Mondo-no-Sho Masakiyo is said to have been born in 10 (1670) at Izumi-go in Satsuma, common name Miyahara Seiemon, also called Kakudayu. He learned forging from the Satsuma domain smith Maruta Sozaemon Masafusa, first signing Kiyomitsu and later changing the name to Masakiyo. In the first month of Kyoho 6 (1721) he was summoned together with his townsman Ippei Yasuyo by the eighth shogun Tokugawa Yoshimune to forge in , and his skill was such that the bakufu granted him the right to cut the single-leaf hollyhock crest of the Tokugawa on his tang. On his return journey the Imperial Court raised him to the title Mondo-no-Sho. He died in Kyoho 15 (1730) at sixty-one. The published sources frame him by a single pairing they return to whenever they place him: with Yasuyo he is, in their words, one of "the twin pillars of Satsuma " (「安代と並んで薩摩新刀の双璧」), and where Yasuyo often tempered a calm -toned , Masakiyo tempered the varied, vigorous that became the recognized hand of the school.
His characteristic work is the -den the published sources say he handled with greatest mastery, modelled on the old Shizu manner. Over a strongly forged itame he tempers a ko-notare into which he sets gunome, ko-gunome and pointed togariba, the temper deep in nioi and the nie thick and strong with coarse ara-nie mixed in. Through the ha run long, frequent kinsuji and nie-suji with sunagashi, the streaming nie-lines of a Satsuma hand, and ashi and yo enter well. The pointed teeth set into the undulating notare are the spine of his recognition, the feature that separates his varied midareba from the level suguha of his fellow pillar. The sources name the manner plainly as "the Shizu-style working range that he most excelled in" (「最も得意とした志津風の作域」)2, and on his finest blades they say the result comes near old superior work.
The jigane beneath is the constant. It is a well-forged itame that overall flows strongly and turns masame-inclined, at times a tighter ko-itame mixed with mokume, carrying thick ji-nie with coarse ji-nie mixed and vigorous chikei the sources liken to a distinctive metallic figuring. The steel is masame-prone precisely because the Shizu model asks for it, and the long kinsuji ride that flowing grain into the boshi, which runs in midare-komi or notare to a pointed return, swept with hakikake and turning back deeply. The nioiguchi is bright and clear and only here and there a little uneven. His body is the grand Satsuma form, extremely wide in mihaba with thick kasane and ample hiraniku, an extended chu-kissaki and a sense of funbari, and the published commentary calls such a blade bold, heroic and robust, with the feeling of a decisive downward cut.
There is a second feature the judges single out as a recognition point and read as antique. Especially in the upper half, at the crests of the temper, vigorous yubashiri gather and present an appearance like nijuba, the double temper-line of old work, while long kinsuji and nie-suji run through and sunagashi accompanies them. The sources name it directly, writing that "the manner in which yubashiri are vigorously applied at the crests of the temper to produce a nijuba-like appearance conveys an impression of antique flavor" (「焼頭に湯走り風がさかんにかかって二重刃状を呈している様には、古色の風が感ぜられる」)3. This is not a separate manner but the upper reach of his characteristic hand, the nie-activity pushed to its fullest over the same flowing itame. His tang carries its own constant: almost always ubu, tapering to an iriyama-gata or sword-shaped tip with shallow katte-sagari file marks, the large long signature cut boldly, and on the blades made before the shogun a single-leaf hollyhock crest with a date. The published sources also caution the collector that in his later years many surviving blades were made as daimei by his son Masachika and his pupil Masamori, so a late Masakiyo signature is read against that workshop.
What sets him within his province is exactly the pairing the judges name and the manner they keep returning to. He is read first against his elder townsman Yasuyo, the two held together as the twin pillars of Satsuma shinto, and the distinction is precise: Yasuyo is the calm notare-toned suguha, Masakiyo the varied Shizu-style midare with its pointed togariba, its coarse nie and its long running kinsuji. His own bright deep-nioigunome, his gathering yubashiri and the nijuba of antique flavor are the grounded traits that mark him out, not a borrowed comparison, and the published sources go so far as to say his best work can be mistaken "for old superior blades" (「往々古刀上位の作に見まがう」)4. He stands at the head of the Ichinohira-allied Satsuma shinto masters, the hand by which a varied Soshu-style Satsuma blade of his generation is read.
