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OverviewKanteiHonorsDesignationsProvenanceBlade FormsSignaturesLineageSchool
  1. Schools
  2. Rai
  3. Kunitoshi

Rai Kunitoshi

國俊

Tokujū
Vol. 8, No. 5 · Tantō

Rai Kunitoshi

國俊

208 ranked works

享保名物帳
ProvinceYamashiroEraShoo (1288–1293)PeriodKamakuraSchoolRaiTraditionYamashiro-denGeneration1stTeacherKuniyukiFujishiroSai-jo saku(Supreme Work)Toko Taikan3,500(top 1%)TypeSwordsmithCodeKUN1410
5Kokuhō
7Jūyō Bunkazai
28Jūyō Bijutsuhin
4Gyobutsu
21Tokubetsu Jūyō143Jūyō Tōken

Overview

The published sources open Kunitoshi's record with a single settled fact: he was "the first smith of the line to crown his name with the character , and all who followed took the practice from him" (来派で最初に来の字を冠した刀工で、以後皆これに倣った). Traditionally the son of Kuniyuki, he worked in Kyoto at the close of the period. Dated blades open in the Shoo and Einin eras, fall silent for a time, then resume in Showa and continue through Bunpo, Gen'o and Genko; a of Showa 4 (1315) in the Tokugawa Art Museum bears the age inscription seventy-five (七十五歳), and a work of Genko 1 (1321), cut at eighty-two, stands near the end of his production. This run of dated pieces is the backbone of the late chronology.

His hand is the mainline at its most refined. The are slender or of standard width with a pronounced taper, the curvature -zori, turning to a rounded wa-zori on shortened blades, and the point small or medium. On this body he burns a or in with and mixed in; and enter well, at times slanting toward the in the Kyoto manner the published sources call kyo-. appears in places, fine and run through the , and the is tight and bright; the turns in a calm , the tip lightly swept. The judgment the published sources attach to the whole is consistent: "a refined and calm manner that is Kyoto work through and through" (いかにも京物らしい上品で穏やかな作風).

The carries as much of the attribution as the : a tightly knit with thick, often dust-fine , fine , and a standing clearly over it; one appraisal adds that "the refinement of the in particular deserves special mention" (殊に地鉄の精良さは特筆される). Here and there the larger, softer patches the texts call - (来肌) intrude, and on the may flow toward in places, both accepted as marks of the school rather than flaws. The packed , the fine over it and the standing are what the appraisals return to whenever an unsigned blade is settled on his name.

Nearly half of his published record is : the sources state again and again that where the two-character Kunitoshi left a single example, the Aizen Kunitoshi, Kunitoshi left many. These are and , of standard width or slightly elongated, with the quiet uchi-zori of the late period; the may take a shallow , the of the often runs down long, and the is frequently hardened in. Carving is habitual, a with a slender or set beside it, or over , the added side groove being a practice "peculiar to work" (来物に特有). rules him, yet a small group stands at the opposite limit. Its representative is a National Treasure , and a raised at the 27th session, slender, high in -zori, mixing large-lobed with the thick in the , is called "the most flamboyant range of work in his oeuvre" (同工作例中で最も華やかな作域), "just evoking Niji Kunitoshi" (宛ら二字国俊を彷彿とさせる). That evocation is the heart of the school's classic question, whether the two-character Kunitoshi and the three-character Kunitoshi are one smith or two. The combined dated works run from Koan 1 (1278) to Genko 1 (1321), some forty years and no strain for a single career, and counted back from the age inscription of seventy-five, the lone dated Niji blade falls at age thirty-eight. In recent years, the sources write, re-examination of the workmanship and the signature forms has brought the -smith view toward acceptance, prompting a rethink of the two-smith position, and the blades above are read as key material on his side of the divide. The signatures hold further scholarship: the Gen'o pieces turn cursive enough that the notes weigh his old age against a second generation; rare works add the Minamoto surname; and on a Genko 2 folded-signature once worn by Shimazu Narinobu, the character is cut in the manner of his pupil Kunitsugu, read as one of the rare cases of the pupil signing in the master's name, the third such example known.

