Bruce Pennington Posted April 15, 2022 Report Posted April 15, 2022 Thanks to @Okan for bringing this to my attention. Can't say I've ever seen this flower, which in other locations, often represents the holder is on Imperial household staff. But looking for translation of the mei and quite large mune inscription. Thanks guys! Quote
Mark S. Posted April 15, 2022 Report Posted April 15, 2022 Last character in mei is mitsu. Hard to read character above but I’m going with Kane. Will have to work harder on the rest. Quote
Toryu2020 Posted April 15, 2022 Report Posted April 15, 2022 Thats a neat one - Bishu Sakai? ju Kanemitsu 2603 years from the founding of the nation - made this for certain victory in the Great East Asian War? The last is something sword, so maybe auspicious? can't see but I am sure someone with better eyes will... cool. -tch 2 Quote
Nobody Posted April 15, 2022 Report Posted April 15, 2022 尾州浅井住兼光 – Bishu (Owari) Azai ju Kanemitsu 皇紀二千六百三年大東亜戦必勝祈願刀 – 2603 Imperial year (1943), a prayer sword for victory in the Greater East Asian War 10 1 Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted April 16, 2022 Author Report Posted April 16, 2022 6 hours ago, ChrisW said: A wonderful find Bruce! Thanks go to Okan, he found it, but I know what you mean! Looking the kiri (Paulownia flower) in Fuller's book, he said: "Originally used by the Imperial Family but given to senior officers to denote their high rank. Found on naval kyu-gunto and parade sabres of Flag Officer (Admiral) rank, Diplomatic swords of Chokunin grade (appointment personally approved by the Emperor) plus the swords and dirks of Senior Railway Officials, the Imperial Household and Government-General of Korea" I don't know if that is the significance of this kiri, or if the flower held other significance for the Japanese aside from this. Quote
Mark S. Posted April 16, 2022 Report Posted April 16, 2022 I don’t think I ever would have got the ‘Bishu’ characters. The ‘shu’ kanji would have definitely stumped me… Quote
Bruno Posted April 16, 2022 Report Posted April 16, 2022 Bruce, is there a way to get better photos of the blade, hamon etc? Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted April 16, 2022 Author Report Posted April 16, 2022 @Okan - any chance of gettting a link to the original sale pages? 1 1 Quote
Okan Posted April 16, 2022 Report Posted April 16, 2022 @Bruce Pennington - No sorry Bruce, I've checked but the link is expired..I'm uploading 4 more that I had. How did I miss this blade... 1 Quote
uwe Posted April 17, 2022 Report Posted April 17, 2022 “八幡大菩薩” (Hachiman Daibosatsu). Interesting blade, indeed! 2 Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted April 17, 2022 Author Report Posted April 17, 2022 1 hour ago, uwe said: “八幡大菩薩” (Hachiman Daibosatsu). Interesting blade, indeed! Thanks Uwe! Google searched: "Hachiman is commonly viewed as a Japanese god of war but he’s mostly worshipped as a patron kami of warriors and archery, and not of war itself. The archer kami was initially worshipped near-exclusively by warriors and samurai but his popularity eventually extended to all people in Japan and now he’s also viewed as the patron kami of agriculture and fishing as well." 1 Quote
Ken-Hawaii Posted April 17, 2022 Report Posted April 17, 2022 I was mostly curious how anything could be huge on a mune! 1 Quote
Bugyotsuji Posted April 18, 2022 Report Posted April 18, 2022 Ken, I think he meant huge in the sense of LONG. Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted April 18, 2022 Author Report Posted April 18, 2022 HUGE I'm tellin' ya!!! Ha! 2 Quote
Toryu2020 Posted April 20, 2022 Report Posted April 20, 2022 I think HUGE is a relative term and we all need a better reference in our minds eye... 1 1 Quote
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