Jump to content

Bugyotsuji

Gold Tier
  • Posts

    14,623
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    292

Bugyotsuji last won the day on April 11

Bugyotsuji had the most liked content!

About Bugyotsuji

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location:
    Japan
  • Interests
    Japanese history, Tanegashima, Nihonto, Netsuke, Katchu, fast cars, J-E-J translation

Profile Fields

  • Name
    Piers D

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

Bugyotsuji's Achievements

Emperor

Emperor (14/14)

  • Conversation Starter
  • One Year In
  • One Month Later
  • Week One Done
  • Dedicated

Recent Badges

13.7k

Reputation

  1. It could be 18th c but as you say more likely 19th, although there are couple of indications of age. Is that old-looking pan cover/lid original, for example? Hizen no Kami is decorative and probably added later, post Edo. In the blue box the remains of the nationwide Jinshin registration of 1872. A Mei under the barrel would tell us more.
  2. Bugyotsuji

    Kantei 2

    The Koshiraé is Inaba Koshiraé typical of Tottori on the Japan Sea, black lacquer with silver chrysanthemum fittings. I bought it because it straddles the two Ikeda Daimyo strongholds of Okayama and Tottori, the wife being from Tottori. I thought one of the offspring might want it but thankfully 😅 not, (“I don’t like black”) so I get to keep it.
  3. Looks as if it's been in a fire, and the barrel is missing. That one takes the cake! I wonder where the Kanji characters are located. (Some Korean snapping matchlocks looked very similar and were based on Tanegashima, btw.)
  4. Bugyotsuji

    Kantei 2

    Interesting observations, Alex. Thanks. My sword sensei here says my blade is by the father right at the end of his career, an example just before his son took over, although most people are generally not aware there were two generations of Sukekane.
  5. Hi, yes, took screen shots, cropped them, turned them upright and saved them. The first is a Settsu (Osaka) gun made by a smith (name obliterated) working for the House of Enamiya. 摂州住榎並屋xxx衛作 The second has stuff I need to double-check on. The date at top is fuzzy but looks like 萬延 Man-en Gannen (1860). The Mei 鈴木鉄造 典直 作之 Suzuki Tetsuzo (?) Norinao Saku Kore, = made by Suzuki Tetsuzo Norichika/Norinao (not sure about how he wanted those characters read!) but no place of manufacture is indicated. NB I did find a record of another gun made by this second smith above Nick, dated Bunkyu Gannen (1861), which does put yours inside the ballpark.
  6. Hmmm… at that angle and focus it is difficult to say much. The 備 of 備州 looks somehow wrong in that shot.
  7. Ask them to make a copy for you, before it is deregistered.
  8. All lovely examples of Kinkō workmanship.
  9. Jean, down below left, where it says Wei H. Glad you are reaching out to various Togishi, Wei. Actually, even in Japan there are few who will touch Yari. There is one guy here called Fukutake San who says he enjoys polishing them but maybe he has special stones.(?)
  10. Umabari/Bashin/Kankyūtō. Sadly in poor condition, but it does have some redeeming features. Fairly slim, the kasane at the Nakago ranges from 22mm~25mm. Overall length 22.1 cm, or nearly 8 3/4”. The cross-cuts on the tang may have been to enhance thumb grip. The characters for ‘protection against lightning’ (Kaminari yoké) 雷除 can still be seen faintly among the blade scratches. This was a general invocation against natural calamities like fire, flood and earthquakes, and the centers for such prayers were Kitano Tenmangu in Kyoto, Kaminari Jinja, etc. Although used as fleams for horses’ ankles, there is a theory that they were pushed into the temples of trophy heads after battle for Kubi jikken before your leader. And 雷除
  11. Just had lunch in Fukuoka at the udon place called Bizen Fukuoka Ichimonji, and was explaining to one of the offspring that this name means more than just a random udon shop by the river.
  12. Love it. Congratulations!
  13. Jean, did you ever get a reading for that Mei? Recently I came across a Kankyuto, bashin/umabari, and realized that it’s been some time since I saw any. There must be a few out there, but… are they just not appearing in the marketplace ?
  14. And they’ve just received a donation from abroad! So they’re now looking into the possibility of facilitating such international donations from now on, although that was not part of the original plan.
×
×
  • Create New...