Ebook Posted December 21, 2021 Report Posted December 21, 2021 Can anyone could help me out with this sword. Any information would be most welcome, I have not seen a number stamped nakago before but I’m no expert. regards Quote
raaay Posted December 21, 2021 Report Posted December 21, 2021 Hi Dave , you have supplied the date , which is dated Showa 1943 , the numbers are generally accepted as factory assembly numbers for matching up the sword fittings . 1 Quote
vajo Posted December 21, 2021 Report Posted December 21, 2021 Dave did you have the other side of the nakago? Quote
Ebook Posted December 21, 2021 Author Report Posted December 21, 2021 29 minutes ago, vajo said: Dave did you have the other side of the nakago? Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted December 21, 2021 Report Posted December 21, 2021 Is there a star at the top? Or other stamps? Quote
Ebook Posted December 21, 2021 Author Report Posted December 21, 2021 13 minutes ago, Bruce Pennington said: Is there a star at the top? Or other stamps? This is the last photo I have and don’t see anything… sorry Quote
Ebook Posted December 21, 2021 Author Report Posted December 21, 2021 18 minutes ago, Bruce Pennington said: Is there a star at the top? Or other stamps? Is this a stamp??? Quote
Kiipu Posted December 22, 2021 Report Posted December 22, 2021 Reverse: 昭和十八年一月 = January 1943. I do not recognize the swordsmith's signature so someone else will need to look at it. If it is a Seki smith, than maybe @mecox will know some history. @SteveM @BANGBANGSAN Quote
SteveM Posted December 22, 2021 Report Posted December 22, 2021 國廣 - Kunihiro, using my all-time favorite reduction of the kanji 國 8 3 Quote
robinalexander Posted December 22, 2021 Report Posted December 22, 2021 ahh Kunihiro...thats tricky. Went right through Slough's and Nihonto Compendium Stoke Count Kanji (Sesko) without success. Nice one Steve. Quote
Kolekt-To Posted December 22, 2021 Report Posted December 22, 2021 So, it seems this Type 98 is credited to Seki smith "Kunihiro" in 1943. And this would be considered Showato (non-traditional blade, oil-tempered) as is common with guntos, correct? 1 Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted December 22, 2021 Report Posted December 22, 2021 Japaneseswordindex shows 3 Kunihiro mei and one of them is this one: http://japaneseswordindex.com/oshigata/kunihir2.jpg Nihontoclub shows 2 kunihiro, one from Fukuoka, the other from Aomori, both using the scquare kanji for Kunihiro 國廣. Kataoka Kunihiro was RJT qualified, which is why I was wondering about a possible star stamp, but his mei looked like this: http://japaneseswordindex.com/oshigata/kunihiro.jpg I saw that small mark too, but don't know what to think about it. It could be a poorly struck Seki or Nagoya mark, but neither would necessarily mean the blade is showato, as they both show up in small form on star-stamped blades. 4 1 Quote
Ebook Posted December 22, 2021 Author Report Posted December 22, 2021 Many, many thanks everyone, lots of information to digest. Fascinating. Quote
BANGBANGSAN Posted December 22, 2021 Report Posted December 22, 2021 17 hours ago, Kiipu said: Reverse: 昭和十八年一月 = January 1943. I do not recognize the swordsmith's signature so someone else will need to look at it. If it is a Seki smith, than maybe @mecox will know some history. @SteveM @BANGBANGSAN 國(国)can also write as 囯 圀 囶 1 2 Quote
Kiipu Posted December 22, 2021 Report Posted December 22, 2021 Thanks SteveM and BangBangSan for the bailout. I just do not like this smith's penmanship. He must have been one of those former blacksmiths! And congrats to Detective Bruce for tracking him down and verifying such a smith existed. 1 1 1 Quote
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