Description

相州正宗が大和千手院派や古い大和の刀を研究して刃中に金筋や沸を多く現した相州正宗の刀を作り出したと古来言われているのが本千手院の刀です。大和五派のなかで最も古く興ったのが千手院派です。奈良若草山の西山麓に千手観音を祭る千手堂が有りその地を千手谷と呼んでいました、その刀工集団が千手院であり、平安時代より東大寺に属していた為に殆どが無銘です。本刀は鎌倉期(1192年)(831年前)頃に作られた千手院のほぼ生の無銘の貴重な太刀です。時は平清盛が栄華を謳歌し、しかしながら流石のおごる平家も貴族趣味が祟り、源氏の総大将源頼朝の呼びかけで全国の源氏の挙兵となり、源義経の一の谷の戦いでのひよどり越の戦法で平氏を破り、その後屋島の戦い、そして壇ノ浦の戦いに源氏が勝利して鎌倉幕府が設立され、武家政治の確立と言うその時の時代背景の本刀は正にその時分に作られたであろう貴重な太刀です。本刀はほぼ生で鎬が高くづしりと重く健全で太刀姿が力強い姿を現しています、地金は板目肌に柾心の鍛え肌が交じり地沸が良く付き地の荒いところが大和の刀の特徴を現し、地には映りが現れ見事です。刃紋は直調にのたれて互の目が交じり、小足が入り、刃縁がほつれ刃中金筋や砂流しが素晴らしく多くかかり帽子は掃きかけています。焼刃は他の四派(当麻、尻懸、手掻、保昌、)には見ないほどに変化に富んだ働きをここに見せているところが千手院の特徴を良く現わしています。この度古い御数寄者様から少し手をかけてやると出世をすると思います、奉納刀であったのか昔からの木はばきのままでしたので後進の方にお安くお譲り下さいとお預かりした為に正宗が見習ったと言う刃中の金筋の働きの素晴らしい千手院の貴重な名刀を特別に格安にて御提供いたします。是非お楽しみ下さいませ。

無銘千手院 Senjuin
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無銘千手院 Senjuin

Katana

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Tracked across 76 dealers worldwide · price history · sold archive

Specifications

Nagasa

66.6 cm

Sori

2.1 cm

Motohaba

3.08 cm

Sakihaba

1.86 cm

About the maker

Senjuin千手院

The Senjuin school takes its name from the Senjudo, a hall enshrining Senju Kannon (the Thousand-Armed Avalokitesvara) said to have stood at the western foothills of Mt. Wakakusa in Nara. Tradition holds that the group of swordsmiths residing in this area constituted the school, which is regarded as the earliest in origin among the five schools of Yamato. According to old transmitted writings, two master smiths, Yukinobu and Shigehiro, were active in the late Heian period; however, no secure extant works by either have yet been confirmed. For reasons unknown, signed works of the school are scarce even thereafter. The oldest surviving signed example is a tachi bearing the three-character inscription "Senjuin," thought to date to the early Kamakura period. Works prefixed Ko-Senjuin are attributed to the school's earliest phase and display forms that retain the lingering presence of the earlier straight-sword (*chokuto*) tradition, constituting indispensable material for research into the development of the curved *shinogi-zukuri* blade. The school's technical hallmarks are firmly rooted in the Yamato tradition. The *jigane* characteristically shows *itame-hada* mixed with *mokume* and areas of *nagare-masame*, frequently tending toward *hada-dachi*; thick *ji-nie* adheres well, with abundant *chikei*, and in finer examples a faint *nie-utsuri* appears, yielding a steel that is bright and clear. The *hamon* is fundamentally *suguha*-based with a shallow *notare* tendency, mixing *ko-choji*, *ko-gunome*, and *ko-midare*; the *habuchi* is characteristically frayed with *hotsure*, and activities such as *uchi-noke*, *nijuba*, *kuichigai-ba*, and *yubashiri* appear in profusion. Thick *ko-nie* adheres along the *nioiguchi*, which is bright and clear, while *kinsuji* and *sunagashi* run vigorously throughout. The *boshi* typically enters straight, forming *ko-maru* with vigorous *hakikake*, or terminates in *yakizume*. It has been observed from old times that within the Yamato Five Schools, a *hamon* of unusually vigorous and changeable character should be appraised as Senjuin, distinguishing the school from the more restrained temper patterns of the Taima, Tegai, Hosho, and Shikkake groups. The Senjuin school occupies a position of singular importance in the study of early Japanese swordsmithing. Its production spans from the late Heian period through the Nanbokucho era, and the school's close association with temple warrior-monks is thought to account for the rarity of signed works. Surviving blades encompass *tachi*, *katana*, *kodachi*, *ken*, and *yari*, the last of these being exceptionally rare as signed examples from this period. Many works retain their *ubu* nakago, preserving classical forms of pronounced *koshizori* with *funbari* that overflow with an archaic elegance. The school's *ken* served not as weapons of the warrior class but as *goshintai* and ritual implements, and surviving examples in this form are notably numerous among Yamato works. Pieces transmitted through such collections as Tanzan Shrine and Kyoo Gokoku-ji (To-ji) further attest to the school's deep connections with religious institutions. In both *ji* and *ha*, the finest Senjuin works display a powerful forging woven through with thick *ji-nie* and supported by frequent *chikei*, combined with a luminous *hamon* rich in *nie* activity, producing blades that are at once archaic in character and technically outstanding.

Dealer

Nipponto

nipponto.co.jp

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