The contrast with Niji Kunitoshi is the standing formula of his appraisals: against a grand body with point and a flamboyant -dominated , the three-character works set a slender or standard build, a or with small-patterned , and a gentle effect overall, so the two hands can be told apart even while the one-smith question stays open. His other neighbors lie within the school. At its quietest his "can at first glance be mistaken for Ryokai" (一見了戒に紛れる), and his calmest, largest are read first toward Kunimitsu before the dignity of the work, "a grade higher" (格調が一段高く), settles the attribution on Kunitoshi. His pupils Kunimitsu and Kunitsugu carried the school through the end of , and the line between master and pupils is fine enough that the Yuki Kunitoshi, a recorded in the Meibutsucho, is itself said at first sight to suggest Kunimitsu and Kunitsugu.

For a master of this rank he is unusually approachable. Fujishiro grades him Sai-jo ; five of his blades are National Treasures and eleven are Important Cultural Properties, with twenty-one and one hundred forty-three beneath them, one hundred sixty-four blades across those two tiers. Signed work is abundant, one hundred thirty-four signed against ninety-one unsigned here, which is why his chronology can be written at all. Ten blades are locked in the National Treasure and Important Cultural Property tiers and will never trade, among them the of Futarasan Shrine at Nikko; the Tokugawa Art Museum holds the age-75 , and other works rest with the Tokyo National Museum, the Nezu Museum, the Sano Art Museum and the Kurokawa Institute. Sixty-one blades carry recorded provenance: Toyotomi Hideyoshi, the shoguns Tokugawa Hidetada and Iemitsu, the Owari and Kishu Tokugawa, the Maeda, the Uesugi, the Shimazu of Kagoshima and the Sanada of Matsushiro. Yet thirty-six works are recorded in private hands and many more sit in the tradeable tiers, so a or by Kunitoshi, late Yamashiro work in its purest form, remains a goal a serious collector can actually reach; the blades and the dated pieces stand effectively beyond the market.

Kantei

one refined manner split by form (tachi and an abundant tanto register), with a rare choji edge that reaches back toward Niji Kunitoshi and carries the same-smith question

Kunitoshi, held to be the son of Kuniyuki, was the first of the school to crown his signature with the character , and every smith of the line followed him. His dated works run from Shoo (1288) through Genko 1 (1321), closed by the Showa 4 inscribed at age 75 and a final piece at 82. His hand is the mainline at its most refined: a slender or standard body, a in over a tight dense with under a , the a calm , and an abundance of without parallel in the school. Whether he and the two-character Niji Kunitoshi are one smith or two remains the classic question, lately tilting back toward one.

Diagnostic discriminators

the suguha against choji axis of the whole Kunitoshi question: suguha on 83% of his setsumei against 55% for Niji Kunitoshi, while his choji-midare collapses to 6% against Niji's 45%; the calmest sustained suguha hand of the Rai mainline

20% of his works · 5.0× vs Niji Kunitoshi

the calm ko-maru boshi on 77% of his setsumei, often with a long kaeri on tanto, against Niji Kunitoshi whose boshi runs in with the midare (14%) and ends near-yakizume (16%); his own yakizume is just 4%

98 of his 216 setsumei are tanto, against 2 in the entire Niji Kunitoshi corpus; the texts repeat that the two-character smith left a single example, the meibutsu Aizen Kunitoshi, so an uchi-zori Rai-school tanto signed in three characters is practically a register of its own

Observation by phase

The refined suguha manner (the typical hand, tachi and uchigatana)

A slender or standard body with the widths of base and tip well apart, a small or medium point, the curvature -zori or, on shortened blades, a wa-zori. The is tightly knit with thick, often dust-fine , fine and a standing ; here and there the large, soft patches the texts call - intrude. He burns a or in with and mixed in, the at times slanting toward the in the kyo-, with futae-ba, fine and , the tight and bright; the turns in a calm , the tip lightly swept.

Sugata 姿
Jigane 地鉄
Hamon 刃文
Bōshi 帽子

The tanto register (the form that defines him)

the tanto form itself: 98 of his 216 setsumei are tanto, where the texts repeat that Niji Kunitoshi left but a single example; an abundant tanto record signed Rai Kunitoshi is itself a register marker

, , of standard width or slightly elongated, the edge in the quiet inward uchi-zori of the late . The tight with dust-fine and carries a , at times with a shallow , the of the often running long; the is frequently hardened in. Carvings are habitual: a with a slender or set beside it, or over , the added side-groove practice the texts call peculiar to work.

