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Posted

濃刕関住人源天秀謹作之 – Resident in Noshu Seki, Amahide respectfully made this.

皇紀二千六百年拾月日 – 2600 Imperial year (1940), 10th month

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Posted

Bruce,

I've been thinking the same.

It has had a hard life, is a little rusty, large bo hi, hiro-suguha , I think water rather than oil.

Two rivet holes.

Hope that helps.

David

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Posted
10 hours ago, Akitombo said:

Bruce,

Everything but the tsuba

David

David,

Can we get a photo of the fittings?  

 

I cannot remember where we talked of the earliest RS gunto (Type 100, Type 3, etc), but this seems pretty darn early.  The press release for the style came out in August 1940, so this one is just 2 months after.

 

@Kiipu - do you have the earliest RS/T100 on record?  Do you recall where we discussed this?

Posted

Wow, what an unusual, and appealing sword you have there, David!  It's hard to say, now, if this was made originally for RS fittings or not.  The 2 ana is what made me think it, but after comparing to some other blades made for RS, I'm not sure.  The spacing of the ana isn't quite the same as the others.  Yet, why would it have been made with 2 ana otherwise?

 

Very interesting piece.

Posted

On a Type 98 mounted blade tang being drilled 2 mekugi but only one used...I have a Sho 16 Sept dated blade by Yamagami Munetoshi of Niigata that has two holes but the Type 98 hilt is only drilled to use one mekugi hole.

I think this may just be a smith's decision to produce 2 hole tangs and leave it to the local customer/mounting shop to decide on what mount to have.

Regards...

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Posted
4 hours ago, george trotter said:

leave it to the local customer/mounting shop to decide on what mount to have.

George:

This may answer a question I have had for a while - how the ordering process for swords was carried out. So were blades produced THEN sold through shops with the customers ordering the various koshirae types or was the entire sword ordered, blade and hamon type, then produced?

 

John C.

Posted

There is an article somewhere where department stores etc, had dealers set up, where guys going to war could browse the blades according to their budget, and purchase one. Then they specified the mounts and I guess the sword was prepared for them.

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Posted

@John C   how the ordering process for swords was carried out. So were blades produced THEN sold through shops with the customers ordering the various koshirae types or was the entire sword ordered, blade and hamon type, then produced?

John, as far as I can make out, all of the above.  There were many sources of blades with or without koshirae.  Basically it depended on your budget, as Brian noted,  for quality of blade/ name of maker, and / or style of koshirae, and variations and quality of fittings. These combos were of a very wide range, but many opportunities to buy the full kit off the rack.  This certainly applied to army shingunto, but also looks that navy had a parallel structure.  I think the range of gunto koshirae we see on NMB reflects all this.

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Posted

Yes John,

As Mal has said, it is likely every 'way' of buying a gunto was in use....I think this was possibly just a swordsmith 'thing' to make the choice of mountings easier/quicker for the buyer/sword shop who would mount it for him.

This is just 'probabilities'...none of us has found research/writings that proves how/why the hole numbers were chosen.

Regards...

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