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Description

This is an antique Kozuka from the Edo period. The motif is Ume (Japanese apricot blossom) and the inscription is Sagami no Kami Masatsune. The flowers are colored with gold and silver paints, and the leaves and branches have copper-brown color.

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Swords›Mino-den›Owari Masatsune›Masatsune›Kozuka: Ume Zu
kozuka
Owari Masatsune

Kozuka: Ume Zu

mei · Edo

SOLD
Owari Masatsune — 1 of 7
Owari Masatsune — 2 of 7
Owari Masatsune — 3 of 7
Owari Masatsune — 4 of 7
Owari Masatsune — 5 of 7
Owari Masatsune — 6 of 7
Owari Masatsune — 7 of 7
1 / 7
1 / 7
Owari Masatsune — 1 of 7Owari Masatsune — 2 of 7Owari Masatsune — 3 of 7Owari Masatsune — 4 of 7Owari Masatsune — 5 of 7Owari Masatsune — 6 of 7Owari Masatsune — 7 of 7
Measurements & details
Maker

Owari Masatsune

Era

Edo

Signature

Signed

Description

This is an antique Kozuka from the Edo period. The motif is Ume (Japanese apricot blossom) and the inscription is Sagami no Kami Masatsune. The flowers are colored with gold and silver paints, and the leaves and branches have copper-brown color.

About the maker

Masatsune

政常

Owari Masatsune (Mino-derived Owari shinto; retained by the Owari Tokugawa) · Owari · around 1615-1624

Fujishiro Jo saku · Tōken Taikan top 23%

4 pieces on the market now

›

Masatsune was born at Nodo in Mino Province and first signed Kanetsune, a smith of the Seki tradition who carried that Mino root into the new swords of Owari. The published sources follow his career in unusual detail. In Eiroku 10 he set up an independent branch and moved to Komaki village, changing his name to Masatsune around that time; in Tensho 19 he received the court title Sagami no Kami; in Keicho 5 he followed Matsudaira Tadayoshi to Kiyosu, and he became a retained smith of the Owari Tokugawa house. In Keicho 12 he took the tonsure and retired, passing the name Sagami no Kami Masatsune to his son, but when the second generation died suddenly two years later he returned to the forge, and from that time he signed Masatsune Nyudo. He died in Genna 5 at the age of eighty-four. In later generations he was counted among the Owari Sansaku, the three founding smiths of Owari shinto, beside Hoki no Kami Nobutaka and Hida no Kami Ujifusa.

His recognized hand is the bright straight temper of his hira-zukuri tanto and wakizashi, the form in which his surviving work is most numerous. Over a tightly forged ko-itame mixed with mokume, the steel flows toward masame and carries thick ji-nie, with fine chikei entering and, on several pieces, a mizukage-like feature rising diagonally from below the machi. The temper is a chu-suguha, at times a wide suguha, laid in ko-nie, into which small gunome enter with ko-ashi. What separates his suguha from a plain Seki straight temper is the worked habuchi: it frays into hotsure, with nijuba, kuichigai-ba and uchinoke mixed in and fine sunagashi running through, while the nioiguchi stays bright. The published commentary calls one such tanto a thoroughly characteristic example, with 「相模守政常の典型的な直刃の作例」[[c:1]] (a typical example of Sagami no Kami Masatsune's suguha).

The jigane is the constant beneath both of his manners. It is an itame that overall tends toward masame, with ji-nie attached and, on the better tanto, chikei standing out and the steel reading bright. Where the forging tightens into ko-itame mixed with mokume the impression is of strength, and the published sources single out the diagonal mizukage at the machi and the abundant ji-nie as the marks of his sound forging. On the wakizashi the grain at times stands a little, with the upper half flowing toward the mune, and the carvings he favours, a suken or bonji above the koshimoto with gomabashi on the reverse, are described as crisp and well harmonised with the blade.

His second manner is the Owari-Seki wet temper, carried on his katana, naginata and yari. Over an itame that flows into masame with ji-nie, he tempers a wide suguha tone or a shallow notare-gunome base with togariba and small gunome mixed in, ashi and yo entering, the nie sometimes coarse and gathered in clusters, kinsuji and sunagashi seen, and the nioiguchi tending to a subdued shizumi. The published sources name this directly: on his large Keicho-form katana they read 「尾張関得意の濡れ刃」[[c:2]] (the wet temper for which the Owari-Seki smiths are noted). His naginata and yari are large and dignified, the boshi at times pointed and Jizo-like; the sources credit him as 「短刀, 薙刀の名手として名高い」[[c:3]] (famed as an outstanding maker of tanto and naginata), while noting that the very finest among the naginata are few.

