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Description

This is a katana made by Yasusada, a Shinto period smith from Musashi province. The blade is designated as Juyo Token (Important Sword) and features a gunome-chouji hamon with tobiyaki and thick ashi. The jigane is a well-forged ko-itame with thick jinie and fine chikei.

NBTHK Setsumei

Juyo-Token, 25th Session — Designated November 1, 1977 Katana, mei: Yamato no Kami Yasusada (大和守安定) Measurements Nagasa 68.1 cm, sori 1.4 cm, motohaba 2.9 cm, sakihaba 2.0 cm, kissaki-nagasa 3.0 cm, nakago-nagasa 21.5 cm, nakago-sori none Description Keijo: shinogi-zukuri, iori-mune; shallow curvature; the width narrows toward the tip in comparison to the base; compact chū-kissaki. Kitae: Tight ko-itame-hada; ji-nie adheres. Hamon: Broad yakihaba; notare mixed with gunome; ashi enter; the nioi is deep; nie appears, with slight sunagashi intermingled. Boshi: Rounded, forming a small maru at the point. Horimono: None. Nakago: Upper portion; kurijiri; file marks are large sujikai; three mekugi-ana, of which one is plugged; on the omote a five-character signature placed toward the mune; on the ura there is likewise a date inscription. Artisan Yamato no Kami Yasusada Era Meireki 3 (1657), early Edo period Explanation Yamato no Kami Yasusada has traditionally been regarded as being originally from Echizen Province; however, in light of recent research, the likelihood has grown stronger that he originated in the Kishū Ishidō lineage. Furthermore, considering various conditions—including his manner (sakufū) and workmanship (shitate), as well as cutting-test inscriptions (tameshi-mei) by the Yamano lineage—it appears most appropriate to regard Izumi no Kami Kaneshige as his teacher. This katana is one of Yasusada’s representative works, and the date inscription of Meireki 3 also constitutes valuable reference material.

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Swords›Ishido›Edo Ishido›Yasusada›Katana: Yasusada - Juyo Token
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Ishido Yasusada

Katana: Yasusada - Juyo Token

mei · Genna–Jōkyō (1618-1685) · nagasa 68cm · sori 1.4cm

¥6,300,000
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Measurements & details
Smith
Ishido Yasusada
Type
Katana
School
Edo Ishido
Period
Around 1618–1685(Genna–Jōkyō)
Province
Musashi
Signature
Signed(91% of this smith's designated works are signed)
Measurements
Nagasa 68cmSori 1.4cmMotohaba 3.1cmSakihaba 2.2cmKasane 0.68cmWeight 734g
Description

This is a katana made by Yasusada, a Shinto period smith from Musashi province. The blade is designated as Juyo Token (Important Sword) and features a gunome-chouji hamon with tobiyaki and thick ashi. The jigane is a well-forged ko-itame with thick jinie and fine chikei.

NBTHK Zufu Commentary

Juyo #25

AI translation — may contain errors

-, 25th Session — Designated November 1, 1977

, : Yamato no Kami Yasusada (大和守安定)

Measurements 68.1 cm, 1.4 cm, 2.9 cm, 2.0 cm, 3.0 cm, 21.5 cm, none

Description Keijo: , ; shallow curvature; the width narrows toward the tip in comparison to the base; compact . : Tight ; adheres. : Broad ; mixed with ; enter; the is deep; appears, with slight intermingled. : Rounded, forming a small at the point. : None. : Upper portion; ; file marks are large ; three , of which one is plugged; on the a five-character signature placed toward the ; on the there is likewise a date inscription.

Artisan Yamato no Kami Yasusada

Era Meireki 3 (1657), early period

Explanation Yamato no Kami Yasusada has traditionally been regarded as being originally from Province; however, in light of recent research, the likelihood has grown stronger that he originated in the Kishū Ishidō lineage. Furthermore, considering various conditions—including his manner (sakufū) and workmanship (shitate), as well as cutting-test inscriptions () by the Yamano lineage—it appears most appropriate to regard Izumi no Kami Kaneshige as his teacher.

