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Miyochin fittings maker info requested.


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Posted

Hi Guys,

 

A month or so ago I bought I nice tanto with nice iron fittings.  I no longer have many books on tosogu so I'm wondering if there is any information on this maker.

 

Thanks in advance,

 

 

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  • Like 2
Posted

Bill, 

this is a KOGATANA with KOZUKA, not a TANTO.

The blade looks very recently made, the KOZUKA may be older. I think the MEI reads MYOCHIN MUNEYASU, but I have no records of this artist having made KOZUKA. This name is more known as armour maker.

  • Like 1
Posted

Jean, Bill is a looongtime collector and dealer. I'm 100% sure he knows this isn't the tanto (an understandable misunderstanding) but I expect he means this came fitted to the tanto. :)

  • Like 3
Posted

Myochin Muneyasu was a Bakamatsu smith who ran a workshop / training centre in Edo. he published a diary in which he recorded some of his commissions as well as details of the pupils he took on. I am fortunate in having an armour by one such pupil, a Ki Yasukiyo, who stated on the dou, helmet, mask and kote that he was Muneyasu's pupil. From the diary I have calculated he was 19 when he travelled from Nagato to Edo where he stayed only three years so he must have been taught the basics in Nagato, being sent to Edo to learn the latest fashions.

Ian Bottomley

  • Like 3
Posted

Markus never fails to impress by his erudition. My knowledge of Japanese grammar, and the complexities of word order when read, is so minimal it could be written on the back of a stamp but somehow the sense seems to get through. Returning to the object in question, it is remarkable that Muneyasu would undertake such a minor commission as a kozuka. Perhaps Mr. Kawaji (or Kawamichi) was quite important. As I said, he was running what amounted to a 'finishing school' for armourers as well as turning out armours himself. The signatures on my armour are quite definite about Muneyasu being Yasukiyo's teacher yet the diary states the pupils were actually taught by a Munechika and the mask on my armour is an exact copy of two others I have seen signed by Munechika and are quite different from those signed by Muneyasu. So, it looks as if Muneyasu's workshop was a busy enterprise with quite a few involved in manufacture and teaching.

Ian Bottomley

  • Like 1
Posted

I also had “Mr. Kawaji”, but missed the reading “motome”. That left it fairly confusing to me......

 

Thanks Ian/Steve!

 

PS: Time to buy Koop-Inada, Ian... :)

Posted

Hi Bill,

 

The Kamon is called: Kikou Ni Mitsuboshi (Three stars within a six sided turtle shell lozenge)

 

:)

  • Like 1
  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

Jean,  This is the Kozuka for the Tanto koshirae!  I am not saying its the tanto!  :)

 

Bill

 

Bill, 

this is a KOGATANA with KOZUKA, not a TANTO.

The blade looks very recently made, the KOZUKA may be older. I think the MEI reads MYOCHIN MUNEYASU, but I have no records of this artist having made KOZUKA. This name is more known as armour maker.

 

This thread is quite old. Please consider starting a new thread rather than reviving this one, unless your post is really relevant and adds to the topic..

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