What sets him apart within Owari shinto is exactly what the judges name. His suguha hand, with its fraying habuchi, bright nioiguchi and masame-flowing ji-nie, is the constant by which his tanto are known, and his wet temper marks the Mino-into-Owari Seki descent that the other Owari founders share. On one wakizashi that departs from his usual restraint, bolder in temper and brighter in nie with an antique flavour in the jigane, the published sources judge that he was reaching higher still, 「相州上工, 就中貞宗や信国あたりを狙ったものであろうか」[[c:4]] (aiming, it would seem, at the superior Soshu craftsmen, especially such masters as Sadamune and Nobukuni), and call the result 「同作中出色の一口」[[c:5]] (an outstanding example among his works). His line continued through the second-generation Mino no Kami Fujiwara Masatsune, an adopted son and son of Gifu Daido, whose signed katana and yari survive in the same record.

For the collector, Masatsune is a well-documented founder of an Owari line rather than a rare ghost. Fujishiro grades him Jo saku. He has no National Treasures and no Important Cultural Properties; his record runs instead through the modern Juyo rank, with seventeen blades in the Tokubetsu Juyo and Juyo tiers, and two further pieces designated in the prewar Juyo Bijutsuhin, among them a katana that passed through the Tokugawa Iesato collection and is now held by the Tokugawa Reimeikai Foundation. Provenance touches the daimyo and court houses, with recorded denrai to the Tokugawa family and the Imperial family, and one blade preserved at Akihasan Hongu Akiha Shrine. Because the published sources are agreed that 「刀及び鎬造の脇指は極めて少ない」[[c:6]] (katana and shinogi-zukuri wakizashi are extremely few), a signed katana is the scarce thing, valued as material for the study of the smith himself; his hira-zukuri tanto, wakizashi, yari and naginata come to the serious collector from time to time, and a signed Owari Masatsune of his own hand, not the second generation, remains a satisfying and reachable document of how Owari shinto began.

Historical importance

Where Masatsune 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
著名
Notable

Select a lens to see how it's measured.

Designation record
20 designated works
Jūyō Bijutsuhin
2
Gyobutsu (Imperial)
1
Jūyō
17
4 works by Masatsune on the market→
Masatsune — full profileOwari Masatsune (Mino-derived Owari shinto; retained by the Owari Tokugawa) school
About the school

Owari Masatsune

尾張政常

Mino-den · Owari

12 pieces on the market now

›

The line begins with a Mino man. The setsumei record that Sagami no Kami Masatsune (政常) was born at Nōdo in Mino Province, where he first signed Kanetsune (兼常) and is variously said to have been the son or a disciple of Kanetsune of Seki. Learn more →

2 recorded smiths21 designated works
Leading smiths
SmithEraDesignated
Masatsune政常1615-162420
Masatsune政常1661-16730
Masatsune政常1688-17040
Masatsune政常1661-16730
Kanetsune兼常1573-15921
Explore the Owari Masatsune school →
Warning — certificate not found

We could not find an authenticity certificate on the seller’s listing. Japanese swords and fittings are normally papered by the NBTHK (or the NTHK). Without one, the attribution is the seller’s own assessment and has not been independently verified — treat it with caution and ask the dealer about certification before buying.

Seller
S
Samurai Museum
🇯🇵Ships from Japan
›
✓Verified dealersamuraimuseum.jp
✓Ships worldwide✓English supportPayPalCredit card
Return policy

Returns/exchanges limited to defects caused by shipping (except willful misconduct or gross negligence by the company); customers must contact within 72 hours of receiving the product.

View all of Samurai Museum’s listings→View this item on the dealer’s site→

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Description

This is an antique Kozuka from the Edo period. The motif is Ume (Japanese apricot blossom) and the inscription is Sagami no Kami Masatsune. The flowers are colored with gold and silver paints, and the leaves and branches have copper-brown color.

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Swords›Mino-den›Owari Masatsune›Masatsune›Kozuka: Ume Zu
kozuka
Owari Masatsune

Kozuka: Ume Zu

mei · Edo

SOLD
Owari Masatsune — 1 of 7
Owari Masatsune — 2 of 7
Owari Masatsune — 3 of 7
Owari Masatsune — 4 of 7
Owari Masatsune — 5 of 7
Owari Masatsune — 6 of 7
Owari Masatsune — 7 of 7
1 / 7
1 / 7
Owari Masatsune — 1 of 7Owari Masatsune — 2 of 7Owari Masatsune — 3 of 7Owari Masatsune — 4 of 7Owari Masatsune — 5 of 7Owari Masatsune — 6 of 7Owari Masatsune — 7 of 7
Measurements & details
Maker

Owari Masatsune

Era

Edo

Signature

Signed

Description

This is an antique Kozuka from the Edo period. The motif is Ume (Japanese apricot blossom) and the inscription is Sagami no Kami Masatsune. The flowers are colored with gold and silver paints, and the leaves and branches have copper-brown color.

