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Posted

Very interesting. Thanks for sharing!

 

You don't see many muratato for sale - is that because they are considered non-traditional like showa swords and are illegal in Japan?

Posted

Not sure that I follow you Peter.  Surely the distinguishing feature of Murata-to is the method and material from which they are forged, how do zinc alloy blades come into this?

 

All the best.

Posted

I concur, what is the point?

 

Furthermore, whatever the seller calls them, those a replica army shin gunto. If there are two suspension mounts on an army shin gunto, it is not a murata to, it is a type 94 shin gunto from 1934 (first type, later simplified with a single suspension mount in 1938, the well known type 98). At the time of General Murata (1890s), the relevant mounting was a kyu gunto mounting. The shin gunto was authorised 40 years later.

 

The swords could have been remounted as shin gunto later, but what makes a murata to is the very specific, and non-traditional, way the blade was made. Therefore, selling replica type 94 shin gunto as replica murata to is irrelevant and wrong.

 

And yes, murato to are illegal in Japan.

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