ITEM# UJKA405 – Catalogue 38 – Sold

A Morihiro Katana (先祖拝領之)

ujka405 - A Morihiro Katana / 千代鶴守弘 先祖拝領之

The Chiyozuru school was founded in Echizen province around 1337 by Chiyozuru Kuniyasu, who had migrated from the distinguished Rai school in search of the ideal spring water for forging. He settled in Takefu and established a tradition that would become one of the most respected provincial schools of the Muromachi period. The Morihiro name lasted through approximately four generations, and this expertly crafted katana is most likely the work of the second generation – son of Rai Kuniyasu – who was active during the Ôei era, circa 1394-1428. Ranked jô-saku by Fujishiro, Morihiro’s superior skill as a swordsmith is fully evident in this blade.

The jihada is a genuine pleasure to study: richly figured mokume-hada blends with areas of ô-hada and flowing nagare-hada, with abundant chikei throughout. The contrast between this lively grain and the darkish jigane – characteristic of Echizen province’s coastal steel tradition – is striking. The hamon is a clear, bright suguha terminating in a kaen-boshi. The ô-suriage nakago has been greatly shortened and bears a remarkable gold-inlaid inscription reading Senzo kore hairyô – “my ancestor received this sword” – a testament to the generations of custodians who prized this blade before us.

The late Edo koshirae is a thematically cohesive ensemble of considerable quality. The kizami-saya features hand-carved diagonal spirals lacquered in glossy black that cast dramatic zig-zag shadows. The polished shakudô tsuba, attributed to the Yokotani school (mid-Edo, circa 1700-1780), depicts a tiger in a bamboo grove – strength tempered by flexibility, courage balanced by humility. The fuchi-kashira, attributed to the Kikuoka school (1780-1867), continue the bamboo theme, while the menuki are formed as bamboo stalks. A spider and its web decorate the iron kurigata: patient, persistent, undeterred. The entire mounting speaks of an ancestral sword well worth preserving for the generations to come.

Item Number UJKA405
Sword Type Katana
Attribution Attributed to Morihiro (2nd generation, ô-suriage nakago)
School Chiyozuru
Province Echizen
Period Koto – Early Muromachi (Oei era: 1394-1428)
Nagasa 68.8cm
Sori 1.4cm
Moto-haba 2.78cm
Weight 640g
Nakago O-suriage, 18.0cm, 3 mekugi-ana, gold-inlaid inscription (kinzogan): Senzo kore hairyo
Jihada Mokume-hada mixed with o-hada and nagare-hada, plentiful chikei
Hamon Suguha
Boshi Kaen-boshi
Certificates NBTHK Tokubetsu Hozon; NTHK-NPO Kanteisho (tsuba, fuchi-kashira & koshirae)
Fujishiro Rank Jo-saku
Koshirae Naname-kizami kuro-ro-nuri saya uchigatana-koshirae, Late Edo period (1780-1867)
Tsuba Polished shakudo, tiger in bamboo grove, attributed to Yokotani school, mid-Edo (circa 1700-1780); NTHK-NPO Kanteisho
Fuchi-kashira Bamboo trees swaying in the wind, attributed to Kikuoka school (1780-1867); NTHK-NPO Kanteisho
Menuki Bamboo stalks
Habaki Silver, diagonal file marks
Catalogue Catalogue 38
Status Sold
Includes Shirasaya, Edo koshirae, fabric bags, stand, kit, booklet, description

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