Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

We do not focus on pricing here. Simple as that. Sometimes pricing may come into a discussion..but it is not our focus and never will be.

We are not here to tell people what is expensive and what isn't. I am not prepared to take on that liability here.

I am tentatively ok with people sometimes pointing out an obviously good deal (which can be disputed if people disagree) but that is about the limit of liability I am prepared to accept.

 

Brian

  • Like 3
Posted

Welcome to Nihontoholics, Pete! Everyone say "hi" to Peter!

 

We understand that you are still a bit defensive and wary, but it took courage to show up at this meeting. We applaud you for that.

We are here for you, Pete.

 

Alan

Posted

Know what I like!

 

Thank You Darcy for your int. background knowlegeable Statement.

 

In here for that Kind of "Information", Once again, Great Job Darcy!

 

 

Best Regards

 

PS. Wild Bunch behaviour isn't funny at all !

Posted

Jesus Christ! I thought I tended to be a bit a bit pedantic, but this just takes the cake. B. Hennick, Jesper, and five others "liked this"? Could they actually make any sense out of it? Bafflegab.

 

Alan

 

 

Alan: "Wow that post is way too long!"

 

Then goes and quotes entire post and adds 2 lines under it.... hehe.

 

Barry and anyone else who liked it found value in it. If you don't, that's up to you, but it doesn't mean that all those other members are stupid or insincere. 

 

Also, the post was wordy. It was not pedantic. But sometimes if the situation is deep and in my case I wanted to address several other posts at the same time, a lot of writing is required. For people with short attention spans there is a scrollbar and it lets them bypass the message. But if you copy and paste it right back in, you're not improving the thing you're complaining about  :laughing:

 

Edit: at least you got a smaller font going!

  • Like 2
Posted

Post was gone while people were writing the replies :laughing:

Warning points issued, posting suspended for 12 hours. Thanks for playing Alan.

 

Brian

 

PS - Darcy's post made sense to me....I promoted it to an article which is a feature page soon to be released.

Posted

That was pretty excellent post Darcy.

 

On behalf of Strebel I can say by personal experience that I was very impressed how they treated me when I visited them. I was 17, had bit ragged look, just appeared to their store with quite limited German skills. I was not the potential buyer for their high end stock. However we had very nice discussion about nihonto in general and I checked few of their lower end swords. I'll remember how nice experience that was.

 

It will be quite easy for us Europeans to go and see that particular Juyo Shikkake in person if potentially thinking about buying a sword of that level.

Posted

Another thing that people have to keep in mind is that the flexibility of two parties in parting from their advertised prices may be quite different. So there is no saying how much one of these prices is negotiable compared to the others. So it is a bit of apples and oranges unless you're in direct contact and negotiating the two. I would still go for the one I liked best and if it was more expensive than the others I'd point at the others and use it as leverage. I think any smart buyer would do the same. He can then argue his price. Somewhere in there the two would meet and the buyer will walk out with the one he wanted at a price acceptable to him... or he won't :) 

  • Like 1
Posted

James,

 

Wakizashi were allowed to the merchant class during Edo period, so it is not typical to samurai, then less valued.

Jean, some people here have this view, I myself have never seen any actual evidence showing the validity of this statement, do you or anyone else here know of any actual proof that wakizashi were not typical to samurai during the Edo Period, or maybe I am not quite understanding you. Are you saying that a wakizashi may have possibly have been owned by a merchant and therefore not the exclusive property of samurai as in the case of katana and longer swords.
Posted

I don't subscribe to wakizashi's having less value purely because they 'may of' been used by merchants. Lets not forget merchants could have Tanto as well yet they are priced higher, like-for-like than Wak's while the Daisho for samurai was enshrined in custom by that point so almost all samurai would of had one. At the end of the day if the quality is there is it not the 'art' that is desirable above all?

 

Different people have different priorities I guess as Darcy eluded to.

  • Like 1
Posted

James,

 

This is only factual, that's why you can get very good wakizashi for very good price. Concerning tanto, you must be aware that their golden age is Koto and in a less measure Shinshinto. In between few were forged (roughly between 1600 and 1800). Now being a wealthy merchant what would you wear, a tooth pick or a big wakizashi which allow you to defend yourself in a better manner and which makes you look important?

 

Now, here are two good Japanese websites, I could provide easily others:

 

- http://www.iidakoendo.com/info/item/index.htm

- http://katananokura.jp/SHOP/g8081/list.html

 

Count the number of wakizashi for sale.

