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Overview·Kantei·Dated Works·Designations·Provenance·Blade Forms·Signatures·School
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  1. Schools
  2. Sa Yukihide
  3. Yukihide

Sa Yukihide

行秀

Tokujū
Vol. 27, No. 34 · Katana

Sa Yukihide

行秀

65 ranked works

ProvinceChikuzenEraBunka–Meiji (1813–1887)PeriodMeijiSchoolSa YukihideTraditionShinshintoGeneration1st generationTeacherShimizu HisayoshiFujishiroJo-jo sakuTypeSwordsmithCodeYUK33
2Jūyō Bijutsuhin
2Tokubetsu Jūyō61Jūyō Tōken

Overview

Yukihide was born in Bunka 10 (1813) at Hoshimaru in Asakura, Kamiza District of Province, the heir of Matabei Morishige, and took the name Toyonaga Kyūbei, later the art-name Tōko. He set the character (左) at the head of his signature and styled himself a descendant of the line, in some inscriptions its thirty-ninth generation, a genealogical claim the published sources flatly reject: of one dated the commentary states that he "styled himself the thirty-ninth-generation grandson of , but this is not correct" (三十九代の孫と称しているが当らない). What is documented instead is a career of the bakumatsu. In the early Tenpō era he went up to and studied sword-forging under Shimizu Hisayoshi, a disciple of Hosokawa Masayoshi, winning a name for surpassing his teacher; in Kōka 3 (1846), at thirty-four, he went down to Tosa at the recommendation of the domain smith Sekita Shinpei Katsuhiro, and in Ansei 2 (1855) he became a retained smith of the Yamauchi house, working in both Tosa and the domain's residence at Sunamura in Fukagawa until his swordmaking ended in Meiji 3 (1870). The published sources count him "one of the noted masters of the " (新々刀工中の名工の一人である).

His recognized work is a broad made in conscious emulation of Inoue Shinkai, the manner the published sources call his true forte. He carries it on a grand body, wide in with little taper from base to tip, thick in and heavy in the hand, shallow in with a large or elongated point, the tang and cut with a long, boldly chiseled signature. Over a tightly forged the temper runs a wide bearing a shallow and vigorously mixed with , the exceptionally deep, the thick and well adhered, - frequent along the , entering, with and running through and the whole bright and clear. The runs straight to a with and a long, sometimes deep, turnback. The dated Kaei 2 (1849) shows the type at its height, its broad straight temper with intermingled the most deeply -laden of his hand.

The is the constant beneath both his manners. It is a closely packed , at times an flowing toward , with thick , frequent , and a steel the commentary repeatedly calls bright and clear, occasionally tightening to a near-plain . This is the -derived forging of his stated ideal rather than any reflection, and the published sources hold that whatever the temper his is well attached, his the deepest, and his and keenly clear. On one Kaei 6 (1853) the activity is described with his and both luminous; on another the is "the deepest, bright and clear."

Alongside the the published sources name a second manner, a at times led by and mixing in and large , more flamboyant than the straight temper. Over the build the edge enters long thick , the deep, the thick and at times coarse, with and , and the runs and points or turns back in with . The forging beneath it ranges from the tight to a well-ordered . Some of these the commentary reads as after models, with a emulation among them and others recalling Nanki Shigekuni; his earliest manner is recorded as a Hosokawa-school -, a with a tightened , before he turned, in his own words and the judges', to the tradition. He also signed in several hands, sometimes adding a , and on a few late blades the seven-character Toyonaga Tōko signature.

What sets Yukihide apart from the wider revival is the object of his emulation and the clarity he drew from it. Where many of his contemporaries rebuilt the flamboyant of the middle ages, his ideal, as the published sources put it, was "to take the tradition as his ideal" (相州伝を理想とし), realized above all in works "after the manner of Inoue Shinkai, in conscious admiration of him" (井上真改に私淑した). His bright deep- over a -laden is read as the Ōsaka Shinkai line carried into the bakumatsu, and the judges go further still: of one Kaei 6 the commentary declares outright that "the brilliance of his and is foremost among the " (地刃の冴えは新々刀中第一である). That clarity, more than any single shape of temper, is the mark of his hand.

