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OverviewKanteiDesignationsBlade FormsSignaturesLineageSchool
  1. Schools
  2. Ishido
  3. Fukuoka Ishido
  4. Koretsugu

Fukuoka Ishido Koretsugu

是次

Jūyō
Vol. 36, No. 194 · Katana

Fukuoka Ishido Koretsugu

是次

7 ranked works

ProvinceChikuzenEraKan'ei–Tenna (1628–1681)PeriodEdoSchoolIshido>Fukuoka IshidoTraditionShintoFujishiroJo sakuToko Taikan400(top 37%)TypeSwordsmithCodeKOR96
7Jūyō Tōken

Overview

Koretsugu was born in 'ei 5 (1628) and died in the third month of Tenna 1 (1681) at the age of fifty-three, a domain smith to the Kuroda house of who in Meireki 1 (1655) went up to by his lord's order, studied the tradition under Daijo Sakon Korekazu of the Ishido line, and after three years returned to Fukuoka. With his cousin Moritsugu he is named by the published sources as a leading master of the Fukuoka Ishido, the line they set alongside the school as one of the two pillars of . He worked under the common names Hansanbyoe and Ippei, and because his heir Toshitsugu died before him, Moritsugu succeeded to the main line. His is a revival hand: the brilliant of the Fukuoka , recovered two and a half centuries later in steel, and the published sources call him most skilled at exactly that, a smith who "excelled above all in -ba in the manner of the school, and was extremely skillful" (最も一文字風の丁子刃を得意とし極めて上手).

His characteristic temper is a broadly hardened set high over the in places, mixing , and pointed elements within the clove heads, with and entering well to produce a florid, varied . The temper is -dominant with gathered along it, fine run through, and the is bright and clear. On the finest work of the two cousins the heads tighten and lean, the taking on a or reverse-slanting tendency that the published sources name the group's particular feature, forming the distinctive pouch-shaped -, the "unique pouch-shaped - in which their special character lies" (袋丁子の形に特色). A second recurring tell sits within the : a distinctive edge form the judges call ika no atama (烏賊の頭), a "squid head" that appears precisely where the hardening reaches broadest toward the , and which they read as a salient mark of the workshop and lineage.

The is where the revival is told apart from its model. He forges a packed or that flows strongly in the lower half and tends almost to , carrying fine like minute particles, delicate , and a standing that is sometimes a straight, -like reflection and sometimes a . This -tinged steel is the trait he took directly from Korekazu, and the published sources make it the first point by which his work is separated from true old , together with the tightened with and the , while noting that on his blades "the appearance of is slight" (映りけは少い). The answers the : deeply tempered, entering in a to a small round, the tip finishing in . The shape is the bearing, with , a rather wide with clear taper, a thick and usually a shallow .

His surviving record reads as one revival manner held across a spread rather than as separate periods, and the judges draw the variation themselves. Several of his dated blades are noted as departing from the school formula: although Fukuoka Ishido generally shows the inclination in its , on these pieces that tendency is not conspicuous, and they differ somewhat in character. On just such a blade the school is confirmed not by the reverse but by the -tinged with standing , the broad reaching toward the , the deep and the ika no atama, the points the sources call the salient features of the hand. The work is uniformly signed, all seven recognized blades carrying a long signature cut with a thick chisel in a distinctive hand on the ; several add a date and one a date of 11, so that a smith of the age is read off his own inscriptions rather than off attribution. The largest is a votive of 6, exceptionally wide and long with deep , which the judges hold a typical work showing no lack of control despite its scale.

Within the line his place is set by contrast with his cousin rather than by any borrowed comparison. Where Moritsugu, working in the period, often kept the deeper , Koretsugu by contrast more often made the shallow construction, the difference the published sources single out for attention, observing that he "frequently made constructions with the shallow typical of -" (反りの浅い造込みのものが多い). His teacher Korekazu, the Daijo of the Ishido, gave him the -tinged and the -leaning that distinguish the whole revival from the it looks back to. Against true old his work is told by the fine , the tightened with and the ; against the showier Osaka Ishido it keeps the and the deep-tempered . The published sources affirm his finest as a representative work of the school and "a masterpiece among his works" (同作中の傑作の一口), naming one "a typical work of Ishido" (筑前石堂の典型作).

For the collector Koretsugu is a -rank name rather than a designated-treasure one. He has no National Treasures and no Important Cultural Properties; his record runs entirely through the rank, seven signed blades passing the across sessions from the thirteenth to the fiftieth. Provenance is thin in the surviving record, and no museum or house can be grounded on his blades, though one 9 was made on commission for a member of the Kozai clan of Sanuki, retainers of the Hosokawa since the period, and survives with a black whose fittings are given to Yanagawa Naoaki. With every recorded example signed and most long held, a Koretsugu reaches the market only from time to time, and chiefly his shallow- pieces rather than the grand votive blades. When one does appear it is a self-documenting revival in good order, the kind the judges call a blade "in which Koretsugu's true strengths are fully exhibited" (是次の本領が遺憾無く発揮された一口), and a clear window onto how the Fukuoka was forged again in the age.

