ITEM# UJKA505 – Catalogue 46 – Sold

A Chû-Aoe Katana (青江)

ujka505 - A Chû-Aoe Katana / 青江 刀

The Aoe (青江) school, meaning “Blue River,” rose to prominence in Bitchû Province during the late Heian period and reached its absolute peak during the Nanbokuchô era. Working near the Takahashi River with access to exceptional iron ore, the smiths of Aoe were both warriors and craftsmen – their dual identity as fighters and forgers gave their blades a directness and authority that set them apart from the more courtly schools of Yamashiro. The school’s fortunes were bound to the Southern Court, and when those patrons fell at the century’s end, Aoe production vanished almost overnight. The blades they left behind – particularly those forged during the golden Enbun and Jôji eras – are now among the most coveted swords in Japanese history.

This katana is the definitive 14th-century Nanbokuchô Aoe blade. It passed Jûyô Tôken in July 1976 and was elevated to Tokubetsu Jûyô Tôken just five months later at only the 5th TJ session in December that year. In November 2025 the NBTHK selected it as a study sword for their monthly kantei session, where only five swords are chosen as exemplary teaching tools – and nearly all participants correctly identified it as Aoe. The blade was subsequently featured and documented in the December 2025 issue of Token Bijutsu (No. 827). Even the 1963 torokusho examiner couldn’t help himself, breaking protocol to write “Aoe” on the official registration card – the attribution was so self-evident that leaving it blank would have felt wrong. It belongs to an elite group of just ten ô-suriage mumei long swords attributed to the Aoe school that achieved Tokubetsu Jûyô status on merit alone, without provenance or attribution to an individual smith to bolster the case.

The blade is in remarkable health. Despite being heavily shortened (ô-suriage), it retains an exceptionally wide mihaba and a magnificent ô-kissaki – the grand, powerful sugata characteristic of Enbun-Jôji-era production. The jigane displays the school’s most celebrated hallmark: refined chirimen-hada, a crepe-silk grain of ko-itame and mokume so finely worked it resembles the surface of Japanese silk fabric. Sumihada spots appear in glorious fashion on the omote, and complex dan-utsuri – straight near the edge, irregular toward the mune – is a quintessential Aoe highlight. The hamon flows in precise chû-suguha, enlivened by ko-gunome, saka-ashi, chôji-ashi, kinsuji, and sunagashi; in the monouchi it tilts into characteristic saka-ko-gunome. The bôshi terminates in a shallow notare-komi with a sharp, thrusting togari point and a brief kaeri – textbook Aoe in every detail. Both sides carry a deep bô-hiwith a slender soe-bi running alongside into the tang. The habakiis gold-foil over a copper ground.

Item Number UJKA505
Sword Type Katana
Attribution Chû-Aoe
School Aoe (青江)
Province Bitchû
Period Koto – Nanbokuchô period (Enbun-Jôji eras: 1356~1368)
Nagasa 69.9cm
Sori 1.4cm
Moto-haba 3.13cm
Saki-haba 2.52cm
Kissaki 4.95cm
Moto-kasane 6.2mm
Saki-kasane 4.7mm
Nakago 22.4cm
Weight 890g
Nakago Ô-suriage mumei; shallow kurijiri; katte-sagari yasurime; four mekugi-ana
Jihada Ko-itame mixed with mokume, chirimen-hada, fine ji-nie, chikei, sumihada, dan-utsuri
Hamon Chû-suguha, ko-gunome, ko-notare, ashi, yô, saka-ashi, kinsuji, sunagashi
Boshi Shallow notare-komi; pointed togari with tsukiage tip; short kaeri
Horimono Bô-hi with soe-bi on both sides, running into the tang
Certificates NBTHK Tokubetsu Jûyô Tôken (5th session, December 7, 1976) – Certificate No. 159
Habaki Gold-foil over copper ground
Catalogue Catalogue 46
Status Sold
Includes Shirasaya, fabric bags, stand, kit, printed description

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