Volker62 Posted May 16, 2023 Report Posted May 16, 2023 Hi friends I'm looking foreward to numerous additions and pics of your swordbaldes with an unusual signatures.......... First a special made sword by Minamoto Kikuhira please enjoy 10 1 Quote
Volker62 Posted May 16, 2023 Author Report Posted May 16, 2023 Meibun Atago yama Taro-bo Buzen -bo gohozen Dai hokkyo Iga no kami NyudoMinamoto Kikuhira (At Mt. Atago where Tengu God's Tara-bo and buzen-bo are enshrined Dai hookyo Iga no kami Nyudo Minamoto Kikuhira The swords old shirasaya has an old sayagaki by Sato Kanzan Quote
Matsunoki Posted May 16, 2023 Report Posted May 16, 2023 Ryuminsai Kanetomo made with iron sand from Kujukuri beach. Bought in auction last year. The Mei fascinated me. Never before seen similar except for nanban tetsu. I think he is a well thought of smith. 5 3 1 Quote
Volker62 Posted May 16, 2023 Author Report Posted May 16, 2023 translation sayagaki by Sato Kanzan san: Dai Hokkyo Iga no Kami Nyudo Minamoto Kikuhira Tadashi Atago san un'nun kisei-mei kore ari (in addition,the blade asks for divine assistance) Hacho ni shaku ni sun go-bu kore ari showa Kanzan shirusu+Kao 1 Quote
Volker62 Posted May 16, 2023 Author Report Posted May 16, 2023 Reward sword rare Homei-to by Kotani Takenori/ Yasunori 7 1 Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted May 17, 2023 Report Posted May 17, 2023 @francois2605 just posted this one on the Gendaito thread: "Here's a special order blade by Minamoto Moritaka (rated 2 million yen, high to superior gendaito according to Slough). Signed in tachi mei: "Koteki Mu Kotsu Minamoto Moritaka + Kao" / "Oujyu Mitsuda Jirou Shi Saku" / "Kigen Ni Sen Roppyaku Ni Nen Ju Ichi Gatsu" "Our enemy has no backbone" / "Made at the request of Mr. Mitsuda Jirou" / November 1942" 5 2 1 Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted May 17, 2023 Report Posted May 17, 2023 And this one posted by @DaBears HERE 金剛兵衛盛高靖博 Kongo Byoe Moritaka Yasuhiro "於興亜聖戦陣頭 Oite Kōa seisen jintō From the front line of the Asian holy war of unification. 高原登喜夫佩之 Takahara Tokio kore wo haisuru This sword worn by Tokio Takahara." translation by @SteveM 5 1 Quote
Alex A Posted May 17, 2023 Report Posted May 17, 2023 Great idea for a thread, these inscriptions make a sword a lot more desirable!. 1 1 Quote
francois2605 Posted May 17, 2023 Report Posted May 17, 2023 Interestingly the 2 previous swords are from the same school and this shows in the file marks and the shape of the nakago 1 Quote
Mark S. Posted May 17, 2023 Report Posted May 17, 2023 Not sure if this one will be ‘special’ enough, but the nakago/mei is from a yari made by 11th Generation Izumi no Kami Kanesada in 1867 and opinion of NTHK-NPO is authentic. I haven’t seen many yari signed on all four sides of nakago with “who”, “when”, “where”, and “for who”. 7 2 Quote
John C Posted May 17, 2023 Report Posted May 17, 2023 On 5/17/2023 at 6:00 PM, francois2605 said: previous swords Expand Francois: Do you know if the blue painted 5 at the base of the nakago is original to the sword? John C. Quote
francois2605 Posted May 18, 2023 Report Posted May 18, 2023 On 5/17/2023 at 9:35 PM, John C said: Francois: Do you know if the blue painted 5 at the base of the nakago is original to the sword? John C. Expand I don't know, John. The sword was sold in a shirasaya (no associated gunto koshirae with matching seppa). The 5 looks almost too perfect for being hand painted. Curious to hear what others think. Quote
Volker62 Posted May 21, 2023 Author Report Posted May 21, 2023 Unique Tanto This Tanto was showed to Ogasawara san on the oncassion at an exhibition of important Japanese swords in the Klingenmuseum in Solingen and clearly confirmed as a work by Hori Toshihide, short before his passing unusual long (28,8 nagasa)Tanto in a wooden box blade used as a mobile shrine. The inscription on the omote indicates that the blade is to keep alive the memorey to Captain Paymaster Kubota Yukio He died in action in showa 18 nen 9 gatsu 21 hi The mon presumably represents the dead mans familiy The inscription reads. Chusein (Name of the Monks temple) KOYO JUNDO (spiritual name implying the deceased was a martyr TESTSUSHIN ( posthumous Buddhist name) KOJI (BUDDHIST layman) SENSHI (Death in action 8 4 Quote
Volker62 Posted May 21, 2023 Author Report Posted May 21, 2023 this Tanto has two different hamon one side is in gunome choji in Bizen style other is worked in soshu.. Hori Toshihide was known for his works like that Quote
