Documentation

Shinsa

審査

Definition

Examination or judging; the formal NBTHK process of evaluating swords for certification.

Find items related to Shinsa

Search listings

Related Documentation Terms

Aoe-kiwame青江極

Authentication certificate for Aoe school blades; formal attribution to this Bitchu Province tradition.

Blue-papers

Colloquial Western term for Koshu Tokubetsu Kicho papers, which had a blue cover. Unlike green/white papers, blue papers were issued by the central NBTHK authority in Tokyo, not the provincial branches where authentication scandals occurred. More reliable than other Kicho-era papers but still not up to modern Hozon standards in rigor. See: koshu-tokubetsu-kicho.

Den

Attributed to; traditional attribution without certainty.

Furukiwame古極め

Old attribution; historical sword appraisal or authentication, often from earlier periods.

Art name or pseudonym; an alternative name used by swordsmiths or artists.

Green-papers

Colloquial Western term for Tokubetsu Kicho papers (pre-1982), which had a green cover. Treat as equivalent to no papers—approximately 95% of attributions are unreliable. Exception: low-value fittings from inexpensive schools where modern Hozon certification costs exceed the value gained. See: tokubetsu-kicho.

Hakogaki箱書

Box inscription; writing on a storage box identifying the contents, often by a recognized authority, used as authentication.

Hon'ami本阿弥

The most prestigious family of sword appraisers, active from the Muromachi period through Edo. Their origami certificates remain highly valued.

Horyu保留

Deferred judgement; a status given by NBTHK shinsa when a blade cannot be definitively attributed or authenticated. The item is held for further study rather than being passed or rejected. Blades with horyu status may be resubmitted after additional research or restoration work.

Hozon保存

Worthy of preservation; NBTHK certification indicating a blade meets standards for historical and artistic value.

Juyo重要

Important; NBTHK designation for blades and fittings of exceptional quality, ranking below Tokubetsu Juyo.

Jūyō-bijutsuhin重要美術品

Important Art Object; pre-war Japanese government designation (1933-1950) for culturally significant works including swords. Collectors should exercise considerable caution: Jubi items exhibit enormous qualitative variance, from masterworks approaching Kokuho caliber to pieces now recognized as gimei. Like Juyo Bunkazai and Kokuho, Jubi items cannot be exported from Japan.