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Overview·Dated Works·Designations·Blade Forms·Signatures·School
OverviewDated WorksDesignationsBlade FormsSignaturesSchool
  1. Schools
  2. Aoe
  3. Ko-Aoe
  4. Ietsugu

Ko-Aoe Ietsugu

家次

Jūyō
Vol. 22, No. 234 · Tachi

Ko-Aoe Ietsugu

家次

2 ranked works

ProvinceBitchuErac. 1356–1357PeriodNanbokuchōSchoolAoe>Ko-AoeTraditionBizen-denFujishiroJo sakuToko Taikan1,000(top 8%)TypeSwordsmithCodeIYE355
2Jūyō Tōken

Overview

Ietsugu belonged to the school of Province, a lineage whose activity spanned from the mid- period through the late era. He is recorded in the as a son of Moritsugu, and his works are appraised across two distinct periods: a bearing a -style signature is attributed to the group of the middle to late period, while dated works inscribed Enbun 2 (1357) and Shitoku 3 (1386) place him firmly in the era. This range suggests either a long working life or, more likely, successive generations operating under the name.

The displays the school's hallmark qualities: a dense with and standing out, paired with a temper where the tends toward tightness with abundant and adhering . The notes that "the characteristic features of this lineage are well expressed in both the and the ." The later dated Shitoku 3 is especially significant, as signed works of the school from this period are described as "extremely rare — not only those by Ietsugu, but in general." Despite workmanship the candidly assesses as not rising to a high level, the piece is valued as "exceedingly precious as documentary material."

What emerges from the designated corpus is an artisan of considerable documentary importance to the study of the tradition. His dated Enbun 2 differs in form from the large, elongated examples of contemporaries such as Tsuguyoshi and Tsugunao, making it "useful for research on the school." Across his surviving works, Ietsugu preserves the essential vocabulary of craftsmanship while documenting the school's evolution through its final active centuries.

Dated Works

Years he was demonstrably active, proven by signed-and-dated blades

Active period
1357Editorial estimate: 1356–1357
1 of 2 designated works carry a date
  1. 1357
    延文二年Juyo session 24, item 297

Designations

Kokuhō—
Jūyō Bunkazai—
Jūyō Bijutsuhin—
Gyobutsu—
Tokubetsu Jūyō—
Jūyō Tōken2

Elite Standing

0.00 across 2 designated works

Top 100% among smiths

Blade Forms

Distribution across 2 ranked works

Signatures

Signature types across 2 ranked works

Currently Available

Ko-Aoe School

Other artisans of the Ko-Aoe school

  1. 1.Yasutsugu康次11designated
  2. 2.Tsunetsugu恒次13designated
  3. 3.Kanetsugu包次9designated
  4. 4.Suketsugu助次1 for sale15designated
  5. 5.Moritoshi守利10designated
  6. 6.Masatsune正恒16designated
  7. 7.Tametsugu爲次6designated
  8. 8.Toshitsugu俊次6designated
  9. 9.Sadatsugu貞次5designated
  10. 10.Tsugutada次忠6designated
  11. 11.Moritsugu守次5designated
  12. 12.Shigetsugu重次5designated

Ietsugu

Ietsugu(家次) was a Japanese swordsmith of the Ko-Aoe school in Bitchu province, active during the Kenpo (1213-1219) period.

The work follows the Bizen-den tradition.

Designated works by Ietsugu include 2 Jūyō.