For the collector he is one of the great names of Satsuma shinto, and his work survives almost wholly ubu and signed. He has no National Treasures and no Important Cultural Properties; his record on the modern designation tiers runs through the Tokubetsu Juyo and Juyo ranks, where twenty-three of his works are held, several dated and many carrying the hollyhock crest granted before the shogun. His provenance reaches the highest houses of his age: his masterpiece katana and wakizashi, presented together with a blade by Yasuyo by the Satsuma lord Shimazu Tsuguhisa to Konoe Iehisa, Minister of the Left, who treasured them so that he sent both smiths gifts of fine silver and a set of poems of the Six Immortal Poets endorsed by court nobles, the documents still surviving; and pieces preserved with the provenance of the Tokugawa shogunal house and the Imperial family. Most designated blades, including those in private hands, are held rather than traded, and a fine signed Masakiyo of his Shizu-style Soshu-den comes to market only from time to time and with patience. His work is, comparatively, among the more findable of the first-rank shinto masters, more so than the locked heritage of the old traditions, but a dated, crest-bearing katana in his full vigorous manner remains a landmark acquisition, a document of how the Satsuma school reached its early summit.
Kantei
one Satsuma shinto Soshu-den hand modelled on Shizu: the prime ko-notare midare mixing gunome and pointed togariba, deep in nioi with thick ara-nie carrying long kinsuji, nie-suji and sunagashi over a strongly flowing masame-inclined itame, the boshi swept with hakikake; with a recurring antique-flavor register in which yubashiri gather at the temper crests into a nijuba-like appearance, and a pairing with Yasuyo that defines him within the province
Mondo-no-Sho Masakiyo, common name Miyahara Seiemon, was born in Kanbun 10 (1670) at Izumi-go in Satsuma and learned forging from the Satsuma domain smith Maruta Sozaemon Masafusa; he first signed Kiyomitsu and later changed it to Masakiyo. In the first month of Kyoho 6 (1721) he was summoned together with his townsman Ippei Yasuyo by the eighth shogun Yoshimune to forge in Edo, was granted the right to cut the single-leaf hollyhock crest of the Tokugawa on his tang, and on his way home was raised by the court to the title Mondo-no-Sho; he died in Kyoho 15 (1730) at sixty-one. The published sources frame him by a single recurring pairing: with Yasuyo he is one of the twin pillars of Satsuma shinto, set against the calmer notare-toned suguha that Yasuyo often tempered. His characteristic hand is the Soshu-den the sources say he handled with greatest mastery, modelled on Shizu: over a strongly forged itame that flows and turns masame-inclined, with thick ji-nie, coarse ji-nie mixed, and vigorous chikei, he tempers a ko-notare mixing gunome, ko-gunome and pointed togariba, ashi and yo entering, deep in nioi, the nie thick with coarse ara-nie, and through it run long frequent kinsuji and nie-suji with sunagashi. At the crests of the temper, especially in the upper half, vigorous yubashiri gather to present a nijuba-like appearance the sources read as an antique flavor; the boshi is swept with hakikake carrying long nie-suji and turns back deeply. His body is extremely wide with thick kasane and ample hiraniku, the tang almost always ubu, tapering to an iriyama-gata or sword-shaped tip with a large long signature, often carrying the hollyhock crest and a date. In his later years many blades survive made as daimei by his son Masachika and his pupil Masamori.