Kantei

one shinto-revival hand read in two registers: the school-typical Fukuoka Ishido choji that takes on the saka (reverse-slanting) tendency, set against his own frequent atypical pieces in which the judges note the saka inclination is not conspicuous, both over the masame-tinged Ishido ground with standing utsuri

Koretsugu is a Chikuzen shinto smith of the Kanbun era, born Kan'ei 5 (1628) and dead Tenna 1 (1681) at fifty-three, who with his cousin Moritsugu is named by the published sources as a leading master of the Fukuoka Ishido group, the line the NBTHK sets alongside the Chikuzen Nobukuni school as one of the twin pillars of Chikuzen shinto. A domain smith to the Kuroda house, he went up to Edo in Meireki 1 (1655) by his lord's order, studied the Bizen tradition under Musashi Daijo Sakon Korekazu of the Ishido line, and after three years returned to Fukuoka. His recognized manner is the Ishido revival of Fukuoka Ichimonji choji: over a packed ko-itame and itame that flows strongly in the lower half and tends toward masame, with ji-nie and a standing utsuri, he sets a broad, flamboyant choji-midare mixing gunome, ko-gunome and pointed elements, ashi and yo well in, nioi-dominant with ko-nie, the nioiguchi bright and clear, and a deep boshi with hakikake. The published sources distinguish his work from true old Bizen by exactly these features: the fine masame ground he took from Korekazu, the tightened nioiguchi with ko-nie and sunagashi, and the saka (reverse-slanting) inclination of the choji, which on the cousins' best work forms the distinctive pouch-shaped fukuro-choji. A recurring oddity the judges flag is a distinctive edge form within the ha called ika no atama (squid head).

Diagnostic discriminators

unique vs true old Bizen Ichimonji (no saka tell)

unique vs general Bizen choji vocabulary

unique vs old Bizen Ichimonji ground (no masame)

Observation by phase

The Fukuoka Ishido choji (his school-typical manner)

His recognized manner revives the Fukuoka Ichimonji choji in the Ishido way. Over a packed itame or ko-itame that flows strongly in the lower half and tends toward masame, with fine ji-nie and a standing utsuri, he sets a broadly tempered choji-midare: gunome, ko-gunome and pointed elements mix in, ashi and yo enter well, the temper is nioi-dominant with ko-nie, fine sunagashi run, and the nioiguchi is bright and clear. On the cousins' finest work the choji takes on a tight nioiguchi and a saka (reverse-slanting) tendency that the published sources say forms the distinctive pouch-shaped fukuro-choji. The boshi is deeply tempered, entering in a midare-komi to a small round and finishing with hakikake. The earliest dated Juyo carries the showiest old-Ichimonji vocabulary, kawazuko and juka choji with tobiyaki, the nioiguchi tightened with ko-nie. The judges separate the manner from true old Bizen by the masame ground taken from his teacher Korekazu, the tightened nioiguchi with sunagashi, and the saka choji, noting that the appearance of utsuri is comparatively slight.

Sugata 姿
Jigane 地鉄
Hamon 刃文
Bōshi 帽子

The atypical pieces (saka tendency not conspicuous)

A register the judges repeatedly flag is his own frequent departure from the school formula. While Fukuoka Ishido is generally characterized by choji-midare with a saka (reverse-slanting) tendency, several of Koretsugu's dated Juyo are noted as not strongly showing that inclination, differing somewhat in character. On these the school is confirmed instead by the masame-tinged ground with standing utsuri, the broad yakihaba that locally reaches up toward the shinogi, the deep boshi, and the distinctive ika no atama edge form, the points the published sources call the salient features of the same workshop. The sugata sets him apart from his cousin within the same period: where Moritsugu in the Kanbun-shinto era often made blades with relatively deep sori, Koretsugu by contrast frequently produced the shallow-sori construction typical of Kanbun-shinto, the difference the judges single out for attention.

Sugata 姿
Jigane 地鉄
Hamon 刃文
Bōshi 帽子
Scholarship

The published sources distinguish Koretsugu's Ichimonji-style choji from true old Bizen by three points he took or developed under his teacher: the fine masame ground unlike old work, the tightened nioiguchi with ko-nie and sunagashi, and the saka-leaning choji; the appearance of utsuri, they note, is comparatively slight.

On his atypical dated blades the published sources note that, although Fukuoka Ishido generally shows the saka tendency, that inclination is not conspicuous in these pieces, yet confirm the school from the masame-tinged ground, the broad yakihaba reaching the shinogi, the deep boshi, and the distinctive ika no atama edge form.

Designations

Kokuhō—
Jūyō Bunkazai—
Jūyō Bijutsuhin—
Gyobutsu—
Tokubetsu Jūyō—
Jūyō Tōken7

Elite Standing

0.05 across 7 designated works

Top 22% among smiths

Blade Forms

Distribution across 7 ranked works

Signatures

Signature types across 7 ranked works

Currently Available

Lineage

Koretsugu
Students (2)
  1. 1.Moritsugu守次10designated
  2. 2.Morimasa守政2designated

Fukuoka Ishido School

Other artisans of the Fukuoka Ishido school

  1. 1.Moritsugu守次10designated