karate
Araki-ryu
If you think there is a missing term, let us know using the contact form.