This is one of Yasusada’s representative works, and the date inscription of Meireki 3 also constitutes valuable reference material.

About the maker

Yasusada

安定

Edo Ishido (Yamato-no-kami Yasusada, Kanbun-shinto) · Musashi · around 1618-1685

Fujishiro Jo saku

6 pieces on the market now

›

On the reverse of a katana now in Kochi is cut a gold-inlaid inscription recording a two-body cutting test performed at Edo in Bushu in Manji 2 by Yamano Kaemon-no-jo Nagahisa, and the same hand signed the omote Yamato-no-kami Yasusada in a bold five-character mei. That pairing of a robust signed blade with a Yamano test-cut runs through almost the whole of Yasusada's surviving work and is the readiest mark of him. He was born in Genna 4 (1618) under the surname Tomita, read Tonda, and the published sources, following the Shinto Bengi, now place his origin not in Echizen, as was long believed, but in the Kishu Ishido group, from which he came up to Edo by Keian 1 to become one of the representative makers of the Kanbun-shinto era. The older account that made him a pupil of the first-generation Echizen Yasutsugu the published sources reject on chronological reasoning, since a blade inscribed made at age fifty-three and dated Kanbun 10 fixes his birth in Genna 4, three years before that master's death; the strongest reading instead makes him a pupil of Izumi-no-kami Kaneshige, on the evidence of shared workmanship, tang construction, and the common presence of the Yamano cutting inscriptions.

His sugata is the heavy katana of the mid-seventeenth century, shinogi-zukuri with iori-mune, the sori shallow, the shinogi high and the shinogi-ji broad relative to the blade width, with a sense of funbari at the base and a compact chu-kissaki, the kasane often thick and the build frankly robust. Over this he forges a tightly packed ko-itame, mokume mixed in and at times conspicuous on the ura, the steel taking on a somewhat blackish tone where the grain stands a little; into it dust-fine ji-nie settles thickly and fine chikei enter well, so that the jigane reads as close and bright in his best Edo work. The temper that most distinguishes him is a notare carrying gunome whose heads and valleys turn angular, mixed with ko-gunome and somewhat pointed elements, the nioi deep and ko-nie adhering well, with coarse nie intermixed here and there until the line grows uneven, fine kinsuji and sunagashi running through, and the nioiguchi inclining to a subdued, shizumi tone. The published sources name that angularity of the midare, together with the shizumi nioiguchi and the steep drop of the iori-mune, as the points by which his hand is told.

The boshi answers the temper below it, running sugu or shallowly notare and turning back in ko-maru, sometimes with a slightly deep return, the tip frequently brushed into hakikake; on one Manji wakizashi the omote is straight while the ura carries a faint notare nuance, the kind of small asymmetry that recurs across his work. Activity outside the yakiba is part of the picture as well: small yubashiri-like tobiyaki drift through the ji on some blades, and the nakago, ubu and finished with ha-agari kurijiri and steep o-sujikai file marks, is itself a Yamano-consistent feature that the published sources count among the evidence for the Kaneshige attribution. Horimono is uncommon, though one early wakizashi carries gomabashi on both faces, short on the omote and long on the ura.

The published record divides his work into two manners, in a sentence that recurs almost verbatim across his designations: 「安定の作風は, 大別すると二様があり, 一つはのたれに互の目を交え, のたれが角ばる傾向のものと, 他は互の目を主調とした乱れ刃であり, 同作中では, 前者の作例が多い」[[c:1]]. The first and more numerous is the angular notare mixed with gunome described above; the second is a midareba led by gunome, rising at times into a large, high-tempered pattern of o-gunome with abundant kinsuji, nie-suji and sunagashi, a more florid result that the sources count the rarer of the two. The angular gunome read within the second manner ties it back to the first and lets his individuality be seen even where the pattern is least typical. His dated works run from Keian through Enpo, but the published sources regard the Manji era as his time of full maturity, noting that 「万治頃が大成期とみられ, 最も覇気のある作品が多い」[[c:2]].