 

Nevertheless I do agree with you, good wakizashi are the best quality/price ratio.

Posted

Eric,

 

I am not sure you have ever googled to get your answer

 

I just had to google to have it. Enter "first Haitorei issued in 1870" and you will get several links which should satisfy your curiosity

 

1 - End of Edo period 1868, so I maintain what I said.

 

2 - you are referring to "The Haitorei" issued in 1876 concerning samurai, there were several Edict concerning the wear of Japanese swords, the first one concerning the wear of swords by Merchants and Farmers was issued as soon as 1870.

 

Cf : Kapp, Modern Japanese Swords pp.37

Posted

Eric,

 

I am not sure you have ever googled to get your answer

 

I just had to google to have it. Enter "first Haitorei issued in 1870" and you will get several links which should satisfy your curiosity

 

1 - End of Edo period 1868, so I maintain what I said.

 

2 - you are referring to "The Haitorei" issued in 1876 concerning samurai, there were several Edict concerning the wear of Japanese swords, the first one concerning the wear of swords by Merchants and Farmers was issued as soon as 1870.

 

Cf : Kapp, Modern Japanese Swords pp.37

 

Jean, Markus Sesko says that swords were banned for the "common people", in 1870, this is already well known, that common people (not just merchants) were allowed to carry swords of a certain length during the Edo period. I have never read anything that suggests that common people including merchants actually carried swords in any great numbers.

 

Alexander Takeuchi, Ph.D suggests the same thing in his esay titled "WAS CHONIN CLASS IN EDO PERIOD ALLOWED TO WEAR/CARRY SWORDS?" , he specifically addresses the matter of merchants. 

 

 

In the mid Edo period when wealthy merchants in the city of Osaka started

gaining power, some of them ordered legal length wakizashi from famous Osaka

Shinto era smiths for their personal use. Some wonder if the existence of

large number of antique wakizashi made by some of those Osaka Shinto era

smiths is an indication that those merchants either collected or regularly

wore those wakizashi. However, Nihon-to experts in Japan tend to argue that

such a practice among wealthy merchants was not historically substantiated

(see Ogasawara, 1994a).

 

.

 

 

Excerpt from Nihon-shinshinto-shi - The History of the shinshinto Era of Japanese Swords, by Markus Sesko.

95c8b6286883e96a4e6dd2c828f3d85d.jpg

 

 

And this is from S. Alexander Takeuchi, Ph.D.

 

 

WAS CHONIN CLASS IN EDO PERIOD ALLOWED TO WEAR/CARRY SWORDS?*

 

S. Alexander Takeuchi, Ph.D.

Department of Sociology

University of North Alabama

October 26, 2003

 

I. Popular Misconception About Chonin and the Swords in Feudal Japan.

 

Many Japanese swords enthusiasts in Japan and in the U.S. already know that

the only samurai class was given the privilege of wearing/carrying a pair of

dai-sho (i.e., katana and wakizashi) by the Shogunate laws in feudal Japan.

However, when it comes to what kinds of swords that chonin (i.e., commoner)

class was allowed to wear/carry, there still is a misconception widely

shared. The most popular thus well accepted misconception of the kind is

that "chonin class was not allowed to carry any swords at all." This

misconception is very plausible because in popular Kurosawa movies and TV

jidai-geki dramas, one does not see any chonin or peasants wearing a sword

of any kind. What is very misleading is that the stereotypical portrayals

of the non-samurai class citizens of feudal Japan in Edo period are in fact

rather accurate. That is, historically non-samurai class citizens of feudal

Japan in Edo period did not actually wear/carry any swords in their everyday

life - regardless of what the laws, which many of them could not read, said.

 

Then why the notion that "chonin class was not allowed to carry any swords

at all" is still a misconception when in fact that virtually no chonin class

citizens wore/carried any swords in Edo period? To understand this, one

must examine the sword control laws of feudal Japan for civilian class and

actual cultural practice of the civilian class in the past.

 

II. The Sword Regulations of Feudal Japan.

 

Feudal Japanese government issued several orders to regulate the types of

swords that are allowed to be carried by different classes of people. One

thing consistent among all these orders was the fact that chonin (i.e.,

commoners) were prohibited from wearing long swords (i.e., katana) unless

specifically given permission to do so by the government, while there was no

regulation prohibiting the commoners from carrying short swords such as

tanto.

