Description

This antique Japanese wakizashi is signed by Kanetane, a swordsmith active in Echizen province during the early Edo period. The blade comes with an NBTHK Tokubetsu Hozon Certificate, indicating its high quality and historical value. It features a cutting edge length of 48.9 cm and a curvature of 0.8 cm, and is accompanied by a shirasaya case and maintenance kit.

Antique Japanese Sword Wakizashi Signed by Kanetane NBTHK Tokubetsu Hozon Certificate
Tokuho

Antique Japanese Sword Wakizashi Signed by Kanetane NBTHK Tokubetsu Hozon Certificate

Wakizashi

$6,201

Tracked across 81 dealers worldwide · price history · sold archive

Specifications

Nagasa

48.9 cm

Sori

0.8 cm

About the maker

Seki Kanetane兼植

1 Tokubetsu Jūyō1 Jūyō Tōken

Kaneue traces his origins to the smiths of Gino in Mino Province, who later migrated to Echizen. The NBTHK identifies from his signature "a connection to the line of the Seki smiths," and positions the first generation's activity in the Keicho era, squarely within the formative period of *shinto* production. Several generations bearing the same name succeeded one another — the *meikan* records successive smiths through Kan'ei, Enpo, and Genroku — each producing skillful work and transmitting the vestiges of the *Seki-fu* (Seki style). Because the shodai Echizen Kaneue's style and carvings share features common to the Echizen Shimosaka group, "it may be supposed that the shodai Echizen Kaneue was perhaps originally from Mino, assimilated early with the Shimosaka smiths of Omi, and later moved to Echizen." The characteristic *sugata* of Kaneue's work presents the archetypal Keicho shinto form: wide *mihaba* with minimal narrowing from base to tip, thick *kasane*, and an elongated *chu-kissaki* conveying a weighty, solid, and robust *taihai*. The *jihada* is *itame* mixed with *mokume*, with standing grain and a somewhat darkened "*kane*" tone described as "distinctive to northern-region workmanship." The *hamon* is narrow and fundamentally *suguha*, with shallow, small *notare* and a running admixture of small *gunome*; abundant *ko-ashi*, interspersed *yo*, *ko-nie*, and finely applied *sunagashi* produce what the NBTHK characterizes as "a calm and restrained style" in which "there is, in one vein, something that corresponds to the manner of Higo Daijo Sadakuni." The carvings — particularly the *kurikara* in relief within the *hitsu* — are "deeply cut and forceful in their incision" and display the characteristics of *Kinai-bori*, comparable to those seen on works by Yasutsugu of the same province. The NBTHK reserves its highest praise for the shodai's work, declaring his Tokubetsu-Juyo katana to be "the shodai Echizen Kaneue's finest work, and among his extant pieces no superior example is seen." Both *jigane* and tempering are described as "outstanding among this smith's works," and the workmanship in *ji* and *ha* is called "exceptionally splendid." His production is recognized as embodying a Mino-Seki manner distinct from the Yasutsugu lineage — a distinction the NBTHK credits as the very reason that "Echizen-Seki came to be celebrated."

Dealer

Samurai Museum

samuraimuseum.jp