Lebo14 Posted May 15, 2014 Report Posted May 15, 2014 As a newbie to this area, I was wondering if I could get some help on the markings on this kyu gunto sword. It was a bring back from World War II. Thank you in advance. My bad on the Name. It's David nice to meet y'all. Quote
Ken-Hawaii Posted May 15, 2014 Report Posted May 15, 2014 Your name is required on each post, per Brian's rules. Welcome to the forum. Ken Quote
David McDonald Posted May 16, 2014 Report Posted May 16, 2014 Dear Stephen Easy but.... I thought you were talking about a cardinal number and thought I knew them so had to look. No not the cardinal number. So looked up 100 and then 1000. Is this it?? 千 Ok so I think I found it but what does it mean. I have never see this on a sword before???? I cropped and rotated the image. later david mcdonald jswords@mcn.net its a number easy to look up Quote
george trotter Posted May 16, 2014 Report Posted May 16, 2014 Actually, it is the katakana character for "mo" (just a sound, no meaning) used to write sounds, foreign words and names and such like. If the arsenal guy meant to strike it twice it says mo-mo...which has no meaning except that in kanji or Japanese hiragana script it would mean "peach"...as in Momotaro, the fairy tale. I think it is most likely an accounting mark as in Showa times even gendaito gunto blades are found with a katakana symbol prefixing an account number. Hope this helps (maybe post the pic in "Military Swords" (Arsenal marks). Quote
Stephen Posted May 16, 2014 Report Posted May 16, 2014 ok my bad thought it was shichi shichi, guess i should take longer looks before i insert foot in mouth. right side up helps, thanks GT and David for the rotate and longer look Quote
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