For the collector Yukihide is a securely knowable name, signed and dated almost without exception. Fujishiro grades him Jō-jō , and his record runs through two works at the rank, two prewar Jūyō Bijutsuhin, and many at the rank, sixty-three in the and tiers together; he has no National Treasures or Important Cultural Properties. Because, as the commentary warns, forgeries in his name are extremely numerous, a securely dated signature is prized as a reference specimen, and the supplementary inscriptions some of his blades carry, recording the place of forging and even the mochitetsu iron used, are valued as documentary material in their own right. His blades pass through long-held collections anchored in their own provenance, among them the Yamauchi lords of Tosa, in whose villa at Godaizan he forged what one entry calls a once-in-a-lifetime work, alongside the Inada, Ogura, Ochi and Takagaki families of recorded whereabouts. Most are held rather than traded, but he is not beyond reach as the great names are: a signed, dated Yukihide of good workmanship comes to market from time to time, a sound and bright record of the last age of the Japanese sword.

Kantei

two manners of one bakumatsu Tosa-domain hand stated together by the published sources, both over a grand shinshinto build with tight ko-itame tending to masame, thick ji-nie and chikei: a Shinkai-emulating broad suguha mixed with gunome, the nioiguchi exceptionally deep with nie-hotsure and a bright clear ji and ha; and a gunome-midare mixed with choji, deep in nioi with sunagashi and kinsuji and a midare-komi pointed boshi

Yukihide is one of the leading masters of the bakumatsu, a -born smith named Toyonaga Kyubei who took the character into his signature and styled himself a later descendant, by one account the thirty-ninth generation, of the line, a genealogical claim the published sources flatly call incorrect. He went up to in the early Tenpo era, studied under Shimizu Hisayoshi of the Hosokawa Masayoshi line and was praised as having surpassed his teacher, then entered the service of the Yamauchi house of Tosa, working in both Tosa and the domain's residence at Sunamura until Meiji 3. His recognized work is grand in build, wide in body with little taper and a large , heavy in hand, over a tightly forged or that tends to , thick in with frequent and a notably bright clear steel. He tempers in two manners the sources name together: a broad bearing a shallow and vigorously mixed with , the exceptionally deep, the thick, - and and running freely, made in conscious emulation of Inoue Shinkai; and a mixed with and large , long and deep, and throughout, the and pointed or in with . Whatever the temper, the published sources hold that his is well adhered, his the deepest, and his and bright and clear, calling the brilliance of his work foremost among the . His ideal was the revival of the tradition.

Diagnostic discriminators

unique vs Bizen-den baseline (choji-led, tightened nioiguchi)

unique vs Bizen ko-itame with utsuri

Observation by phase

The Shinkai-emulating broad suguha (his recognized prime)

His recognized work, and the manner the published sources call his true forte, is a broad made in conscious emulation of Inoue Shinkai. The shape is robust , wide in body with little taper from base to tip, thick in and heavy in hand, shallow in with a large or elongated , the tang with a long thickly cut signature. The ground is a tightly forged , at times an tending to , thick in with frequent and a notably bright clear steel, sometimes near plain. Over it the temper is a wide bearing a shallow and vigorously mixed with , the exceptionally deep, thick and well adhered, - frequent along the , entering, running and entering well, the whole bright and clear. The runs straight to a with and a long, sometimes deep, turnback. The published sources affirm this as the manner at which he most excelled and as the work that, in the clarity of its and , ranks foremost among the .

Sugata 姿
Jigane 地鉄
Hamon 刃文
Bōshi 帽子

The gunome-midare mixed with choji (his second mode)

The published sources name a second manner together with the first: a , at times led by and mixing in and large , more flamboyant than the broad . The build is the grand body, the ground a or an flowing to with and . Over it the temper is mixed with and angular elements, long thick entering, the deep, thick and at times coarse, running and entering, with in the lower half on certain blades and on others. The runs and points, or turns back in with . Some of these are understood as after models, a emulation among them, and his early manner is recorded as a Hosokawa-school -, a with a tightened , before he turned to the tradition. The sources call the work skillful and number outstanding examples among it.

