Guest nickn Posted July 25, 2009 Report Posted July 25, 2009 please could some one translate the inscription on this kozuka Quote
Nobody Posted July 26, 2009 Report Posted July 26, 2009 金華山麓 – The foot of Mt. Kinka 於濃州長良川邊藤原兼長 – On the riverside of Nagara River in Noshu, Fujiwara Kanenaga Quote
Guest nickn Posted July 26, 2009 Report Posted July 26, 2009 thank you moriyama-san any chance the mei is sho-shin? nick Quote
firebee1976 Posted July 31, 2009 Report Posted July 31, 2009 Well... I'm relatively new to nihonto and I absolutely hate to dissapoint people, but this is probably Showa-To period. Most of the smiths on record from the Gifu province, which is the only place a Kozuka could be made at the base of Mt. Kinka and on the banks of the Nagara River, are smiths from the Showa-To period. Mind you... I'm extremely new to Nihonto, so I could be wrong, but from what I've seen and what I understand, this kozuka is probably from the Showa-To period. Quote
Guest nickn Posted August 1, 2009 Report Posted August 1, 2009 thanks brian but you are wrong gifu or noshu = mino an important area for sword production from from an early age in fact one of the original 5 gokaden Quote
Nobody Posted August 1, 2009 Report Posted August 1, 2009 thank you moriyama-sanany chance the mei is sho-shin? nick FYI; There is a kogatana whose mei writing is similar to the mei of yours, though the last smith name is different. viewtopic.php?f=1&t=5184&hilit=kiyonaga Quote
firebee1976 Posted August 1, 2009 Report Posted August 1, 2009 Oops... I was looking at all the wrong things all the wrong ways. Like I said... I'm still pretty new to this. However... I'm still guessing it's not shin-shinto because I can't find a Fujiwara Kanenaga that would do shin shinto work. However, there was a smith named Fujiwara Kanenaga from the mino province in the Kanbun period during the mid-late 1600s, which I believe is shinto period. The only other Fujiwara Kanenaga from that area I can find was a showa period smith, but he was a seki smith, so it doesn't make much sense for him to make a kozuka, unless it was just a hobby piece or something. Hope all of this helps you out. Quote
Brian Posted August 1, 2009 Report Posted August 1, 2009 Ko-gatana folks...not kozuka. Remember that most kogatana mei are gimei or dedication signatures. Not to say this one is...but most are. Brian 1 Quote
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