Sugata 姿
Jigane 地鉄
Hamon 刃文
Bōshi 帽子

The rare choji edge (toward Niji Kunitoshi)

rules him, yet a small group burns a true . The texts name the as the representative of this side, and the passed at the 41st and raised at the 27th , slender, high in -zori with fubari, mixing large-lobed with the thick in the , is called the most flamboyant work in his oeuvre, just evoking Niji Kunitoshi. The earliest three-character , wide of body and judged not to fall after Shoo or Einin, likewise recalls the two-character smith. These blades are read as key material for the one-smith theory, the bridge from his side of the divide.

Hamon 刃文
Scholarship

His dated works open at Shoo and Einin, fall silent, resume at Showa and run through Bunpo, Geno and Genko; the Showa 4 (1315) tachi of the Tokugawa Art Museum carries the age inscription 75, and a Genko 1 (1321) work at 82 stands near the end. The chronology of an entire late-Kamakura career is legible in his own mei.

The age arithmetic keeps the one-smith theory open: the combined dates of both signatures span Koan 1 (1278) to Genko 1 (1321), some forty years, no strain for a single career, and counted back from the age-75 tachi the two-character smith's lone dated year of Koan 1 falls at age 38.

The question has lately moved: recent re-examination of the styles and signatures of both groups has brought the one-smith view toward acceptance, and the NBTHK now writes that it prompts a rethink of the two-smith position.

Within the school, signature substitution is documented: on the Genko 2 folded-signature katana and on a tanto, the kuni character is cut in the manner of his pupil Rai Kunitsugu, and the judges read them as rare cases of Kunitsugu signing in the master's name, three such examples being known.

Honors

享保名物帳Kyōhō Meibutsu Chō (Catalog of Celebrated Blades)

Recorded (Torikai, Aizen and Yūki Kunitoshi, among others)

The family's catalog of celebrated blades (名物) presented to shogun Tokugawa Yoshimune in Kyōhō 4 (1719). Records ~274 blades of – manufacture (168 extant + ~80 burned + ~26 later additions), grouped by smith with valuations and provenance. This honor tags smiths whose work is recorded in the catalog; the detail field carries per-smith counts where the published tally is exact, or 所載 + named blades where only inclusion is verified.

Designations

Kokuhō5
Jūyō Bunkazai7
Jūyō Bijutsuhin28
Gyobutsu4
Tokubetsu Jūyō21
Jūyō Tōken143

Elite Standing

0.90 across 208 designated works

Top 2% among smiths

Provenance

78 documented provenances across certified works by Kunitoshi

Provenance Standing

39 works held in elite collections across 78 documented provenances

Top 1% among smiths

Raw score: 4.40 / 10

Blade Forms

Distribution across 208 ranked works

Signatures

Signature types across 208 ranked works

Currently Available

Lineage

TeacherKuniyuki
Kunitoshi
Students (10)
  1. 1.Kunimitsu國光4 for sale269designated
  2. 2.Kunitsugu國次2 for sale65designated
  3. 3.Mitsukane光包15designated
  4. 4.Ryokai了戒1 for sale95designated
  5. 5.Kuninaga國長1 for sale58designated
  6. 6.Kunizane國眞1 for sale26designated
  7. 7.Tomokuni倫國5designated
  8. 8.Tomoshige友重5designated
  9. 9.Kunitoshi國俊
  10. 10.Kunitoshi國俊

Rai School

Other artisans of the Rai school

  1. 1.Kuniyuki國行1 for sale125designated
  2. 2.Kunitoshi國俊84designated
  3. 3.Kunimitsu國光4 for sale269designated
  4. 4.Kunitsugu國次2 for sale65designated
  5. 5.Mitsukane光包15designated
  6. 6.Kunizane國眞1 for sale26designated
  7. 7.Kunihide國秀7designated
  8. 8.Tomokuni倫國5designated
  9. 9.Kunisue國末1designated
  10. 10.Mitsushige光重2designated
  11. 11.Kunitake國武1designated
  12. 12.Kunimune國宗1designated