Sugata 姿
Jigane 地鉄
Hamon 刃文
Bōshi 帽子
Scholarship

The published sources transmit Yukihide as Toyonaga Kyubei of Chikuzen, who styled himself a descendant of the Chikuzen Samonji line, by one account its thirty-ninth generation, and observe that this genealogical claim is not correct. They record that he studied under Shimizu Hisayoshi of the Hosokawa Masayoshi line, surpassed his teacher, became a Tosa-domain smith, and took the art-name Toko after returning to Tosa in Keio 3.

The published sources name two manners in his work, a suguha and a midare, and two forging tendencies, a well-ordered masame and a tightly packed ko-itame, and hold that whatever the temper his nie is well adhered, his nioiguchi the deepest, and the clarity of his ji and ha foremost among the shinshinto; his ideal is given as the revival of the Soshu tradition, realized above all in works after Inoue Shinkai.

Dated Works

Years he was demonstrably active, proven by signed-and-dated blades

Active period
1849–1867Editorial estimate: 1813–1887
44 of 65 designated works carry a date
18401870
  1. 1849
    嘉永二年Juyo session 51, item 189
    嘉永二年Juyo session 16, item 228
    嘉永二年Tokubetsu Juyo session 27, item 34
    嘉永二年Juyo session 37, item 171
    嘉永二年Juyo session 43, item 141
  2. 1850
    嘉永三年Juyo session 20, item 321
    嘉永三年Juyo session 51, item 190
    嘉永三年Juyo Bijutsuhin vol. 7, item 971
  3. 1852
    嘉永五年Juyo session 18, item 250
    嘉永五年Juyo session 19, item 355
    嘉永五年Juyo session 33, item 186
  4. 1853
    嘉永六年Juyo session 49, item 217
    嘉永六年Juyo session 14, item 336
    嘉永六年Juyo Bijutsuhin vol. 7, item 972
    嘉永六年Juyo session 31, item 206
    嘉永六年Juyo session 13, item 170
    嘉永六年Juyo session 22, item 325
  5. 1855
    安政二年Juyo session 22, item 326
  6. 1856
    安政三年Juyo session 31, item 207
    安政三年Juyo session 66, item 115
    安政三年Juyo session 49, item 218
  7. 1859
    安政六年Juyo session 21, item 352
    安政六年Juyo session 12, item 154
    安政六年Juyo session 21, item 351
    安政六年Juyo session 12, item 153
    安政六年Juyo session 16, item 229
    安政六年Juyo session 63, item 134
  8. 1860
    安政七年Juyo session 37, item 172
    万延元年Juyo session 33, item 187
  9. 1862
    文久二年Juyo session 45, item 144
  10. 1866
    慶応二年Juyo session 23, item 442
    慶応二年Juyo session 35, item 200
    慶応二年Juyo session 31, item 208
    慶応二年Juyo session 22, item 328
    慶応二年Juyo session 24, item 439
    慶応二年Tokubetsu Juyo session 26, item 41
    慶応二年Juyo session 22, item 327
    慶応二年Juyo session 14, item 337
    慶応二年Juyo session 23, item 443
  11. 1867
    慶応三年Juyo session 44, item 140
    慶応三年Juyo session 7, item 82
    慶応三年Juyo session 24, item 440
    慶応三年Juyo session 10, item 148
    慶応三年Juyo session 35, item 201

Designations

Kokuhō—
Jūyō Bunkazai—
Jūyō Bijutsuhin2
Gyobutsu—
Tokubetsu Jūyō2
Jūyō Tōken61

Elite Standing

0.22 across 65 designated works

Top 11% among smiths

Provenance

5 documented provenances across certified works by Yukihide

Provenance Standing

1 works held in elite collections across 5 documented provenances

Top 69% among smiths

Raw score: 1.90 / 10

Blade Forms

Distribution across 65 ranked works

Signatures

Signature types across 65 ranked works

Currently Available

Sa Yukihide School

Other artisans of the Sa Yukihide school

  1. 1.Toko東虎1designated

Yukihide

Yukihide(行秀) was a Japanese swordsmith of the Sa Yukihide school in Chikuzen province, active during the Bunka–Meiji (1813-1887) period.

The work follows the Shinshinto tradition.

Designated works by Yukihide include 2 Tokubetsu Jūyō, 61 Jūyō.