ITEM# UJKA278 – Catalogue 28 – Sold

A Shodai Masahiro Katana (肥前国河内大掾藤原正広)

ujka278 - A Shodai Masahiro Katana / 初代正広 刀

Kawachi Masahiro was born Sadenjiro in 1607 and died at only 59 in 1665. The son of Yoshinobu — who was himself the adopted son of the great first generation Shodai Tadayoshi — he began his career signing as Masanaga and even cut signatures on behalf of the ailing Shodai Tadayoshi (dai-mei). Recognising his exceptional talent, Lord Nabeshima Katsushige suggested the young smith take the name Masahiro, and so Shodai Masahiro was born. Ranked Jo-saku and rated Wazamono for cutting ability, he stands among the finest smiths the Hizen tradition ever produced.

This long and splendid katana is a tour de force. The steel is forged in the classic Hizen manner: a tight ko-mokume that refines into the school’s celebrated konuka-hada, so densely worked it resembles fine rice bran under magnification. Masahiro was renowned for his thick nie-deki, and this blade delivers in full — generous splashes of sparkling nie crystals animate the hamon from base to point, with lively kinsuji and generous sunagashi threading through the activity. The boshi is a spectacular kaen, the thick clusters of nie at the tip blazing like fire.

The sword comes complete with a superb Edo period uchigatana koshirae. The saya is finished in black raden fuemaki lacquer — symmetrical mother-of-pearl flute stripes — dated and certified to the middle Edo period, circa 1688-1780. The tsuba is a polished iron example with gold cloth inlay attributed to the prestigious Umetada school, bearing the sangaibishi triple-diamond kamon of the Ogasawara daimyo who ruled the Karatsu domain in Hizen from 1817 to 1871. The fuchi-kashira is decorated with large crawling dragonflies in shakudo — the dragonfly being the quintessential samurai symbol of forward-only determination — certified by the NTHK-NPO to the Iga school of the late Edo period. The tsuka is wrapped in a bold two-strand tsunegumi-kumiagemaki weave in gold silk over stingray skin, with large shakudo dragon menuki. An ibushigin flower niju-habaki in oxidised silver completes the mounting. Every component is a statement piece — together, they form one of the most complete and visually compelling Edo period mountings one could wish for.

Item Number UJKA278
Sword Type Katana
Swordsmith Shodai Masahiro (first generation)
Swordsmith (JP) 肥前国河内大掾藤原正広
Signature Hizen no Kuni Kawachi Daijo Fujiwara Masahiro
School Hizen (Omi-Ishido lineage, Tadayoshi school)
Province Hizen
Period Shintô – Early Edo period (Kan’ei era: 1624-1644)
Nagasa 76.0cm (ubu)
Sori 1.5cm
Moto-haba 3.3cm
Weight 875g
Nakago 19.8cm, 1 mekugi-ana, tachi-mei
Jihada Ko-mokume leading to Hizen konuka-hada, thick nie-deki
Hamon Gunome choji-midare with kinsuji and sunagashi
Boshi Kaen (flame)
Certificates NBTHK Tokubetsu Hozon (guaranteed; original certificate lost, new shinsa required — Unique Japan covers all associated costs); NTHK-NPO Kanteisho (tsuba, fuchi-kashira, koshirae)
Fujishiro Rank Jo-saku
Sharpness Rating Wazamono
Koshirae Edo period uchigatana koshirae
Tsuba Polished iron with gold cloth inlay, sangaibishi (triple-diamond) kamon of the Ogasawara clan; attributed to Umetada school, mid-Edo circa 1700s. NTHK-NPO Kanteisho certified.
Fuchi-kashira Shakudo with dragonfly motif and gold inlay; Iga school, late Edo period (early 1800s). NTHK-NPO Kanteisho certified.
Menuki Large shakudo crawling dragons, tsunegumi-kumiagemaki two-strand weave
Tsuka Gold silk tsukamaki over white stingray skin (same), tsunegumi-kumiagemaki weave
Habaki Ibushigin flower niju-habaki (oxidised silver, two-piece)
Catalogue Catalogue 28
Status Sold
Includes Shirasaya, Edo koshirae, fabric bag, stand, kit, DVD, booklet, description

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