Description

Crafted in Edo in August 1841 by Koyama Munetsugu, a jôjô-saku ranked smith of the shinshintô period, this robust katana features a flowing nagare-hada and a gunome chôji-midare hamon. It bears a tameshigiri inscription from August 1840, commemorating a cutting test on a convicted criminal. The sword comes with a custom uchigatana-koshirae, certified by NBTHK Tokubetsu Hozon and NTHK-NPO Kanteishô.

A MUNETSUGU TAMESHIGIRI KATANA (於東都固山宗次作之)
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A MUNETSUGU TAMESHIGIRI KATANA (於東都固山宗次作之)

Katana

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Specifications

Nagasa

63.3 cm

Sori

1.3 cm

Motohaba

3.12 cm

About the maker

Koyama Munetsugu宗次

51 Jūyō Tōken

Koyama Munetsugu was born in Kyōwa 3 (1803) at Shirakawa in Ōshū, common name Sōbē, with the art-names Issensai and Seiryōsai, and he became the foremost reviver of the Bizen tradition in the closing decades of the Edo period. The published sources record that his teacher is said to have been Katō Tsunahide of Yonezawa, yet they add the careful qualification that, judging from his manner of work, the influence of Tsunahide's younger brother Katō Tsunatoshi seems rather to have been the stronger. He served first the Matsudaira house of Shirakawa, and when that domain was transferred he became a smith for the Kuwana fief in Ise, living in Edo at Azabu Nagasaka; in Kōka 2 (1845) he received the court title Bizen no Suke, and he worked from the latter half of the Bunsei era down into the early Meiji years, signing in several forms, as Nishiyama, as Koyama, and as Bizen no Suke Fujiwara Munetsugu. His record on the published rolls is one of the largest of any shinshintō smith, dated tightly across the Tenpō, Kaei, Ansei and Keiō years, and the sources judge that his style remained consistently within the Bizen tradition throughout. His characteristic hand is a *chōji* and *gunome-chōji* in the Bizen manner, the feature that distinguishes his work above all others. Over the temper he sets *chōji* mixed with *gunome*, pointed elements, *ko-chōji* and *ko-gunome*, *ashi* entering long and well, and the published sources liken the manner to the Kamakura Bizen of Kanemitsu. What is constant, and what separates his revival from the older models he looks back to, is the *nioiguchi*: it is *nioi*-dominant and tight, bright and clear, with *ko-nie* well adhered, and the brightness within the tempered area is the point the judges return to again and again. On one Tenpō katana, finished in his showiest vein, the published sources call it 「常にも増して華やかな丁子主調の乱れ刃に仕上げており」, a midareba more flamboyantly *chōji*-dominant than usual, the *nioiguchi* full and soft and the interior of the *hamon* bright. The *jigane* is his other constant. His usual *jigane* is a well-packed *ko-itame*, so finely and beautifully forged that it often appears almost plain, with fine *ji-nie* adhering and, at times, fine *chikei*. The published sources summarise the success of his work on exactly these two elements together, calling it 「地鉄のよくつんだ綺麗な鍛えに、匂勝ちの丁子乱れを焼いて成功している」, a tight and beautiful forging of the *jigane* over which the *nioi*-dominant *chōji-midare* is raised. The *bōshi* runs *midare-komi* to a *ko-maru* turnback, at times becoming pointed with *hakikake*, and where carving is present it is a *bō-hi* with accompanying groove, sometimes deepened with *bonji*, *gomabashi*, *kurikara* and a sacred invocation. Besides his mainline he was a deliberate copyist, and the published sources describe his *utsushi-mono* directly. They call one *daishō* a typical example of his copy-work: the katana an imitation of Sue-Bizen, and especially of Yosazaemon-no-jō Sukesada, the wakizashi an imitation of the Ōei-Bizen masters Morimitsu and Yasumitsu, in which he succeeds in producing an *utsuri* on the shorter blade. A separate vein is the broad, long, *ō-kissaki* blades of the Tenpō years, wide in body with thick *kasane*, in which the *jigane* departs from his usual tight grain into an *itame* mixed with *mokume* and *nagare-hada*, the grain standing, with fine *ji-nie* and *chikei* giving a stronger and more powerful impression that the sources say is not uncommon among his Tenpō works. A quieter *suguha* and *suguha-chō* register survives as well, the rarest of his manners. Being an entirely signed and dated smith, the connoisseurship question around Munetsugu is never one of attribution but of quality, and the sources name his teacher with the same honesty they bring to the rest, recording that his manner owes more to 「むしろ弟の加藤綱俊の影響力が大きい」. What marks his place in the bakumatsu is the completeness of his Bizen revival and the documentary richness of his blades. Many carry cutting-test inscriptions by the Yamada house, tried at Senju and elsewhere, and his son Yoshitsugu supplied carvings on some of them. One katana was forged at the command of Lord Date Munenari of the Uwajima domain from the ring-iron taken from the broken mast of a foreign ship, an inscription the published sources call precious as material for the history of the late Edo bakumatsu age. His bright, tight *chōji-midare* and the near-plain *ko-itame* beneath it set his work apart from the deeper, softer *nioiguchi* of the Kamakura models he copied, and place him at the head of the Bizen-den smiths of the new-new sword period. For the collector Munetsugu is a signed and abundant master rather than a rarity. Fujishiro grades him Jō-jō saku. He has no National Treasures and no Important Cultural Properties; his standing on the published record runs instead through the Jūyō rank, where his work is well represented, with the broad *chōji-midare* katana named the typical and representative example of his hand, and those of unusually deep *nioi* and bright *nioiguchi* singled out as superior pieces in which both *ji* and *ha* are sound. His blades pass through documented hands rather than museums, the recorded provenance reaching the Marquis of Koga, Matsudaira Chikanai, a senior retainer of the Shōnai domain, and Lord Date Munenari of Uwajima, with one blade long held at the Egara Shrine in Kamakura. Because so many were made and so many survive, all of them in the tradeable tiers, a signed and dated Munetsugu of good workmanship comes to market more often than almost any other named master of his rank, and remains among the most attainable ways for a collector to hold a fully documented, cutting-tested bakumatsu Bizen-den blade.

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