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Posted

I have been told the mei is Kanenami. I have also been told the blade is Edo period. I have not been able to find much on Kanenami but what I have seen those Kanenami and Edo period do not match. This was brought back from the Nansei-Shotō. I would just like as much guidance and information as I can get.

 

Thank you.

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Posted

Any reason why there are no military markings on the Blade itself? Was it normal to have an arsenal/factory stamp on issued blades? Does the tang having two holes simply mean a new Tsuka was added for some reason?

Posted

Jeremy,

This is an officer's blade, and only NCO gunto were issued. Officers had to buy thier own and had quite a variety of places and ways to do that. Does yours have a stamp? Better pictures of the full nakago (tang), with the habaki off (brass collar) would help us all with your questions.

  • Like 2
Posted

What Bruce said, and yes, haagari sounds correct.

 

Also, can you see the Hamon, if so, take pictures of it. If it is clear enough, we could potentially tell you whether it is oil tempered or not.

Posted

I will get some pictures of the whole tang and hopefully the hamon this afternoon. Other than the name the only other things I see are 2 small dots and the faint remains of green paint. Not sure if those comes through in the picture.

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Posted

The paint could be remnants from numbers used on the assembly line, that’s frequent. If there is a stamp, you’ll find it generally above the signature. It’s very hard to say anything from the provided pictures to be fair. The two holes are a bit weird on a WW2 sword, but the chippy nature of the signature is typical of the WW2´s way of signing swords.

Posted

There have been some recent discussion of WWII showato being sold on the civil market. It's possible this blade was originally sold that way, and later coverted to military mounts, requiring a new hole to fit the standard army tsuka.

  • Like 1
  • 1 year later...

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