 

However, until many years after the end of the Japanese Civil War (1600)

those old laws regarding swords were not always followed by the people. This

was partially because many of those older laws had different definitions of

katana, wakizashi and tanto in terms of their lengths. As the result, in the

beginning of the Edo period (early 1600s), there were still some chonin

class commoners and many Yakuza gangs who openly carried long wakizashi that

were virtually equivalent to prohibited katana (Iiyama, 1995; Kukubo, 1993).

 

In the mid 1600s when the Tokugawa Shogunate restored peace and order in

society, the government also issued different orders to prohibit chonin from

carrying long swords. One of such orders was "Dai-sho katana no Sumpou oyobi

touhats futsumou no Sei" [The Order Regarding Dai-sho Paired Swords and Hair

Style] issued in July, Shoho 2 (a.d.1645). This law also specified the

maximum blade length of katana to be 2 shaku 8 sun or 9 sun (= 84.84cm -

87.87cm) and wakizashi to be 1 shaku 8 sun or 9 sun (= 54.54cm - 57.57cm)

(Kokubo,1993; Ogasawara,1994b).

 

Then in March, Kanbun 8 (1668), the Tokugawa Shogunate once again issued

"Muto Rei," [No Sword Order], an executive order to firmly prohibit chonin

class from carrying any swords longer than "ko-wakizashi" (i.e., small

wakizashi) unless specifically permitted by the government (Iiyama,1995).

According "Mutou Rei," "ko-wakizashi" is a sword whose blade length is

shorter than 1 shaku 5 sun (i.e., 45.54cm). However, after seven decades

had passed since the Japanese Civil War and when the social structures of

the Tokugawa Shogunate was stabilized in the peaceful capital city of Edo,

the Shogunate amended the old executive order "Muto Rei" to add some

exceptions to the prohibition. These exceptions included the permission for

chonin to carry regular length wakizashi (but not katana) when they are

traveling or when there is a fire (Iiyama, 1995).

 

III. Actual Cultural Practice of the Chonin Class in Edo Period.

 

As seen in above, historically the feudal government of Japan tried to

control its civilian class subjects by prohibiting them from

wearing/carrying long swords (e.g., katana). In fact, due to the continuous

legal and political pressure to prohibit chonin from arming themselves, it

has since become the shared cultural norm among law abiding chonin class in

Edo period not to carry any swords other than some exceptional occasions,

despite the fact that the laws did not specifically prohibit them from

carrying relatively short "ko-wakizashi." In this sense, the most popular

misconception about chonin and swords in feudal Japan is virtually supported

in terms of the actual cultural practice among the civilian class, even

though it is not supported in terms of the judicial history of feudal Japan.

 

While most law abiding chonin seemed to have stopped carrying virtually any

swords casually (whether legally prohibited or not), carrying "ko-wakizashi"

(that were still legal) when they were traveling was not an uncommon

practice. In fact, as seen in some of the famous wood block prints or read

old story books in the late Edo period (such as Toukaido chu Hizakurige),

there are many descriptions of chonin carrying legal length "ko-wakizashi"

during their travel (Iiyama, 1995). Therefore, Suke-san and Kaku-san

characters in popular Mito Komon TV series carrying wakizashi in their

chonin disguise is not historically inaccurate.

 

IV. Wealthy Chonin and Famous Osaka Shinto Era Wakizashi.

 

In the mid Edo period when wealthy merchants in the city of Osaka started

gaining power, some of them ordered legal length wakizashi from famous Osaka

Shinto era smiths for their personal use. Some wonder if the existence of

large number of antique wakizashi made by some of those Osaka Shinto era

smiths is an indication that those merchants either collected or regularly

wore those wakizashi. However, Nihon-to experts in Japan tend to argue that

such a practice among wealthy merchants was not historically substantiated

(see Ogasawara, 1994a).

 

References:

Iiyama, Yoshiaki. (1995). "Edo jidai no tousou to fuzoku." ["The customs and

sword furnishings in the Edo period.] In Shibata, Mitsuo. Shibata Mitsuo no

Touken Handbook. [The Handbook of Japanese Swords by Mitsuo Shibata.] Pp.

120-125. Tokyo, Japan: Kogei Shuppan. ISBN4-7694-0094-2.

Kokubo, Kenichi. (1993). Zukan Tousou no Subete. [The Complete Book of the

Japanese Sword Furnishings, Illustrated.] Tokyo, Japan: Kogei Shuppan.

ISBN4-7694-0094-2.

Ogasawara, Nobuo. (1994a). Nihon-to no Kanshou Kiso Chishiki. [The

Fundamental Knowledge of Japanese Sword Appreciation.] Tokyo, Japan: Shibun

Do. ISBN4-7694-0053-5.

