ITEM# UJKA455 – Catalogue 43 – Sold

A Kenchô Katana (長船兼長)

ujka455 - A Kenchô Katana / 兼長 備前国長船住兼長

This exceptional katana is attributed to Kenchô – also read Kanenaga – the celebrated first-generation smith of Bizen Osafune and a direct student of Chôgi. The blade was originally forged as an ôdachi of more than 90cm during the turbulent Nambokuchô period, circa 1362 to 1368, and later shortened to its current length by successive generations of samurai for practical everyday wear. The nakago bears a two-character gold-inlaid kinzôgan-mei “兼長” (Kanenaga) inscribed by Hon’ami Kôyû in 1753 – authentication of the highest order from the official sword appraisers to the shogunate.

Kenchô’s work sits at the fascinating intersection of two great traditions. Rooted firmly in the Bizen school, his blades are simultaneously enriched by the energy and vitality of the Sôshû tradition – a combination known as Sôden Bizen, and one of the most coveted styles in all of nihontô. This katana exemplifies that blend superbly. The jihada is a standing-out itame with gorgeous nagare-hada streaming along the blade, fine ji-nie sparkling throughout, and a faint midare-utsuri lending the characteristic Bizen atmosphere. The hamon is a wide, beaming notare in ko-nie-deki, enriched with gunome, chôji, and larger midare elements, many ko-ashi and , and sunagashi – a composition of extraordinary variety and beauty.

The provenance of this blade is nothing short of remarkable. In the third year of Hôreki (1753), Hon’ami Kôyû issued an origami evaluating the blade at 15 gold coins. That same year, the ninth shôgun Tokugawa Ieshige personally presented this katana as a gift to Lord Asano Munetsune upon his succession as head of the Asano clan – a fact confirmed by sword researcher Markus Sesko through reference to the Tokugawa Jikki chronicles. The original torokusho registration card bears serial number 15469, placing it among the very first swords formally registered in Japan in 1951, almost certainly from a prominent former daimyô family collection. The NBTHK recognised its exceptional quality at the 7th Tokubetsu Jûyô shinsa in 1980. Tanobe Michihiro added his sayagaki to the shirasaya in September 2024, confirming the attribution. A sword of this calibre – bearing shogunal provenance, origami from the foremost Hon’ami appraiser of his era, and Tokubetsu Jûyô certification – belongs among the finest holdings any serious collection could aspire to.

Item Number UJKA455
Sword Type Katana
Attribution Bizen Osafune Kenchô (also read Kanenaga, first generation) – ô-suriage mumei with kinzôgan-mei by Hon’ami Kôyû
School Sôden Bizen / Chôgi group
Province Bizen
Period Kôtô – Nambokuchô period (Jôji era: 1362-1368)
Nagasa 71.0cm (ô-suriage)
Sori 1.5cm
Moto-haba 2.96cm
Weight 770g
Nakago Ô-suriage, sujikai-yasurime, three mekugi-ana, kaki-nagashi horimono on both sides, kinzôgan-mei on sashi-omote
Jihada Standing-out itame mixed with nagare, fine ji-nie, faint midare-utsuri
Hamon Wavy notare in ko-nie-deki, wide clear nioiguchi, mixed with gunome, chôji, larger midare, many ko-ashi and yô, sunagashi
Boshi Midare-komi, late starting ko-maru-kaeri
Certificates NBTHK Tokubetsu Jûyô Token (Certificate No. 280, 7th shinsa, November 20, 1980)
Fujishiro Rank Jô-saku
Sharpness Rating Ô-Wazamono
Sayagaki Tanobe Michihiro – Bishû Osafune-jû Kenchô, dated a lucky day in September, Year of the Dragon (2024)
Habaki Gold habaki with file marks
Catalogue Catalogue 43
Status Sold
Includes Shirasaya with sayagaki, fabric bag, stand, maintenance kit, printed description, Hon’ami Kôyû origami (1753), formal gift certification origami (1753), and antique lacquered box with Fukushima daimyô kamon

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