Bry7831 Posted January 7, 2016 Report Posted January 7, 2016 I recently inherited this sword from my uncle, who brought it back from WWII. This sword is strange in that it has a leather covered scabbard like early shin-gunto, yet has traditional fittings. I showed it to an expert on nihonto, and she believes its WWII era but is having difficulty translating the mei. Hopefully my picture attaches correctly, i am a forum scrub and am not terribly familiar with it. Quote
obiwanknabbe Posted January 7, 2016 Report Posted January 7, 2016 Bry7831, we will need good clear pictures of the entire blade to help you answer your question. Also, as per board rules, please add a full name so that we can address you properly. kurt k Quote
Bry7831 Posted January 7, 2016 Author Report Posted January 7, 2016 I took these pictures when we were cleaning out his room. I realize theyre blurry, but theyre what i have atm. Quote
Bry7831 Posted January 7, 2016 Author Report Posted January 7, 2016 Sorry for some reason two of them didnt paste right. Im having to do this all on my phone. -Bryan Quote
Greg F Posted January 7, 2016 Report Posted January 7, 2016 Hi Bryan, im no expert but I think it probably is ww2 era blade with edo Koshirae minus saya. The fittings seem nice enough. Welcome to the board. Greg 1 Quote
SteveM Posted January 7, 2016 Report Posted January 7, 2016 Hello Bryan, The mei reads: Naganuma Yoshifusa Another possible reading might be Yoriifusa, as in the thread below. (with thanks to Moriyama-san and Eugene) http://www.militaria.co.za/nmb/topic/859-kanji-help/ Quote
Bry7831 Posted January 7, 2016 Author Report Posted January 7, 2016 Greg- Thank you for the welcome. You dont need to be an expert, i appreciate any input you can give me. Could you tell me more about Edo koshirae? And your opinions of these particular koshirae? Steve- thank you the mystery is solved lol. Would you happen to know anything about this particular smith? The only thing i could find through google is a kai gunto he made, which to my relief the description states he made his swords through all traditional methods. Quote
Greg F Posted January 7, 2016 Report Posted January 7, 2016 Hi Bryan here is a great article that should help. If you can get some better pics for us then people can get a better idea what we are looking at. The f/k could be mino school? All the best. http://www.arscives.com/historysteel/japanesekoshirae.article.htm Greg Quote
SteveM Posted January 7, 2016 Report Posted January 7, 2016 Hello Bryan, sorry to say I don't know anything about this smith. He seems to be a rather obscure WW2-era smith. Quote
Bry7831 Posted January 7, 2016 Author Report Posted January 7, 2016 Greg- Im going to get a camera from this decade so you guys can have some quality pictures to work with. I have been working my way down the article as well. My only questions for you guys are: Is this a gendaito? Or some modified gunto? If you have any speculation on the previous question, then who might this have been made for and why a combination of traditional fittings and a gunto scabbard? I dont mean to bombard you with impossible questions, i just find this sword puzzling. Thanks again to the both of you. Quote
Stephen Posted January 7, 2016 Report Posted January 7, 2016 looks showato, possible gendaito well know if we get better nei pix Quote
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