In standing he is read against the smiths nearest his own hand rather than against his nominal teacher: the published sources find his manner closest to Izumi-no-kami Kaneshige, with whom he shares the clarity of ji and ha, the tang construction and the Yamano inscriptions, and at times close to Izumi-no-kami Kanesada, while in style his blades are said to share elements with Kotetsu, the celebrated Edo contemporary whose robust katana his own most resemble. His bond with the test-cutter is the firmest thread of all: among Edo smiths only Kotetsu carries the Yamano family's gold-inlaid cutting inscriptions in comparable density, and the published sources record that on Yasusada the count of Nagahisa's test-cuts is reckoned 「馬徹とほぼ同数かそれを上回ると思われる数」[[c:3]], roughly equal to or exceeding that on Kotetsu. A second generation also signed Yamato-no-kami Yasusada, but its output is extremely scarce, so that the name in practice belongs to the first.

Yasusada's blades survive in the Juyo tier, his record carrying no higher designation; the eight blades on official record here are all Juyo, seven of them signed and most bearing the Yamano cutting test. Provenance attaches to the test-cutter himself, the gold-inlaid inscriptions of Yamano Kaemon-no-jo Nagahisa, called Eikyu, standing on the reverse of his finest work, with one sword also naming a holder, Ichiha Sanshiro, whom the published sources leave to further research. The eighth-session masterpiece in Akita the NBTHK calls 「同作中の傑作の一本である」[[c:4]], and of the broad, robust Manji katana in Kochi it writes 「豪壮な造込みに相応しい出来映えを示した本作は同工の入念且つ会心の一口と言えよう」[[c:5]]. A signed Yasusada with its Yamano test-cut intact is not beyond the reach of a serious collector in the way the highest-designated blades are, since most of his record sits in the tradeable Juyo and Tokubetsu-Hozon tiers; even so such blades are held more than traded, and a fully documented example, robust in build and carrying Nagahisa's inscription, comes to market only from time to time and stands among the more sought pieces of the Kanbun-shinto Edo when it does.

Historical importance

Where Yasusada 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

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Designation record
11 designated works
Jūyō
11
6 works by Yasusada on the market→
Yasusada — full profileEdo Ishido (Yamato-no-kami Yasusada, Kanbun-shinto) school

Dated Works

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

Active period
1657Editorial estimate: 1618–1685
1 of 9 designated works carry a date
About the school

Edo Ishido

江戸石堂

Shinto · Musashi

15 pieces on the market now

›

The Edo Ishido school (江戸石堂) is the capital branch of the Ishido lineage, a body of shinto-era smiths who carried the Bizen choji tradition into Edo and there pursued a single deliberate project: the revival, in the brighter steel of the early-Edo forges, of the flamboyant choji-midare worked by the medieval Fukuoka-Ichimonji masters of Bizen. Learn more →

4 recorded smiths55 designated works
Leading smiths
SmithEraDesignated
Korekazu是一1817-189125
Yasusada安定1618-168511
Yasusada安定1673-16819
Mitsuhira光平1619-168510
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NBTHK Certificate
Jūyō Tōken重要刀剣
Important Sword
›

A blade of top-grade workmanship and condition, formally judged to rank with a nationally recognized Important Art Object (Jūyō Bijutsuhin). Awarded only at the NBTHK’s competitive annual examination.

Of Japan’s roughly 2.5 million registered swords, only 12,358 (about 1 in 202) have ever attained Jūyō.

About the NBTHK›

The NBTHK (Nihon Bijutsu Tōken Hozon Kyōkai, the Society for the Preservation of Japanese Art Swords) is a public-interest incorporated foundation founded in 1948 and supervised by Japan’s Agency for Cultural Affairs (Bunkachō); it is based at the Japanese Sword Museum in Tokyo. Its expert panels physically examine each submitted work (shinsa) and issue a certificate (kanteishō) ranking it by artistic and historical merit. NBTHK papers are the most widely recognized standard of authentication for Japanese swords and fittings.