Diagnostic discriminators
志津風Shizu-fu3
unique vs Yasuyo, the quiet pillar (calm notare-suguha)
尖り刃togariba4
二重刃nijuba4
金筋kinsuji4
Observation by phase
His characteristic hand: the Shizu-style Soshu-den midare
The recurring portrait the published sources give of Masakiyo is the Soshu-den they say he handled with greatest mastery, modelled on the old Shizu manner and set against the calmer suguha of his townsman Yasuyo. The body is broad, the kasane thick and the hiraniku ample, with an extended chu-kissaki. Over a strongly forged itame that flows and turns masame-inclined, sometimes a tighter ko-itame, with thick ji-nie, coarse ji-nie mixed and vigorous chikei, he tempers a ko-notare into which he sets gunome, ko-gunome and pointed togariba, sometimes widening to o-gunome; ashi and yo enter, the nioi is deep, the nie thick and strong with coarse ara-nie mixed and gathering unevenly, and through the ha run long frequent kinsuji and nie-suji with sunagashi, the bright clear nioiguchi sometimes becoming a little uneven. The boshi runs in midare-komi or notare, the point pointed, swept with vigorous hakikake carrying long nie-suji and turning back deeply, sometimes a ko-maru. The nakago is almost always ubu, tapering to an iriyama-gata or sword-shaped tip with shallow katte-sagari file marks, a large long signature cut boldly, often the single-leaf hollyhock crest and a date. On his finest pieces the published sources say the work nearly reaches old superior blades, ideally the Shizu of antiquity.
The antique-flavor register: yubashiri gathering into nijuba
On his most ambitious pieces the published sources draw out a second feature as a recognition point and read it as an antique flavor. Especially in the upper half, at the crests of the temper, vigorous yubashiri-like activity gathers and presents an appearance like nijuba, the double temper-line of old work, while long kinsuji and nie-suji run through and sunagashi accompanies them. The sources name this directly: the manner in which yubashiri are vigorously applied at the yakigashira to produce a nijuba-like appearance conveys an impression of antique flavor. The boshi extends this same activity, swept with hakikake and carrying long nie-suji. The jigane beneath is the same strongly flowing itame with thick ji-nie and chikei that he carries through his prime, so this face is not a separate manner but the upper reach of his characteristic hand, the nie-activity pushed to its fullest.
The published sources frame Masakiyo by a single recurring pairing: with Ippei Yasuyo he is one of the twin pillars of Satsuma shinto, but whereas Yasuyo often tempered calm notare-toned suguha, Masakiyo tempered a varied Shizu-style midare-ba mixing gunome and pointed togariba into ko-notare, the Soshu-den he handled with greatest mastery.3
On his most accomplished blades the published sources read the vigorous yubashiri gathering at the crests of the temper into a nijuba-like appearance as an antique flavor, and in his later years they note many surviving works made as daimei by his son Masachika and his pupil Masamori.2
Dated Works
Years he was demonstrably active, proven by signed-and-dated blades
Active period
1714–1728Editorial estimate: 1714–1736
6 of 23 designated works carry a date
17101730
1714
正徳四年Juyo session 18, item 280
1724
享保九年Juyo session 43, item 144
享保九年Tokubetsu Juyo session 15, item 33
享保九年Juyo session 61, item 162
1726
享保十一年Juyo session 17, item 316
1728
享保十三年Juyo session 42, item 113
Historical importance
Where Masakiyo stands among comparable artisans: across all of nihontō, and within tradition, era, and period. The tiers (Foremost · Leading · Major · Notable) weigh official designations from the NBTHK and Japan's Agency for Cultural Affairs, together with historical honors of lasting repute such as the Sansaku and Meibutsu-chō.
随一
Foremost
屈指
Leading
有数
Major
All nihontōYamatoShintōGenroku & later
著名
Notable
Select a lens to see how it's measured.
Designations
Kokuhō—
Jūyō Bunkazai—
Jūyō Bijutsuhin—
Gyobutsu3
Tokubetsu Jūyō1
Jūyō Tōken21
Elite Standing
0.09 across 25 designated works
Top 19% among smiths
Provenance
8 documented provenances across certified works by Masakiyo
▸Imperial3
▸Shogunal1
▸Premier Daimyō2
Major Daimyō—
▸Other Daimyō2
Zaibatsu—
Institutions—
Named Collectors—
Provenance Standing
6 works held in elite collections across 8 documented provenances