Ogasawara, Nobuo. (1994b). Nippon no Bijutsu 1, No. 332: Nihon-to no

Koshirae. [The Art of Japan 1, No. 332: The Koshirae of Japanese Swords.

Posted

Eric,

 

If I understand correctly your initial post question was:

 

Do you or anyone else know of any actual proof that wakizashi were not typical to samurai during the Edo period?

 

Undoubtedly from your last post quotes and 1870 decree: YES

 

When people outside the samurai class were allowed to own wakizashi, wakizashi stopped to be typical to samurai class.

Posted

Eric,

 

If I understand correctly your initial post question was:

 

Do you or anyone else know of any actual proof that wakizashi were not typical to samurai during the Edo period?

 

Undoubtedly from your last post quotes and 1870 decree: YES

 

When people outside the samurai class were allowed to own wakizashi, wakizashi stopped to be typical to samurai class.

Jean, I think you are not understanding "typical", wakizashi were typical of samurai, they were not "exclusive", a wakizashi was a typical samurai weapon, in the many photos and prints of samurai a wakizashi was commonly worn, but unlike katana and longer swords commoners could also have owned and worn a wakizashi. 

Posted

My bad Eric, i did not make the difference between exclusive and typical.

 

In fact, I was referring to exclusiveness and it seems, according the ratings given by Chris, that the Japanese market has taken into account this non exclusiveness and considers wakizashi less typical of samurai than daito or tanto. This, of course, does not influence on some wakizashi qualities.

 

What would be interesting is the opinion of our Japanese members on wakizashi and their analysis on price market.

Posted

Well I reported one of my Japanese contacts opinions already in six words. "Tanto samurai. Katana samurai. Wakizashi businessman." 

 

My own feeling is that the majority of wakizashi went into a non-samurai market. What someone needs to look at is the population growth in Japan and how much the samurai class grew over time. I think the samurai as a proportion of the population was something that was falling, and with wealth growing in the hands of private citizens so goes the market. I have nothing to back this up. 

Posted

The population demographics of Japan throughout most of the Edo period was 10-12% Samurai and nobility, 80-82% farmers & peasantry, 5-6% merchants and artisans. Considering it was customary for practically all Samurai to own a daisho and the merchants were only half their number (not even the merchants, thats including all artisans as well) then it's quite preposterous to assume even 1/3 of all waks extant today dating from the 1600's onwards were owned by anyone other than samurai.

 

If you take a look at Edo, the population in 1720 was 1.4m out of which 500,000 were samurai so it's pretty safe to assume most waks produced in Edo around that time would of been for samurai. The whole waks = merchants thing seems to be a bit of a myth alhough there may be other reasons as to why they're so undesirable.

 

The other alternative is the farmers were buying a load as well...

 

Source: Mikio Sumiya and Foji Taira, An Outline of Japanese Economic History, 1603-1940

  • Like 1
Posted

No doubt there were those other than samurai who owned wakizashi. How many? I would suspect the truth is somewhere in between very few and many. Regardless, there is the perception that many wakizashi were owned by those outside the samurai class. Markets are controlled to a great extent by perceptions, thus, we see wakizashi discounted. Recognizing this can result in buying opportunities...

Posted

cc72e050940cc30e36a9ae5ad87a35ca.jpgeda04b72f30645d70577e6c1c76f6525.jpg

No doubt there were those other than samurai who owned wakizashi. How many? I would suspect the truth is somewhere in between very few and many. Regardless, there is the perception that many wakizashi were owned by those outside the samurai class. Markets are controlled to a great extent by perceptions, thus, we see wakizashi discounted. Recognizing this can result in buying opportunities...

I agree that the "perception" makes for some very good buying opportunities, I feel that this is a man thing, and if women were as active in the collection of nihonto as men, smaller sized swords would be more appreciated. Since perception is not always accurate I would look to historical records, period prints and photographs are a good method to gauge the use of wakizashi.

 

I have put together what I think is the worlds largest gallery of samurai related photographs, when browsing through the photos of samurai wearing swords you can see both tanto and wakizashi being worn. I can not remember any old Japanese photographs showing commoners wearing swords but there should be some, maybe another forum member has some to show. Likewise I know there must be some samurai related print galleries were the types of swords being worn can be seen. 

