List of yoga schools

Yoga schools are as diverse as the meanings of the bracket term yoga. Within the major branches of yoga such as haṭha, lāya, rāja, jñāna, and bhakti there are many different schools and lineages, both extant and defunct. Since the late 19th century, a great number of distinct new styles of "Yoga" have been introduced by individual teachers. Some schools and traditions are occasionally referred to as yoga or yogic for their similar practices, despite having no foundation in the Indian tradition; these include Shin Shin Tōitsu-dō, and Daoyin.

Modern Hinduism and Neo-Hindu revival
The term "Yoga" has been used for various philosophies and concepts in the context of Hindu revivalism and Neo-Hindu religious and philosophical movements.


 * 1918: The Yoga Institute - Shri Yogendra
 * 1920: Agni Yoga - Nicholas Roerich and his wife Helena Roerich (theosophy)
 * 1920: Self-Realization Fellowship - Paramahansa Yogananda
 * 1921: Integral Yoga - Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis of Yoga
 * 1924: Kaivalyadhama Health and Yoga Research Center
 * 1948: Divine Life Society - Swami Sivananda
 * 1950s: Satyananda Yoga - Swami Satyananda Saraswati
 * 1955: Ananda Marga - Shrii Shrii Anandamurti
 * 1960s: Transcendental Meditation - Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
 * 1970: Bikram Yoga - Bikram Choudhury
 * 1971: Himalayan Institute of Yoga Science and Philosophy - Swami Rama
 * 1970s: Siddha Yoga - Swami Muktananda
 * 1970s: Sahaja Yoga, a new religious movement founded by Nirmala Srivastava
 * 1981: Art of Living - Ravi Shankar
 * 1991: Shiva Yoga – Shankarananda
 * 1997: Ananda yoga - Swami Kriyananda

Styles of yoga as exercise
India and other Asian countries are home to thousands of yoga schools founded over the last century to teach yoga as exercise, which unlike all earlier forms consists in large part of asanas. Below are some and their style of yoga.


 * 1948: Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga - Sri K. Pattabhi Jois
 * 1963: Bihar School of Yoga - Swami Satyananda Saraswati
 * 1960s: Sivananda Yoga - Swami Vishnu-devananda
 * 1960s: Iyengar Yoga - B.K.S. Iyengar
 * 1970s: Yin Yoga - Paulie Zink
 * 1971: Bikram Yoga - Bikram Choudhury
 * 1980s: Viniyoga - tradition of Tirumalai Krishnamacharya
 * 1980s: Rocket Yoga - Larry Schultz
 * 1982: Forrest Yoga - Ana T. Forrest
 * 1986: Jivamukti Yoga - David Life and Sharon Gannon
 * 1992: Isha Yoga - Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev
 * 1995: Power Yoga - Beryl Bender Birch
 * 1990s: Power Yoga - Bryan Kest
 * 1997: Anusara Yoga - formerly John Friend

Eclectic styles
Several eclectic styles, some with Western audiences, are partially based on Hatha yoga:


 * 1969: Kundalini Yoga - Yogi Bhajan
 * 1975: Zen Yoga
 * 1985: Body & Brain ("Korean Yoga") - Ilchi Lee
 * 1995: Laughter Yoga - Madan Kataria

Yoga in other religious traditions
With the widespread reception of the concept of "Yoga" in the west, the term has also been transferred to similar systems of meditation and exercise which are not of Indian origin, mostly without global reach:


 * Tsa lung Trul khor, a concept in Tibetan Buddhism described as "Yantra Yoga" by Chogyal Namkhai Norbu (2000)
 * Kum Nye, Tibetan practice, sometimes dubbed "Kum Nye Yoga"
 * Shin Shin Tōitsu-dō, a system of "mind and body unification" created by Nakamura Tempu in the 1940s which is also known as "Japanese Yoga".
 * Daoyin is a similar Daoist practice in China, part of a broader meditation system which includes Qigong and Taijiquan
 * Kemetic yoga, an ancient Egyptian yoga system