Okan Posted January 3, 2024 Report Posted January 3, 2024 Hello guys, appreciate if you help out with this one..sharing both sides with multiple angles. Thanks in advance. Quote
Higo-san Posted January 4, 2024 Report Posted January 4, 2024 Dear Okan the signature on the second menuki reads Miyashita (宮下). I am not 100% sure on the very first kanji on the first menuki but the second is definitely Masa (正). A quick research let me to page 221 of “The Japanese Toso-kinko Schools“ by Markus Sesko where the family name Miyashita is mentioned. The article is about an artist by the name of Toshinori. The Nori-Kanji looks like an extended version of the missing first kanji on your first menuki. Therefore, I would suggest NORImasa as a possible translation of the mei of the first menuki. Kind regards Chris 3 1 Quote
Okan Posted January 4, 2024 Author Report Posted January 4, 2024 Dear Chris, Thank you very much!! Here is the excerpt from Markus's book. I'm still amaze that they were able to sign on a "micro" spot where I can't even read with a 10x magnifier Toshinori (寿矩) was a student of Kiyotoshi. His civilian name was „Morimiya Heikichi“ (森宮平吉) and he was born in the first year of Tenpō (1830) the son of a cooper (okeya, 桶屋). His former family name was, according to transmission, „Miyashita“ (宮下). He used the gō „Ryūseimin“ (竜青眠 or 龍青眠) and died on the 15th day of the ninth month of Meiji 30 (1897). His son Heijirō (平次郎), who continued the original family name „Miyashita“, specialized after the Meiji Restoration in the mounting of rayskin (same, 鮫) on sword hilts under the name of „Samehei“ (鮫平). Quote
Bugyotsuji Posted January 4, 2024 Report Posted January 4, 2024 I was going to suggest with a degree of uncertainty, Miyashita 平Hiramasa, but Okan's post does lend some credibility to such a reading as the character 平 was in use by the Miyashita line. (?) 1 Quote
Okan Posted January 4, 2024 Author Report Posted January 4, 2024 One more try with the pictures. 1 Quote
Bugyotsuji Posted January 4, 2024 Report Posted January 4, 2024 Really hard to make that out... Quote
Shugyosha Posted January 4, 2024 Report Posted January 4, 2024 The ? in ?masa looks a bit like the right hand side of 伊. I really struggle to track down older/ obscure kanji but it might give one of you better researchers a lead? 1 1 Quote
Okan Posted January 4, 2024 Author Report Posted January 4, 2024 From Markus: "The mei appears to read: Miyashita – Tadamasa (宮下・尹正)" Looks like another mystery is solved..thank you everyone! @Shugyosha You cancel your next eye exam appointment! 2 2 Quote
Bugyotsuji Posted January 6, 2024 Report Posted January 6, 2024 Dang, should’ve got that! Ansei… 1 1 Quote
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