The iron tsuba of Edo’s Akasaka district — openwork sukashi guards that carried the restraint of tea taste into the city of the shōguns. From the Kan’ei era the line ran through nine generations of masters signing Tadamasa and Tadatoki, the early Ko-Akasaka work prized for bold, asymmetric compositions cut in well-forged iron, the later generations refining the house style through the end of the Edo period.
The The Edo Akasaka School (赤坂), active 1624–1860 in Edo across 8 documented smiths: 0 Kokuhō (National Treasures), 0 Jūbun, 0 Jūbi, 0 Tokubetsu Jūyō, 12 Jūyō.
Tadashige (忠重) — Mainline · 1730-1816. Jūyō. Tayuemon Tadashige (太右衛門忠重) was a *tsubako* of the Akasaka school, the lineage of tsuba makers who relocated from Kyoto to Akasaka in Edo at the beginning of the Edo period and flourished there until the end of the Tokugawa shogunate. Tadashige entered the workshop of the fourth-generation master Tadatoshi during the latter's final active years; in practical terms, however, his training was conducted under the fifth-generation Tadatoshi. He proved remarkably long-lived, with signed works from his later career bearing the inscription "made by Tadashige at the age of eighty-four," and his skill has been praised as among the most accomplished of the Akasaka masters active from the mid-Edo period onward. His eldest son, Tadayoshi (忠好), is known to have executed *daisaku-daimei* works on his behalf in these advanced years.
Tadashige's tsuba follow the established Akasaka constructional idiom — *ichimai* iron plates forged with the school's characteristic *sanmai-awase* (three-plate composite lamination), finished with a moderately raised *nikuoki* at the center, broadening connecting webs near the rim for visual stability, and a customary *maru-mimi* rounded edge. Within this framework, his iron displays what the NBTHK describes as "superb forging" and a patinated *sabiiro* "rich in character" with a "distinctive sheen" that appears "clear and fresh." His openwork (*ji-sukashi*) is distinguished by keen cutting edges and crisp, incisive carving, while *kebori* fine-line engraving evokes atmosphere and scent in his naturalistic compositions — plum beneath blue moonlight, aged pine branches, sacred deer within shrine precincts.
The NBTHK identifies Tadashige as outstanding in design even within a school celebrated for the novelty of its compositions, crediting him with a "progressive temperament" that led him to incorporate decorative pattern ideas associated with Ogata Korin. His inventions, such as the "three-tiered *matsukaze*" motif, are noted as having no precedent even among Higo tsuba. Across the designated works, the evaluative language is remarkably consistent: "large in scale and dignified," "strikingly innovative," "exceptionally well-balanced and notably distinguished." Tadashige's achievement lies in his synthesis of Akasaka orthodoxy with an enterprising creative spirit, producing openwork tsuba of "pronounced dignity and distinction" that the NBTHK regards as fully displaying "the characteristic strengths of Akasaka work, whose true specialty is a stylish and tasteful openwork aesthetic."
Tadamune (忠宗) — Mainline · 1707-1746. Smith of the Edo Akasaka School.
Tadanori (忠則) — Mainline · 1730-1780. Smith of the Edo Akasaka School.
Tadatoki (忠時) — Mainline · 1704-1764. Smith of the Edo Akasaka School.
Live·Akasaka lineage
赤坂
The Edo Akasaka School
The iron tsuba of Edo’s Akasaka district — openwork sukashi guards that carried the restraint of tea taste into the city of the shōguns. From the Kan’ei era the line ran through nine generations of masters signing Tadamasa and Tadatoki, the early Ko-Akasaka work prized for bold, asymmetric compositions cut in well-forged iron, the later generations refining the house style through the end of the Edo period.
The The Edo Akasaka School (赤坂), active 1624–1860 in Edo across 8 documented smiths: 0 Kokuhō (National Treasures), 0 Jūbun, 0 Jūbi, 0 Tokubetsu Jūyō, 12 Jūyō.
Tadashige (忠重) — Mainline · 1730-1816. Jūyō. Tayuemon Tadashige (太右衛門忠重) was a *tsubako* of the Akasaka school, the lineage of tsuba makers who relocated from Kyoto to Akasaka in Edo at the beginning of the Edo period and flourished there until the end of the Tokugawa shogunate. Tadashige entered the workshop of the fourth-generation master Tadatoshi during the latter's final active years; in practical terms, however, his training was conducted under the fifth-generation Tadatoshi. He proved remarkably long-lived, with signed works from his later career bearing the inscription "made by Tadashige at the age of eighty-four," and his skill has been praised as among the most accomplished of the Akasaka masters active from the mid-Edo period onward. His eldest son, Tadayoshi (忠好), is known to have executed *daisaku-daimei* works on his behalf in these advanced years.
Tadashige's tsuba follow the established Akasaka constructional idiom — *ichimai* iron plates forged with the school's characteristic *sanmai-awase* (three-plate composite lamination), finished with a moderately raised *nikuoki* at the center, broadening connecting webs near the rim for visual stability, and a customary *maru-mimi* rounded edge. Within this framework, his iron displays what the NBTHK describes as "superb forging" and a patinated *sabiiro* "rich in character" with a "distinctive sheen" that appears "clear and fresh." His openwork (*ji-sukashi*) is distinguished by keen cutting edges and crisp, incisive carving, while *kebori* fine-line engraving evokes atmosphere and scent in his naturalistic compositions — plum beneath blue moonlight, aged pine branches, sacred deer within shrine precincts.
The NBTHK identifies Tadashige as outstanding in design even within a school celebrated for the novelty of its compositions, crediting him with a "progressive temperament" that led him to incorporate decorative pattern ideas associated with Ogata Korin. His inventions, such as the "three-tiered *matsukaze*" motif, are noted as having no precedent even among Higo tsuba. Across the designated works, the evaluative language is remarkably consistent: "large in scale and dignified," "strikingly innovative," "exceptionally well-balanced and notably distinguished." Tadashige's achievement lies in his synthesis of Akasaka orthodoxy with an enterprising creative spirit, producing openwork tsuba of "pronounced dignity and distinction" that the NBTHK regards as fully displaying "the characteristic strengths of Akasaka work, whose true specialty is a stylish and tasteful openwork aesthetic."
Tadamune (忠宗) — Mainline · 1707-1746. Smith of the Edo Akasaka School.
Tadanori (忠則) — Mainline · 1730-1780. Smith of the Edo Akasaka School.
Tadatoki (忠時) — Mainline · 1704-1764. Smith of the Edo Akasaka School.