NBTHK official site→
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Description

This is a katana made by Yasusada, a Shinto period smith from Musashi province. The blade is designated as Juyo Token (Important Sword) and features a gunome-chouji hamon with tobiyaki and thick ashi. The jigane is a well-forged ko-itame with thick jinie and fine chikei.

NBTHK Setsumei

Juyo-Token, 25th Session — Designated November 1, 1977 Katana, mei: Yamato no Kami Yasusada (大和守安定) Measurements Nagasa 68.1 cm, sori 1.4 cm, motohaba 2.9 cm, sakihaba 2.0 cm, kissaki-nagasa 3.0 cm, nakago-nagasa 21.5 cm, nakago-sori none Description Keijo: shinogi-zukuri, iori-mune; shallow curvature; the width narrows toward the tip in comparison to the base; compact chū-kissaki. Kitae: Tight ko-itame-hada; ji-nie adheres. Hamon: Broad yakihaba; notare mixed with gunome; ashi enter; the nioi is deep; nie appears, with slight sunagashi intermingled. Boshi: Rounded, forming a small maru at the point. Horimono: None. Nakago: Upper portion; kurijiri; file marks are large sujikai; three mekugi-ana, of which one is plugged; on the omote a five-character signature placed toward the mune; on the ura there is likewise a date inscription. Artisan Yamato no Kami Yasusada Era Meireki 3 (1657), early Edo period Explanation Yamato no Kami Yasusada has traditionally been regarded as being originally from Echizen Province; however, in light of recent research, the likelihood has grown stronger that he originated in the Kishū Ishidō lineage. Furthermore, considering various conditions—including his manner (sakufū) and workmanship (shitate), as well as cutting-test inscriptions (tameshi-mei) by the Yamano lineage—it appears most appropriate to regard Izumi no Kami Kaneshige as his teacher. This katana is one of Yasusada’s representative works, and the date inscription of Meireki 3 also constitutes valuable reference material.

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Swords›Ishido›Edo Ishido›Yasusada›Katana: Yasusada - Juyo Token
katanaJūyō
Ishido Yasusada

Katana: Yasusada - Juyo Token

mei · Genna–Jōkyō (1618-1685) · nagasa 68cm · sori 1.4cm

¥6,300,000
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Measurements & details
Smith
Ishido Yasusada
Type
Katana
School
Edo Ishido
Period
Around 1618–1685(Genna–Jōkyō)
Province
Musashi
Signature
Signed(91% of this smith's designated works are signed)
Measurements
Nagasa 68cmSori 1.4cmMotohaba 3.1cmSakihaba 2.2cmKasane 0.68cmWeight 734g
Description

This is a katana made by Yasusada, a Shinto period smith from Musashi province. The blade is designated as Juyo Token (Important Sword) and features a gunome-chouji hamon with tobiyaki and thick ashi. The jigane is a well-forged ko-itame with thick jinie and fine chikei.

NBTHK Zufu Commentary

Juyo #25

AI translation — may contain errors

-, 25th Session — Designated November 1, 1977

, : Yamato no Kami Yasusada (大和守安定)

Measurements 68.1 cm, 1.4 cm, 2.9 cm, 2.0 cm, 3.0 cm, 21.5 cm, none

Description Keijo: , ; shallow curvature; the width narrows toward the tip in comparison to the base; compact . : Tight ; adheres. : Broad ; mixed with ; enter; the is deep; appears, with slight intermingled. : Rounded, forming a small at the point. : None. : Upper portion; ; file marks are large ; three , of which one is plugged; on the a five-character signature placed toward the ; on the there is likewise a date inscription.

Artisan Yamato no Kami Yasusada

Era Meireki 3 (1657), early period

Explanation Yamato no Kami Yasusada has traditionally been regarded as being originally from Province; however, in light of recent research, the likelihood has grown stronger that he originated in the Kishū Ishidō lineage. Furthermore, considering various conditions—including his manner (sakufū) and workmanship (shitate), as well as cutting-test inscriptions () by the Yamano lineage—it appears most appropriate to regard Izumi no Kami Kaneshige as his teacher.