 

https://www.pinterest.com/worldantiques/samurai-photographs/

 

 

 

 

  • Like 1
Posted

What I've been taught (in Japan):

 

It takes a lot of skill to achieve a consistent and flawless hada and hamon on a long sword.

 

It takes a lot of skill to achieve a balanced hada and hamon on a tantō.

 

It takes less skill to make a wakizashi, since it's less difficult to achieve a consistent and flawless hada and hamon on a shorter blade as compared to katana / tachi, and there are no space restrictions as compared to tantō.

 

I've heard the reasoning "wakizashi = commoner" for the first time outside of Japan, although I can't rule out that some Japanese collectors think the same way. In any case, it doesn't make much sense, because samurai wore a daishō, of which one blade is usually a wakizashi. To my knowledge, there are not significantly more wakizashi in collections and on the market than katana.

  • Like 2
  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Sorry for being late and rehashing this thread but a reader of mine brought it to my attention as being quoted ;) So my opinion on this matter is as follows:

 

The vast majority of Edo-period wakizashi that is going round is of course going back to former wearers of them from the bushi class (-> daishô as part of the official “samurai uniform” if you want to put it that way). As James C. pointed out and just on a quantitative basis, there is IMHO no much arguing about that, i.e. who was allowed and expected to wear swords in general and wakizashi in particular. But I think the whole “merchant wakizashi clientele” issue can be narrowed down to blades that come close to 2 shaku, the border that separatet ruling class from civilians, and to blades by renowned master smiths. No merchant was walking around town with his long wakizashi thrusted through the belt pretending to be a samurai. It was IMHO all about power. I wrote an article a few years ago about the sword prices of newly ordered sword, the then shinsakutô, and most of the upper league shintô blades that we collect today (e.g. Inoue Shinkai, Hizen Tadayoshi) were just out of range for any middle class samurai. When I mention power, imagine the following: A fief was going to plan budgeting for the coming year, and as many of the smaller fiefs were about to face first financial problems soon (we are talking about the latter half of the 17th century), they were sending their man for this matter to Ôsaka or Sakai to discuss loans and interests. So this samurai is starting to discuss things for his fief and the (for him) exorbitant rich broker steers the conversation round to swords (smalltalk and so on before doing business), asking the poor guy what swords he is wearing. Now he says he has a mumei Sue-Seki katana and a newly made wakizashi from Doi Shinryo. And now the broker tells him how nice his swords are but also that he just got five brand new wakizashi delivered from Shinryo’s master, Inoue Shinkai, pulling one of them out of the drawer that is an exceptional masterwork and that is by no means ever affordable by the “conversation partner.” So in my opinion, this was as mentioned a power thing, showing the bushi class how far some of the merchants and rice brokers came, i.e. to “I don’t care, I can order katana and tachi from that smith whatever, just “your” regulations don’t allow me.” Of course there were also some connoisseurs who were really into swords and collected them as pieces of art.

 

In short and repeating myself, this merchant wakizashi approach concerns IMHO first and foremost close-to-katana-size wakizashi of the greatest master smiths of their time and not the majority of wakizashi made throughout the Edo period.

  • Like 2
Posted

Interesting theory that makes a lot of sense. Come to think of it, most extremely luxurious koshirae – like the jūyō tōsōgu one with solid gold fittings (including the tsuba!) that I saw a few years ago at the DTI – were indeed made for wakizashi on the long side.

Posted

Interesting.

 

I think it important to also remember that the average height of the Japanese has increased markedly over the past 100 years. Many swords just under 2 shaku were just as likely to be used by samurai who were smaller in stature as a practical matter. Even in WWII we see many gunto made right around 2 shaku.

 

I would think a good place to get some actual data on this would be to look into the records of sword production said to still survive. Perhaps in the records of the Tadayoshi/Hizen Daimyo or some shinshinto smiths there exists details about who the swords were ordered for, specifically.

 

We do know the economic fortunes of the ruling class deteriorated as the Edo era ran its course, with samurai became more and more indebted. As a result, we also know that swords were sold, pawned, etc. No doubt wakizashi formerly ordered by samurai ended up in merchant hands as time advanced.

 

We also know that Daimyo and the upper levels of the samurai class were indeed able to afford wakizashi and kodogu by the top artists of the Edo period.

 

Thus, it is quite uncertain when it comes to many wakizashi to determine exactly who owned and wore them through time. This is what the price differential addresses- the uncertainty. WIth daito, there isn't this uncertainty- daito were exclusive to the ruling class. There is no conjecture, no theory, no doubt.

  • Like 1

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...