Kyle Jones Posted September 10, 2023 Report Posted September 10, 2023 Hi after some information history on the below short sword, it could have been made in October 1929 by Sadakatsu Tsukiyama. 4 Quote
Ray Singer Posted September 10, 2023 Report Posted September 10, 2023 Gassan Sadakatsu kin saku + kao dated a lucky day in October 1929. Looks like a very nice piece, please don't do anything to polish on your own. Definitely one to give to a professional for restoration Quote
Kyle Jones Posted September 10, 2023 Author Report Posted September 10, 2023 Thanks Ray, I had a Japanese friend look over it, he said it could have been made for an anniversary for an emperors son ? Is this a military blade? Quote
mywei Posted September 10, 2023 Report Posted September 10, 2023 Yes made to commemorate birthday of the Prince It won't be a mass made gunto if that was your question Quote
Nobody Posted September 10, 2023 Report Posted September 10, 2023 FYI; Tanto: Kōtaishi Denka Go Tanjō Kinen/Shōwa Hachi Nen Jūni Gatsu Kichijitsu Gassan Sadakatsu Tatemakoto(NBTHK Hozon Token) | Japanese Sword Shop Aoi-Art (aoijapan.com) 1 Quote
Kyle Jones Posted September 11, 2023 Author Report Posted September 11, 2023 I just want to know exactly what the markings are on it and it’s history Quote
Kyle Jones Posted September 11, 2023 Author Report Posted September 11, 2023 Also is it a genuine artifact, the gentleman that gave it to me has had it for more then 40 years Quote
Ray Singer Posted September 11, 2023 Report Posted September 11, 2023 Kyle, as mentioned above this is a piece which commemorates the birth of the Crown Prince. It's absolutely no question that it is an authentic piece, and as I said it is one that should be cared for and handled by a professional if it ever goes for restoration. 1 1 Quote
Bryce Posted September 11, 2023 Report Posted September 11, 2023 G'day Kyle, Further to what Ray has already told you, your tanto was made by Gassan Sadakatsu, in 1929, to commemorate the birth of the crown princess (Taka Kazuko). Gassan Sadakatsu was one of the best Japanese swordsmiths of his time and made many commemorative pieces like this. Tanto like this, were not made for military use, but have more of a spiritual significance. Potentially your tanto is quite valuable, but unfortunately it looks like it has had a very hard life and this may effect the value. First thing to do though is give it a very light oiling to prevent any further oxidation. Don't try to remove any rust yourself as this will damage the blade. Gassan Sadakatsu is my favourite smith and I agree with Ray that your tanto is genuine. If you do a search on this forum you will find plenty of information about him. It looks like you may have lost the wooden handle of the shirasaya and also the habaki (metal collar) that would have gone on the junction of the blade and nakago (tang). Here is a picture of mine to show you what I mean. Cheers, Bryce 3 1 Quote
Bryce Posted September 11, 2023 Report Posted September 11, 2023 Here is a link to another tanto like yours. Tanto : Gassan Sadakatsu – 日本刀販売の葵美術 (sword-auction.com) Cheers, Bryce 2 1 Quote
Brian Posted September 11, 2023 Report Posted September 11, 2023 This absolutely needs to go for papers and professional polish and restoration. That would cost several thousand $'s to have done right, and would save this significant piece. If you cannot afford that, resist the urge to do anything less than a professional job, and rather keep it for the future, well oiled and preserved, or consider selling it to someone who will. 1 Quote
Kyle Jones Posted September 11, 2023 Author Report Posted September 11, 2023 Thanks everyone for your replies I’ve received this piece in the exact condition in the pictures. I have not done anything to it except take photos to show you all. I live in Australia 🇦🇺 so they have places here that can restore Quote
Brian Posted September 11, 2023 Report Posted September 11, 2023 Kyle, You have ONE place that I would consider for restoration. Only ONE. For polishing that is. @Andrew Ickeringill You are very lucky over there to have someone who is fully trained and qualified. Use no-one else for polishing unless they are sending it to Japan. regardless, I would get this to Andrew for him to have a look at. Awesome guy. 3 2 1 Quote
ROKUJURO Posted September 11, 2023 Report Posted September 11, 2023 Kyle, please avoid touching the blade with your bare hands! It is in bad condition, but please don't worsen it. When oiling it, use a low viscosity machine oil, apply it very thinly, and wipe it afterwards so that no oil gets into the sheath. As said before, it is a rare and valuable item in case it can be restored. 1 Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.