About the maker

Masatsune

政常

Owari Masatsune (Mino-derived Owari shinto; retained by the Owari Tokugawa) · Owari · around 1615-1624

Fujishiro Jo saku · Tōken Taikan top 23%

4 pieces on the market now

›

Masatsune was born at Nodo in Mino Province and first signed Kanetsune, a smith of the Seki tradition who carried that Mino root into the new swords of Owari. The published sources follow his career in unusual detail. In Eiroku 10 he set up an independent branch and moved to Komaki village, changing his name to Masatsune around that time; in Tensho 19 he received the court title Sagami no Kami; in Keicho 5 he followed Matsudaira Tadayoshi to Kiyosu, and he became a retained smith of the Owari Tokugawa house. In Keicho 12 he took the tonsure and retired, passing the name Sagami no Kami Masatsune to his son, but when the second generation died suddenly two years later he returned to the forge, and from that time he signed Masatsune Nyudo. He died in Genna 5 at the age of eighty-four. In later generations he was counted among the Owari Sansaku, the three founding smiths of Owari shinto, beside Hoki no Kami Nobutaka and Hida no Kami Ujifusa.

His recognized hand is the bright straight temper of his hira-zukuri tanto and wakizashi, the form in which his surviving work is most numerous. Over a tightly forged ko-itame mixed with mokume, the steel flows toward masame and carries thick ji-nie, with fine chikei entering and, on several pieces, a mizukage-like feature rising diagonally from below the machi. The temper is a chu-suguha, at times a wide suguha, laid in ko-nie, into which small gunome enter with ko-ashi. What separates his suguha from a plain Seki straight temper is the worked habuchi: it frays into hotsure, with nijuba, kuichigai-ba and uchinoke mixed in and fine sunagashi running through, while the nioiguchi stays bright. The published commentary calls one such tanto a thoroughly characteristic example, with 「相模守政常の典型的な直刃の作例」[[c:1]] (a typical example of Sagami no Kami Masatsune's suguha).

The jigane is the constant beneath both of his manners. It is an itame that overall tends toward masame, with ji-nie attached and, on the better tanto, chikei standing out and the steel reading bright. Where the forging tightens into ko-itame mixed with mokume the impression is of strength, and the published sources single out the diagonal mizukage at the machi and the abundant ji-nie as the marks of his sound forging. On the wakizashi the grain at times stands a little, with the upper half flowing toward the mune, and the carvings he favours, a suken or bonji above the koshimoto with gomabashi on the reverse, are described as crisp and well harmonised with the blade.

His second manner is the Owari-Seki wet temper, carried on his katana, naginata and yari. Over an itame that flows into masame with ji-nie, he tempers a wide suguha tone or a shallow notare-gunome base with togariba and small gunome mixed in, ashi and yo entering, the nie sometimes coarse and gathered in clusters, kinsuji and sunagashi seen, and the nioiguchi tending to a subdued shizumi. The published sources name this directly: on his large Keicho-form katana they read 「尾張関得意の濡れ刃」[[c:2]] (the wet temper for which the Owari-Seki smiths are noted). His naginata and yari are large and dignified, the boshi at times pointed and Jizo-like; the sources credit him as 「短刀, 薙刀の名手として名高い」[[c:3]] (famed as an outstanding maker of tanto and naginata), while noting that the very finest among the naginata are few.

What sets him apart within Owari shinto is exactly what the judges name. His suguha hand, with its fraying habuchi, bright nioiguchi and masame-flowing ji-nie, is the constant by which his tanto are known, and his wet temper marks the Mino-into-Owari Seki descent that the other Owari founders share. On one wakizashi that departs from his usual restraint, bolder in temper and brighter in nie with an antique flavour in the jigane, the published sources judge that he was reaching higher still, 「相州上工, 就中貞宗や信国あたりを狙ったものであろうか」[[c:4]] (aiming, it would seem, at the superior Soshu craftsmen, especially such masters as Sadamune and Nobukuni), and call the result 「同作中出色の一口」[[c:5]] (an outstanding example among his works). His line continued through the second-generation Mino no Kami Fujiwara Masatsune, an adopted son and son of Gifu Daido, whose signed katana and yari survive in the same record.

For the collector, Masatsune is a well-documented founder of an Owari line rather than a rare ghost. Fujishiro grades him Jo saku. He has no National Treasures and no Important Cultural Properties; his record runs instead through the modern Juyo rank, with seventeen blades in the Tokubetsu Juyo and Juyo tiers, and two further pieces designated in the prewar Juyo Bijutsuhin, among them a katana that passed through the Tokugawa Iesato collection and is now held by the Tokugawa Reimeikai Foundation. Provenance touches the daimyo and court houses, with recorded denrai to the Tokugawa family and the Imperial family, and one blade preserved at Akihasan Hongu Akiha Shrine. Because the published sources are agreed that 「刀及び鎬造の脇指は極めて少ない」[[c:6]] (katana and shinogi-zukuri wakizashi are extremely few), a signed katana is the scarce thing, valued as material for the study of the smith himself; his hira-zukuri tanto, wakizashi, yari and naginata come to the serious collector from time to time, and a signed Owari Masatsune of his own hand, not the second generation, remains a satisfying and reachable document of how Owari shinto began.