Bazza Posted May 21, 2023 Report Posted May 21, 2023 > this Tanto has two different hamon > one side is in gunome choji in Bizen style > other is worked in soshu.. I believe this is called konotegashiwa?? BaZZa. 2 1 Quote
Volker62 Posted May 21, 2023 Author Report Posted May 21, 2023 thanks Barry! very special work, with very special meanings.... Quote
Matsunoki Posted May 21, 2023 Report Posted May 21, 2023 (edited) Endo Mitsuoki signed also by the horimono carver Abe Akitada “in the same province” ”Echigo Kuni Mitsuoki Zo kore” ”August in 1940 Koki 2600 A resident of Sanjo in the same province Abe Akitada carved this” Currently in my custody but been on this forum twice before I think. All the best. Colin. Edited May 21, 2023 by Matsunoki Typo 11 1 1 Quote
Bryce Posted May 22, 2023 Report Posted May 22, 2023 G'day Volker, Here is one by Kojima Kanemichi dated December 8 1942. It was made for Mr Minoru Nokura to commemorate the first anniversary of the start of the Pacific war (bombing of Pearl Harbour). Cheers, Bryce 7 1 Quote
Volker62 Posted May 23, 2023 Author Report Posted May 23, 2023 thanks for sharing Bryce! what a historic sword!!! congrat's! Quote
DMNK Posted May 23, 2023 Report Posted May 23, 2023 Don't know if this fits in here : Musashi Koku Jyu Kaneko Sandai Taro Minamoto Sukehide special order katana in bizen sanmai construction. 6 2 Quote
Volker62 Posted May 23, 2023 Author Report Posted May 23, 2023 it fit's very well ! t'ks a lot Dominik for sharing, a rare swords signature here. 1 Quote
Itomagoi Posted May 29, 2023 Report Posted May 29, 2023 Chichibu Jū Fujino Masatsugu Saku (知知夫住藤野政丞作) Sakurai Saburō (応桜井三郎造之) Tame Kyū Konoe Rentai Rikugun Chūsa (為旧近衛連隊陸軍中佐) Sakurai Tomiharu Jū San Kaiki Kuyō Zō Kore (桜井冨治十三回忌供養造之) Meiji Jū Kyū Nen Ichi Gatsu Ni Jū San Hi Sendai Hachi Jū Kyū (明治十九年一月二十三日仙台生八十九才武州川越没) Translate by Steve M: The sword is by Fujino Masatsugu from Chichibu city in Saitama Prefecture. It was made at the request of Sakurai Saburō, on the ocassion of the 13th anniversary of the passing of his relative Sakurai Tomiharu, who was at one time a Lieutenant colonel in the Japanese Imperial Army. Tomiharu was born in Sendai city on January 23rd, Meiji 19 (1886), and died at the age of 89 (1975) in Kawagoe city. This means the sword was made around 1988. 7 1 Quote
Volker62 Posted May 30, 2023 Author Report Posted May 30, 2023 t'ks a lot Peter wow great signature......! Quote
Stephen Posted May 30, 2023 Report Posted May 30, 2023 Somewhere buried in old post( I tried to find it) I had a sword that said seven lives for my country Pheasant thigh nakago Shichi sei hokoku... Probably misspelled and probably why I can't find it 1 Quote
francois2605 Posted May 30, 2023 Report Posted May 30, 2023 @Stephen Here: https://www.militaria.co.za/nmb/topic/9324-shichisei-hōkoku/#comment-94266 1 Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted June 2, 2023 Report Posted June 2, 2023 Here's a rare one. I've seen a couple over the years with an inscription on the nakago mune like this. Posted by @Okan 1943 Kanemitsu blade with a unique kiri engraving and LOOOONG inscription on the nakago mune that says "皇紀二千六百三年大東亜戦必勝祈願刀 – 2603 Imperial year (1943), a prayer sword for victory in the Greater East Asian War" 3 1 Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted June 2, 2023 Report Posted June 2, 2023 Don't know if @NickC was going to post this here, if so, sorry Nick for jumping the gun!!! A great one posted by Nick HERE. Translation by @SteveM: "Its a war poem/song 海ゆかばみづく屍 山ゆかばくさむす屍 大皇のへにこそ死なめ かえりみはせし Translation (from Wikipedia) is: At sea be my body water-soaked, On land be it with grass overgrown. Let me die by the side of my Sovereign! Never will I look back. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umi_Yukaba (Date on the other side of the sword is October, 1943)" Further details from @Ray Singer "Umi Yukaba This tachi shown here has the Umi Yukaba song on the uramei side. The title means “Going Out to Sea” and it was the anthem of the Imperial Japanese Navy during WWII. It is a sad song with a mournful tune and was often sung on the decks of aircraft carriers when kamikaze pilots took off on their last missions. The lyrics come from a poem written in 749AD by Otomo no Yakamochi in the Manyoshu (Collection of Ten Thousand Leaves), which represents the earliest recorded poetry in Japanese literature." 2 Quote
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