This is one of Yasusada’s representative works, and the date inscription of Meireki 3 also constitutes valuable reference material.

About the maker

Yasusada

安定

Edo Ishido (Yamato-no-kami Yasusada, Kanbun-shinto) · Musashi · around 1618-1685

Fujishiro Jo saku

6 pieces on the market now

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On the reverse of a katana now in Kochi is cut a gold-inlaid inscription recording a two-body cutting test performed at Edo in Bushu in Manji 2 by Yamano Kaemon-no-jo Nagahisa, and the same hand signed the omote Yamato-no-kami Yasusada in a bold five-character mei. That pairing of a robust signed blade with a Yamano test-cut runs through almost the whole of Yasusada's surviving work and is the readiest mark of him. He was born in Genna 4 (1618) under the surname Tomita, read Tonda, and the published sources, following the Shinto Bengi, now place his origin not in Echizen, as was long believed, but in the Kishu Ishido group, from which he came up to Edo by Keian 1 to become one of the representative makers of the Kanbun-shinto era. The older account that made him a pupil of the first-generation Echizen Yasutsugu the published sources reject on chronological reasoning, since a blade inscribed made at age fifty-three and dated Kanbun 10 fixes his birth in Genna 4, three years before that master's death; the strongest reading instead makes him a pupil of Izumi-no-kami Kaneshige, on the evidence of shared workmanship, tang construction, and the common presence of the Yamano cutting inscriptions.

His sugata is the heavy katana of the mid-seventeenth century, shinogi-zukuri with iori-mune, the sori shallow, the shinogi high and the shinogi-ji broad relative to the blade width, with a sense of funbari at the base and a compact chu-kissaki, the kasane often thick and the build frankly robust. Over this he forges a tightly packed ko-itame, mokume mixed in and at times conspicuous on the ura, the steel taking on a somewhat blackish tone where the grain stands a little; into it dust-fine ji-nie settles thickly and fine chikei enter well, so that the jigane reads as close and bright in his best Edo work. The temper that most distinguishes him is a notare carrying gunome whose heads and valleys turn angular, mixed with ko-gunome and somewhat pointed elements, the nioi deep and ko-nie adhering well, with coarse nie intermixed here and there until the line grows uneven, fine kinsuji and sunagashi running through, and the nioiguchi inclining to a subdued, shizumi tone. The published sources name that angularity of the midare, together with the shizumi nioiguchi and the steep drop of the iori-mune, as the points by which his hand is told.

The boshi answers the temper below it, running sugu or shallowly notare and turning back in ko-maru, sometimes with a slightly deep return, the tip frequently brushed into hakikake; on one Manji wakizashi the omote is straight while the ura carries a faint notare nuance, the kind of small asymmetry that recurs across his work. Activity outside the yakiba is part of the picture as well: small yubashiri-like tobiyaki drift through the ji on some blades, and the nakago, ubu and finished with ha-agari kurijiri and steep o-sujikai file marks, is itself a Yamano-consistent feature that the published sources count among the evidence for the Kaneshige attribution. Horimono is uncommon, though one early wakizashi carries gomabashi on both faces, short on the omote and long on the ura.

The published record divides his work into two manners, in a sentence that recurs almost verbatim across his designations: 「安定の作風は, 大別すると二様があり, 一つはのたれに互の目を交え, のたれが角ばる傾向のものと, 他は互の目を主調とした乱れ刃であり, 同作中では, 前者の作例が多い」[[c:1]]. The first and more numerous is the angular notare mixed with gunome described above; the second is a midareba led by gunome, rising at times into a large, high-tempered pattern of o-gunome with abundant kinsuji, nie-suji and sunagashi, a more florid result that the sources count the rarer of the two. The angular gunome read within the second manner ties it back to the first and lets his individuality be seen even where the pattern is least typical. His dated works run from Keian through Enpo, but the published sources regard the Manji era as his time of full maturity, noting that 「万治頃が大成期とみられ, 最も覇気のある作品が多い」[[c:2]].

