This is a fine Mikawa Takenori gendaito katana. Takenori was a smith working in Mikawa during the Showa period in WWII. He was a student of Nakano Kazunori and was employed as a Rikugun Jumei Tosho. This is a very large and robust blade with wide mihaba, with an appropriately powerful heavy silver habaki. The hamon is a wonderful mixture of choji and gonome midare. There are deep ashi, saka-ashi and yo. The ihada is a fine itame with ji-nie. Takenori seemed to often forge blades with a wide mihada and powerful sugata. This Mikawa Takenori gendaito katana is an excellent example of that sugata from his work.

Mei: Mikawa ju Fujiwara Takenori kore or tsukuru
Nengo: Showa ni ju nen go gatsu hi (a day in May 1940)
Nagasa: 65.4cm
Moto-haba: 3.33cm
Kasane: 0.7cm
Sori: 1.7cm

Gendaito are traditionally made Japanese swords forged from swordsmiths working after the Meiji period. These swords were made using fully traditional methods and those swordsmiths who were approved to forge gendaito during WWII were designated Rikugen Jumei Tosho. While for many years Showa period blades were overlooked, a number of exhibitions such as the first showing of Yasukuni-to, demonstrated the high level of craftsmanship exhibited in these swords. Some are extraordinarily impressive examples modelled on classical works (koto utushimono of smiths such as the Bizen Nagamitsu and the Ichimonji school).

$4,250.00

SKU: KATANA0010 Categories: , , Tags: , ,

Description

Gendaito are traditionally made modern Japanese swords forged from swordsmiths working after the Meiji period. Some references categorize gendaito as swords made after the end of the Meiji, including only the Taisho, Showa, Heisei and Reiwa eras. Those swords categorized as gendaito were made using fully-traditional methods, including a heat treatment in water, rather than oil, and using tamahagane (traditional Japanese iron) as the base material for their work. Tamahagane is made from satetsu (iron sand) and put through a smelting process in an tatara (clay furnace) for up to 72 hours to produce a quality iron for the forging process.

Those swordsmiths who were approved to forge gendaito during WWII were designated Rikugen Jumei Tosho. While for many years Showa period blades were overlooked, a number of exhibitions such as the first showing of Yasukuni-to, demonstrated the high level of craftsmanship exhibited in these swords. Some are extraordinarily impressive examples modelled on classical works (koto utushimono of smiths such as the Bizen Nagamitsu and the Ichimonji school). The schools of Miyairi Akihira, Gassan Sadakazu, Kasama Ikkansai Shigetsugu and others are especially famed for their quality of work and produced swords that are regarded today as exemplary examples that can be compared favorably with the swords of earlier time periods.

Mikawa Takenori was one of the top smiths working during the Showa period.  This Mikawa Takenori katana is a good example of a high quality gendaito made using traditional methods by one of the most skillful smiths of the time period.