Description

This is a katana attributed to Kanafusa, dating to the Edo period around 1685. The blade has a length of 70.4 cm and a curvature of 1.8 cm. It comes with NBTHK Hozon certification.

刀 無銘 金房 保存刀剣鑑定書

刀 無銘 金房 保存刀剣鑑定書

Katana

¥700,000

Tracked across 81 dealers worldwide · price history · sold archive

Specifications

Nagasa

70.4 cm

Sori

1.8 cm

Motohaba

3.5 cm

Sakihaba

2.95 cm

About the school

Kanabo School金房派

The Kanabō (金房) smiths worked in Nanto, the old name for Nara in *Yamato* province, from the end of the Muromachi period into the early Shintō era. Their relationship to any of the five established Yamato schools is not clearly fixed in the record, and the NBTHK setsumei treat the group as one that rose and flourished in Nara during the late Muromachi decades, with dated examples encountered from the Eishō era onward. The blades here name several hands. Masatsugu (政次), who signed as Kanabō Hyōe no Jō Masatsugu and as Kanefusa Hyōe no Jō Masatsugu, is described as the representative and best-known smith of the line. Masasada (政定), signing Kanefusa Saemon-no-jō Masasada, left an *uchigatana* dated Eiroku 2 (1559). The setsumei note that the group, signing in various forms of the Kanabō name, was numerous enough to be called a flourishing tradition, though one whose membership was once disparaged with the epithet "Kanenobō." Rather than the classical *Yamato-den* manner of the earlier five schools, the Kanabō hand reads as a Muromachi *uchigatana* idiom that shares points with the *Sue-Bizen* and *Sue-Seki* spheres. The *kitae* is *itame* that flows into *nagare* and tends toward *masame*, with the grain often standing and growing large, and a whitish *utsuri* appearing in places. The *hamon* divides between two registers the setsumei repeatedly cite: a large *gunome*-based *midare*, the "hips" of the *gunome* opening out and mixed at times with *togari-ba*, *chōji*, or *ko-notare*; and a *suguha* carried on a tight *nioiguchi*. Across both, *ashi* and *yō* enter well and stand out, *ko-nie* and *ji-nie* adhere, and *sunagashi* with *kinsuji* run through; the *nioiguchi* frequently takes a *shizumi*, subdued cast. The *bōshi* runs *midare-komi*, often with *hakikake* and a pointed or *ko-maru* return. The build tends to broad *mihaba* with *sakizori* on the swords, while *naginata* are conspicuously common, a production read as answering the demands of the warrior monks (*sōhei*) of Kōfukuji and the great Nanto temples. For kantei, the line is held by the flowing *masame*-tending *itame*, the broad *gunome-midare* with prominent *ashi* and *yō* over a tight or subdued *nioiguchi*, and the marked presence of *naginata* and long polearm blades among extant work. The setsumei single out Masatsugu's polearms as typical of his hand, several preserved with their vermilion-lacquer *nagamaki* mounts (*shunuri nagamaki koshirae*) and one black-lacquer *naginata* mounting, the fittings inferred to have been made together with the blade. The records grant that true masterworks within the group are rare, yet they describe individual blades by Masatsugu and Masasada with fine *jigane*, skillfully cut *horimono*, and workmanship judged excellent and dignified. Within the wider Yamato sphere the Kanabō stand as a late, utilitarian offshoot whose polearms and serviceable swords carry the group's name into the NBTHK register.

Dealer

Toyuukai

toyuukai.jp

¥700,000

View on Toyuukai