In standing he is read against the smiths nearest his own hand rather than against his nominal teacher: the published sources find his manner closest to Izumi-no-kami Kaneshige, with whom he shares the clarity of ji and ha, the tang construction and the Yamano inscriptions, and at times close to Izumi-no-kami Kanesada, while in style his blades are said to share elements with Kotetsu, the celebrated Edo contemporary whose robust katana his own most resemble. His bond with the test-cutter is the firmest thread of all: among Edo smiths only Kotetsu carries the Yamano family's gold-inlaid cutting inscriptions in comparable density, and the published sources record that on Yasusada the count of Nagahisa's test-cuts is reckoned 「馬徹とほぼ同数かそれを上回ると思われる数」[[c:3]], roughly equal to or exceeding that on Kotetsu. A second generation also signed Yamato-no-kami Yasusada, but its output is extremely scarce, so that the name in practice belongs to the first.

Yasusada's blades survive in the Juyo tier, his record carrying no higher designation; the eight blades on official record here are all Juyo, seven of them signed and most bearing the Yamano cutting test. Provenance attaches to the test-cutter himself, the gold-inlaid inscriptions of Yamano Kaemon-no-jo Nagahisa, called Eikyu, standing on the reverse of his finest work, with one sword also naming a holder, Ichiha Sanshiro, whom the published sources leave to further research. The eighth-session masterpiece in Akita the NBTHK calls 「同作中の傑作の一本である」[[c:4]], and of the broad, robust Manji katana in Kochi it writes 「豪壮な造込みに相応しい出来映えを示した本作は同工の入念且つ会心の一口と言えよう」[[c:5]]. A signed Yasusada with its Yamano test-cut intact is not beyond the reach of a serious collector in the way the highest-designated blades are, since most of his record sits in the tradeable Juyo and Tokubetsu-Hozon tiers; even so such blades are held more than traded, and a fully documented example, robust in build and carrying Nagahisa's inscription, comes to market only from time to time and stands among the more sought pieces of the Kanbun-shinto Edo when it does.

Historical importance

Where Yasusada 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
11 designated works
Jūyō
11
6 works by Yasusada on the market→
Yasusada — full profileEdo Ishido (Yamato-no-kami Yasusada, Kanbun-shinto) school

Dated Works

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

Active period
1657Editorial estimate: 1618–1685
1 of 9 designated works carry a date
About the school

Edo Ishido

江戸石堂

Shinto · Musashi

15 pieces on the market now

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The Edo Ishido school (江戸石堂) is the capital branch of the Ishido lineage, a body of shinto-era smiths who carried the Bizen choji tradition into Edo and there pursued a single deliberate project: the revival, in the brighter steel of the early-Edo forges, of the flamboyant choji-midare worked by the medieval Fukuoka-Ichimonji masters of Bizen. Learn more →

4 recorded smiths55 designated works
Leading smiths
SmithEraDesignated
Korekazu是一1817-189125
Yasusada安定1618-168511
Yasusada安定1673-16819
Mitsuhira光平1619-168510
Explore the Edo Ishido school →
NBTHK Certificate
Jūyō Tōken重要刀剣
Important Sword
›

A blade of top-grade workmanship and condition, formally judged to rank with a nationally recognized Important Art Object (Jūyō Bijutsuhin). Awarded only at the NBTHK’s competitive annual examination.

Of Japan’s roughly 2.5 million registered swords, only 12,358 (about 1 in 202) have ever attained Jūyō.

About the NBTHK›

The NBTHK (Nihon Bijutsu Tōken Hozon Kyōkai, the Society for the Preservation of Japanese Art Swords) is a public-interest incorporated foundation founded in 1948 and supervised by Japan’s Agency for Cultural Affairs (Bunkachō); it is based at the Japanese Sword Museum in Tokyo. Its expert panels physically examine each submitted work (shinsa) and issue a certificate (kanteishō) ranking it by artistic and historical merit. NBTHK papers are the most widely recognized standard of authentication for Japanese swords and fittings.

NBTHK official site→
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