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Posted

  my grandfather gave me a Japanese sword and it has been recognized by the NBTHK and it says on the tang Fujiwara Ikutoshi who is that and can anyone tell me about him and what he did thank you

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Posted
  On 8/28/2015 at 1:01 AM, SteveM said:

Did you grandfather just buy this from Yahoo Auction in Japan yesterday? Cause the same sword is showing up there. ;-)

 

 

 

 

Edit: Seems like a very obscure smith. The reading might well be Yukitoshi, but that still doesn't turn up much.

I dont know how he got it all i know is that he gave it to me and i did a some research on it and it did now show anything and i was woundering if you guys know about the blade

Posted

Zak?

Wouldnt it be a much more enjoyable gift if you did some of the research yourself? Start with the Bungo Takada school and go from there. A great adventure!

 

-t

Posted

Tom,

 

Name is Daniel I. I have added his signature to his posts according the Board's rule :)

 

Daniel,

 

Your title is meaningless. What do you want? A translation? An information? Shirosaya does not mean anything.

 

Here is a link which is very useful:

 

http://www.sho-shin.com

Posted

Can't argue with the collective I'm afraid. It is indeed for sale out of Japan, both on eBay and was on Yahoo 2 days ago.

The members here are a sharp bunch (aside for a few of them, but they'll never know)
Creative writing will be discovered every time.
 

:laughing: :laughing:

Posted

Hello Daniel,

 

You already have the name of the smith: Fujiwara Yukitoshi (藤原行俊). The kanji 行 could also plausibly be read as Iku (as indicated in your original post), but I favor Yuki as a more likely reading. 

 

So, to avoid doubt

 

Fujiwara Yukitoshi, or

Fujiwara Ikutoshi

 

Both are possible. The former is more probable, in my estimation. Regardless of the reading, since the smith doesn't appear in any of the obvious reference sites or materials, one has to assume it is a rather obscure smith, and not as famous as the sites linked above are asserting.

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