Kurikata Posted March 5, 2015 Report Posted March 5, 2015 Hello Kanji experts and Japanese NMB members WHAT IS THIS ALL ABOUT ? Thank you Quote
cabowen Posted March 5, 2015 Report Posted March 5, 2015 It's the history and lineage of the tsuba-ko. Interesting in that it is dated Tenpo 8 (1837).... Quote
Kurikata Posted March 6, 2015 Author Report Posted March 6, 2015 Thank you Chris Do you mean that the Tsuba is dated 1837 or the Hakogaki has been written in 1837? Do we have some clues on the Tsuba-ko ? Thank you again Quote
cabowen Posted March 6, 2015 Report Posted March 6, 2015 Hakogaki was written in Tenpo. Tsubako is said to be Masayasu I believe... Quote
cabowen Posted March 7, 2015 Report Posted March 7, 2015 Whoops, Tempo 8 is the date the artist died. Sorry for the error. And thanks to Guido for pointing that out. Quote
Kurikata Posted March 7, 2015 Author Report Posted March 7, 2015 Would it be Masayoshi (Iwama Masayoshi, 1764-1837) as Tsuba-Ko and not Masayasu? Quote
cabowen Posted March 7, 2015 Report Posted March 7, 2015 The hakogaki says 政盧 ”マサヤス” Masayasu. There is a similar kanji: 蘆 which can be read "yoshi". A typo perhaps somewhere? Quote
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