Description

This remarkable tachi was forged by Ietoshi of the Ko-Bizen school during the heart of the Kamakura period, circa 1247. It features a tight jihada with itame and mokume, vivid midare-utsuri, and a gently undulating suguha-chô hamon. This is the only sword by Ietoshi to have attained NBTHK Jûyô Token designation, making it a singular reference piece for the Ko-Bizen tradition.

AN IETOSHI TACHI (家俊)
Sold
TokuhoSold

AN IETOSHI TACHI (家俊)

Tachi

SOLD

Tracked across 76 dealers worldwide · price history · sold archive

School

Ko-Bizen

Era

Kôtô – middle Kamakura (hôji era: 1247-1249)

Specifications

Nagasa

72 cm

Sori

2.3 cm

Motohaba

2.6 cm

About the school

Ko-Bizen School古備前派

2 Jūyō Bijutsuhin2 Tokubetsu Jūyō42 Jūyō Tōken

Ko-Bizen (古備前) is the oldest stratum of the Bizen tradition, the work of the smiths who forged in Bizen province from the late Heian period, around the Eien era, into the early and middle Kamakura. The published sources trace the line to a founding Tomonari and to Masatsune, the two counted from old as the twin pillars (*sōheki*) of the group, and they are careful to read each of the great names as a name-line rather than a single man: surviving *tachi* signed Tomonari carry Katei-era dates of the early Kamakura, the Masatsune name is transmitted across three generations or more, and the Kanehira and Sukehira signatures fall into distinct chisel hands. Beside the pillars stand the three *Bizen Sanpei*, Kanehira, Sukehira and Takahira, and a wider field of hands, Nobufusa, Naritaka, Yukihide, Sukekane, Yoshikane and the smiths of the Masatsune house such as Tsunemitsu, Toshitsune and Tochika. From this root, before the school's great flowering at Fukuoka, the whole Bizen tradition descends. Several of these names recur in the early Ichimonji line of the same province, so that the appraisal of any one of them begins by separating the archaic Ko-Bizen hand from its later namesake. The shared vocabulary is consistent enough that the school is read as a single manner held across many hands. The *sugata* is the slender *tachi* of the age: *shinogi-zukuri* with *iori-mune*, high *koshizori* with pronounced *funbari*, the curvature settling toward a small *ko-kissaki*. The forging is an *itame* mixed with *mokume*, the grain often standing a little (*hada-dachi*), with *ji-nie* adhering, *chikei* woven through, and over it the speckled *jifu-utsuri* or a *midare-utsuri* of old Bizen steel. The temper is the quietest reading of Bizen: a *suguha* tone undulating shallowly into *ko-midare*, into which *ko-chōji* and *ko-gunome* enter, *ko-nie* adhering thickly, *ashi* and *yō* working in the *ha*, and *kinsuji* and *sunagashi* running through; the *bōshi* runs straight to a calm *ko-maru*, at times to *yakizume* with *hakikake*, and a *yakiotoshi* dropped above the *machi* is an archaic touch met across the group. Within that norm the early masters keep their individuality. The sources separate Tomonari and Masatsune by saying the first is marked by the excellence of his *sugata* and the second by the excellence of his *kitae*; Yoshikane is known by a *hada* that stands more than his fellows and a *nioiguchi* that sinks; Yukihide leans his *midare* in the reverse (*saka*) direction; Naritaka crowds the edge with *uchinoke* and a doubled *nijūba*; and Kageyasu sets angular *gunome* and *chōji* further forward than the pillars, the manner the earliest Ichimonji would inherit. A collector seeks Ko-Bizen as the source of the Bizen line, and the *kantei* turns on restraint rather than display. Against the later Fukuoka Ichimonji, whose flamboyant *ō-chōji* stand under a brilliant *midare-utsuri*, Ko-Bizen keeps its *ko-midare* quiet and its *nie* archaic; against the Osafune line of Nagamitsu, which is *nioi*-based and *utsuri*-bearing, the Ko-Bizen edge is *nie*-deki, a distinction the published record makes the whole ground for separating Junkei from the man he was long mistaken for. The standing of the best members is fixed by the weight of designation behind their names: Tomonari, Masatsune, Kanehira and Nobufusa are graded *Sai-jo saku* by Fujishiro, and the school's summit is the Ō-Kanehira, the broadest and most powerful *tachi* old Bizen produced, a National Treasure long held as the patrimony of the Ikeda house and now in the Tokyo National Museum. The signature works carry provenance through the first houses of the realm, the Imperial Household, the Tokugawa shogunal family, and the Ikeda, Maeda, Date, Shimazu and Satake daimyo, with the Nobufusa *tachi* given by Ieyasu to Sakai Tadatsugu and the Naritaka blade transmitted as the wearing sword of Nasu no Yoichi. Because so much of the corpus is held as heritage and the signed early hands are scarce, a signed Ko-Bizen *tachi* reaching open hands is among the rarer encounters the field affords, a document of how the Bizen tradition began.

Dealer

Unique Japan

uniquejapan.com

Sold