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Kamakura,
Genk? two, 1322]\ 2nd Yr 1322 AD,
worn by
Kagoshima daimy?
Shimazu Narinobu ( ????
, 1773-1841)
Tokubetsu Juyo – an Art Treasure
Juyo Token Certificate
Translation
J?y? No 585
katana , orikaeshi-mei : Rai Kunitoshi (???) – Genk? ni (???) ( ika-kire ) ( to nenki ga aru ) (bears a date signature of Genk? two, 1322)
kinz?gan-mei : Bungo no Kami Narinobu kore obiru (???????) (“worn by Bungo no Kami
Narinobu”)
Measurements : nagasa 66.2 cm, sori 1.8 cm, motohaba 2.9 cm
Keijo : shinogi-zukuri , iori-mune , relatively wide mihaba , despite the suriage a deep sori , rather compact ch?-kissaki
Kitae : excellently forged itame with plenty of ji-nie
Hamon : suguha-ch? in ko-nie-deki mixed with ko-gunome , ko-ch?ji , many ashi and y? , and fine
sunagashi
B?shi : shallow notare with a roundish kaeri
Horimono : on both sides a futasuji-hi which runs on the omote side as kaki-nagashi into, and on the ura side as kaki-t?shi through the tang
Nakago : suriage , old yasurime katta-sagari , new yasurime kiri , three mekugi-ana (one plugged)
According to the result of the shinsa committee of our society we judge this work as authentic and rate it
as tokubetsu-j?y?-t?ken .
May 29, 1996
[Foundation] Nihon Bijutsu T?ken Hozon Ky?kai, NBTHK
[President] Yamanaka Sadanori (????)
Juyo Zufu
Translation
Tokubetsu-j?y?-t?ken at the 14th tokubetsu-j?y? shinsa held on May 29, 1996
katana , orikaeshi-mei : Rai Kunitoshi (???) – Genk? ni (???) ( ika-kire , below cut off) ( to nenki ga aru ) (bears a date signatute of Genk? two, 1322)
kinz?gan-mei : Bungo no Kami Narinobu kore obiru (???????) (“worn by Bungo no Kami
Narinobu”)
Tai Yutaka (??)
Measurements
nagasa 66.2 cm, sori 1.8 cm, motohaba 2.9 cm, sakihaba 2.2 cm, kissaki-nagasa 3.2 cm, nakago-nagasa 20.1 cm, nakago-sori 0.1 cm
Description
Keijo : shinogi-zukuri , iori-mune , relatively wide mihaba , thick kasane , despite the suriage a deep sori , rather compact ch?-kissaki
Kitae : excellent and densely forged itame that is mixed with some nagare and that features chikei plenty of ji-nie
Hamon : suguha-ch? in ko-nie-deki mixed with ko-gunome , ko-ch?ji , many ashi and y? , fine sunagashi , and a few uchinoke
B?shi : shallow notare with a roundish kaeri and a few hakikake
Horimono : on both sides a futasuji-hi which runs on the omote side as kaki-nagashi into, and on the ura side as kaki-t?shi through the tang
Nakago : suriage , kirijiri , old yasurime katta-sagari , new yasurime kiri , three mekugi-ana (one plugged), the sashi-omote side bears an orikaeshi niji-mei plus date and the ura side a kinz?gan-mei of the name of a former owner of the blade
Artisan: Rai Kunitoshi from Yamashiro province
Era: end of Kamakura period
Provenance: Shimazu (??) family, daimy? of the Kagoshima fief
Explanation
It has not yet been determined with certainty if Niji-Kunitoshi and Rai Kunitoshi were the same person or not. There exists a work by Rai Kunitoshi which is dated Sh?wa four (??, 1315) and which is signed with the supplement “made at the age of 75.” The only known dated work of Niji-Kunitoshi is from K?an one (??, 1278). Calculting back from the age given with the Sh?wa four work, we learn that Rai Kunitoshi was 38 years old in K?an one and so it is theoretically very well possible that we are facing here a single smith. However, we recognize significant differences in workmanship and so we can distinguish between a Niji-Kunitoshi and a Rai Kunitoshi style. This blade bears an orikaeshi-mei “Rai Kunitoshi” with remnants of the date “Genk? two” chiseled next to the niji-mei . This way of dating a blade is neither seen at Rai Kunitoshi nor at the Rai School in general and the characters are also executed in a different manner as the signature itself. Now the Rai smiths did occasionally date in kakukudashi manner, i.e. with the date being chiseled below of the signature (on the same side of the tang). Therefore, it is possible that this blade was indeed dated Genk? two in kakikudashi style, that this date, being inscribed below of the signature, was inevitably lost when the blade was
shortened, but that someone wanted to preserve that information and decided to add the year next to the folded-over niji-mei . The jiba of this blade ranks on one level with the greatest masterworks of this smith and is in perfect condition. A closer inspection of the character for Kuni reveals that the four dots within the box radical are chiseled in a slanting manner, going from bottom right to top left. This is a characteristic feature of Rai Kunitsugu’s (???) signatures and so it is possible that the signature is a daimei of Rai Kunitsugu.
The kinz?gan-mei states that this blade was once worn by the Kagoshima daimy? Shimazu Narinobu (????, 1773-1841).
end Juyo zufu translation.
Koshirae
Hada (grain structure) & Hamon
Translation:
katana , orikaeshi-mei (fold over signature): Rai Kunitoshi (???) – Genk? ni (???) ( ika-kire , below cut off) ( to nenki ga aru ) (bears a date signature of Genk? two, 1322)
Translation:
kinz?gan-mei : Bungo no Kami Narinobu kore obiru (???????) (“worn by Bungo no Kami Narinobu”)
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