説明

Description ITEM DESCRIPTION: Comes with kimono or cotton bag. Comes with certificate of supein Nihonto. Documentation Documentation 1) NBTHK Certificate (刀剣鑑定書 / “Sword Appraisal Certificate”) Heading: 刀 鑑定書 Translation: Katana — Appraisal Certificate Mei: 山城大掾源国重 Translation: Inscription: Yamashiro Daijō Minamoto Kunishige (Additional inscription): 水田住人以南蛮鉄作之 Translation: (Additional inscription): “Resident of Mizuta; made using nanban-tetsu (imported/‘western’ iron/steel)” Length: 二尺二寸七分半 Translation: Length: 2 shaku 2 sun 7.5 bu (≈ 68.94 cm) Text: 右は當協會に於て審査の結果特別保存刀剣と鑑定しこれを證する Translation: The above item has been examined by this association and, as a result, is appraised as Tokubetsu Hozon Tōken (Especially Preserved Sword) and is hereby certified. Smith, school, and context The signature 山城大掾源国重 (Yamashiro Daijō Minamoto Kunishige) is commonly linked to the Mizuta lineage (備中水田) , described in reference material and specialist trade sources as active in the early Shintō phase (Edo period) . These sources also place the granting of the title “Yamashiro Daijō” for this Kunishige in Shōhō 2 (1645) , and associate him with the “Edo Mizuta” designation. The additional inscription 「以南蛮鉄作之」 is commercially and historically significant because it explicitly states the use of nanban-tetsu , imported iron/steel that some Edo-period smiths incorporated—often as a deliberate technical and prestige marker. (No guesswork here: it is recorded because it is literally present in the mei and in both documents). Technical description of the blade This is a shinogi-zukuri katana with a classical overall profile, a medium-proportioned kissaki , and a clearly defined yokote in the photographs. The hamon reads as notare-midare , broad and continuous in its undulation, with a well-defined hardened boundary along the edge. The polish allows a clean reading of the hamon outline; fine superficial handling/storage marks are visible under hard lighting. The nakago is signed and shows diag

Nihonto Katana “Minamoto Kunishige” NBTHK Tokobetsu Hozon
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Nihonto Katana “Minamoto Kunishige” NBTHK Tokobetsu Hozon

売却済

世界81社の刀剣商を横断追跡 · 価格履歴 · 売却アーカイブ

仕様

長さ

68.94 cm

作者について

Mizuta Kunishige國重

2 御物1 重要刀剣

Kunishige worked within the Mizuta school of Bitchu Province, a lineage that flourished from the late Muromachi period into the Edo era. The most celebrated smith of this name is Otsuki Yogoro Kunishige, commonly abbreviated as "Daiyogo," who was the son of Otsuki Saburobei Kunishige and is recognized as the foremost master of the Mizuta school. The NBTHK observes that "the nationwide prosperity of this school during the Edo period was likely due to the presence of such superior craftsmen." Earlier work signed "Ko-Mizuta Kunishige" is dated to the late Muromachi period, with a katana bearing the date Tensho 20 (1592) among the few signed examples by the older lineage. The Ko-Mizuta works display a *kitae* of dense *ko-itame-hada* with *ji-nie* and *utsuri*, and a *hamon* built around *gunome-midare* as the principal theme, incorporating small *midare* and *ko-choji* in what the NBTHK describes as an "overall somewhat busy" manner, with a tightly formed *nioiguchi* and attached *ko-nie* as the chief point of appreciation. The later Daiyogo Kunishige, by contrast, excelled particularly in the *Soshu-den*, producing *itame-hada* with prominent standing grain, well-adhering *ji-nie*, and *chikei*, tempered in bold *notare*-style *o-midare* that in the upper half becomes nearly *hitatsura*, with deep *nioi* and coarse nie. The *boshi* on such works enters in irregular *midare-komi* with *hakikake*, burning down long to the *mune-machi*. The tang tip in the Mizuta manner is characteristically *ha-agari kurijiri*. Signed examples by both the Ko-Mizuta and Daiyogo lines are described as "comparatively few," lending particular significance to surviving blades. The Ko-Mizuta katana of Tensho 20 is called "not only a typical example, but also one of his representative works," while the Daiyogo Kunishige is praised as "a superior craftsman who exceeded his father's skill." This rarity of signed work is traditionally attributed to signatures being removed or blades being shortened and reworked into superior pieces -- a testament to the enduring regard in which Mizuta workmanship has been held.

刀剣商

Supein Nihonto

supeinnihonto.com

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