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.