Historical importance

Where Masatsune 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
著名
Notable

Select a lens to see how it's measured.

Designation record
20 designated works
Jūyō Bijutsuhin
2
Gyobutsu (Imperial)
1
Jūyō
17
4 works by Masatsune on the market→
Masatsune — full profileOwari Masatsune (Mino-derived Owari shinto; retained by the Owari Tokugawa) school
About the school

Owari Masatsune

尾張政常

Mino-den · Owari

12 pieces on the market now

›

The line begins with a Mino man. The setsumei record that Sagami no Kami Masatsune (政常) was born at Nōdo in Mino Province, where he first signed Kanetsune (兼常) and is variously said to have been the son or a disciple of Kanetsune of Seki. Learn more →

2 recorded smiths21 designated works
Leading smiths
SmithEraDesignated
Masatsune政常1615-162420
Masatsune政常1661-16730
Masatsune政常1688-17040
Masatsune政常1661-16730
Kanetsune兼常1573-15921
Explore the Owari Masatsune school →
Warning — certificate not found

We could not find an authenticity certificate on the seller’s listing. Japanese swords and fittings are normally papered by the NBTHK (or the NTHK). Without one, the attribution is the seller’s own assessment and has not been independently verified — treat it with caution and ask the dealer about certification before buying.

Seller
S
Samurai Museum
🇯🇵Ships from Japan
›
✓Verified dealersamuraimuseum.jp
✓Ships worldwide✓English supportPayPalCredit card
Return policy

Returns/exchanges limited to defects caused by shipping (except willful misconduct or gross negligence by the company); customers must contact within 72 hours of receiving the product.

View all of Samurai Museum’s listings→View this item on the dealer’s site→

More works by Owari Masatsune

View all →
Choshuya
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ByOwari Masatsune
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Toushin
Kozuka - by Owari Masatsune School - Kogatana: Masatsune nyudoKozuka - by Owari Masatsune School - Kogatana: Masatsune nyudo

Kozuka

ByOwari Masatsune School
¥90,000
Asahi Token
Hozon
Futatokoro - Hozon - by Owari Masatsune School - Nishomono: Goat Design (Unsigned)Futatokoro - Hozon - by Owari Masatsune School - Nishomono: Goat Design (Unsigned)

Futatokoromono

ByOwari Masatsune School
¥120,000

More from the Mino tradition

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Nihon Collection
Hozon
Menuki - Hozon - by Kaga School - Plum TreeMenuki - Hozon - by Kaga School - Plum Tree

Menuki

ByKaga School
¥2,000
Nihon Collection
Hozon
Kozuka - Hozon - by Kaga School - Kaga “Cricket”Kozuka - Hozon - by Kaga School - Kaga “Cricket”

Kozuka

ByKaga School
¥1,000
Token-Net
Tokuho
Tsuba - Tokuho - by Kaga School - Zodiac Animals - Mumei (Kaga Kinko)Tsuba - Tokuho - by Kaga School - Zodiac Animals - Mumei (Kaga Kinko)

Tsuba

ByKaga School
¥1,500,000
Nihon Collection
Hozon
Kozuka - Hozon - by Kaga School - Kaga - InsectsKozuka - Hozon - by Kaga School - Kaga - Insects

Kozuka

ByKaga School
¥600
Nihon Collection
Hozon
Tsuba - Hozon - by Kaga School - Kaga Tomomasa - Cricket and CageTsuba - Hozon - by Kaga School - Kaga Tomomasa - Cricket and Cage

Tsuba

ByKaga School
¥2,500
Toushin
Kozuka - by Kanemoto - Kogatana: Tashiro Genichi KanemotoKozuka - by Kanemoto - Kogatana: Tashiro Genichi Kanemoto

Kozuka

ByKanemoto
¥18,480
Choshuya
Tokuho
Fuchi-Kashira - Tokuho - by Kaga School - Rakugan (Wild Geese) Motif Daisho Fuchigashira - Mumei - KagaFuchi-Kashira - Tokuho - by Kaga School - Rakugan (Wild Geese) Motif Daisho Fuchigashira - Mumei - Kaga

Fuchi-Kashira

ByKaga School
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Touken Matsumoto
Kozuka - by Zensho Chikanori - Product SearchKozuka - by Zensho Chikanori - Product Search

Kozuka

ByZensho Chikanori
¥155,000

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