Rich S Posted November 26, 2007 Report Posted November 26, 2007 Would appreciate any help with the follow mei. I think (?) the first two Kanji are Takayama. Thanks Rich S Quote
sencho Posted November 26, 2007 Report Posted November 26, 2007 I have the first 2 as TAKA YAMA The 3rd looks like TO (as in nihon-to) 刀 Takayama-to 高山刀: swords made at Takayama Forge (I heard they had unique features.) ... 2nd from last looks like SHO (shu) or TOKORO..... 州 or 所 probably no bloody help at all..... oh well!! :D Cheers! Quote
Nobody Posted November 27, 2007 Report Posted November 27, 2007 Kanji are as follows; 高山刀鍛錬所作 鍛錬所 (Tanren-sho) - Forge Quote
Rich S Posted November 27, 2007 Author Report Posted November 27, 2007 Thanks guys. I'd never have gotten that as the translation. Much appreciate the help. Rich S Quote
Dr. T Posted November 28, 2007 Report Posted November 28, 2007 Just out of curiosity... Is it a stainless steel gunto? Quote
Rich S Posted November 28, 2007 Author Report Posted November 28, 2007 Dr. T Haven't seen the blade. A friend just sent the oshigata to get a translation. I was looking for a smith's name whose surname was Takayama. Who says anesthesia doesn't kill brain cells??? :-) Rich S Quote
Dr. T Posted November 28, 2007 Report Posted November 28, 2007 Dr. Stein I see... If my memory serves , there was a thread on Takayama-to/Kozan-to brand stainless steel kaigun-to over at SFI years ago... The condition of nakago in your photo looks very much like the one in the old thread... Quote
Brian Posted November 28, 2007 Report Posted November 28, 2007 Ah..using Dr T's hint, I searched SFI and found these pages with some info: http://forums.swordforum.com/showthread.php?t=64298 http://forums.swordforum.com/showthread.php?t=38365 To quote W.Y. Chan from that thread (He always has excellent info and sources when it comes to WW2 swords ) Perhaps, this sword was manufactured between 1935-1945. I have not understood what "Takayama-Sword" means for a long time. What does Takayama mean? , I was guessing that it was a name of a place or a name of the mountain or a family name. But, I understood that "Takayama" is a family name recently. Mr. Takayama who was the master of martial-arts(Takayama-Ryu,Takayama school) of naval forces, and he designed of those swords(perhaps, material, length of sword, and length of handle etc,). Therefore, these swords seem to have been named "Takayama Sword". http://www.webdiva4hire.com/kenshinkan/ph_toyama.html Brian Quote
k morita Posted November 29, 2007 Report Posted November 29, 2007 Hi Brian, Thank you for the quotation of my past posting on SFI. k Morita Quote
Nobody Posted November 29, 2007 Report Posted November 29, 2007 FYI: Here is one Takayama-to. Directed by Col. Takayama http://www.toukenhataya.jp/goods/sword/sword_s147.html Quote
Russell P Posted November 29, 2007 Report Posted November 29, 2007 Interesting. I have a takayama sword but it does not have a hamon The link above shows a hamon, is it a false hamon or was I unlucky to get a stainless version? More information, it all helps. Russell Quote
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