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Tokyo Nihonto

Antique Japanese Katana Sword signed Jumyo with Reddish Koshirae

Antique Japanese Katana Sword signed Jumyo with Reddish Koshirae

Regular price $3,500.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $3,500.00 USD
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USA SHIPPING ⚠️ From 9 oct. 2025

Order, Japan Post (EMS) has temporarily suspended all commercial deliveries to the United States.

As a result, we are now shipping through alternative private carriers. Unfortunately, these services are considerably more expensive. Therefore, we kindly ask our U.S. customers to contribute a portion of the shipping cost — $200 per order.

Please note that delivery times will also be longer, as we must obtain a custom shipping quote from the carrier for each sword. We currently estimate a 3–4 month delivery window.

We sincerely appreciate your patience, understanding, and continued support during this time.

  • Signature (Mei): 壽命 Jumyō (Edo-period attribution)
  • Swordsmith: Jumyō (also known as Toshinaga)
  • School / Tradition: Jumyō School — Mino-den tradition (Yamato origins)
  • Period / Province: Edo Period / Mino Province (modern-day Gifu Prefecture)
  • Mounting: Period koshirae — nashiji-nuri saya, dragon-motif fuchi-kashira in shakudō with gilt, mokko-gata iron tsuba
  • Blade Length (Nagasa): 69 cm
  • Curvature (Sori): 1.75 cm — elegant koshizori
  • Mekugi-ana: 2
  • Shape: Shinogi-zukuri, chu-kissaki, moderate mihaba with refined fukura
  • Hamon: Notare-gunome with togari — classic Mino-den character with nie along the habuchi
  • Boshi: Ko-maru turnback with calm continuation of the hamon into the kissaki

This distinguished Katana bears the signature of Jumyō (壽命), one of the most celebrated and auspiciously named lineages in the entire history of Japanese swordsmanship. The name Jumyō — meaning longevity or life span — was no idle choice; swords bearing this mei were traditionally offered as ceremonial gifts among daimyō and the highest echelons of samurai society, prized precisely because their name carried an invocation of long life and prosperity. Measuring 69 cm with a graceful 1.75 cm koshizori, this blade presents the refined geometry of the Edo-period Mino tradition: a well-proportioned shinogi-zukuri form with a composed chu-kissaki, clean shinogi-ji, and a mune that tapers with understated elegance toward the point.

The hamon displays the unmistakable hallmarks of Mino-den differential hardening: a rhythmic notare-gunome undulation punctuated by togari — the characteristic pointed protrusions that became synonymous with Mino mastery — riding along a bright, active habuchi enriched with nie crystals. Viewed along the blade's length, the hamon moves with confident vitality, neither overwrought nor timid, reflecting the controlled hand of a smith working within a tradition refined over centuries. The ji exhibits the fine, close-grained steel surface that is the hallmark of properly folded Mino-den tamahagane, with hints of shirake utsuri — the ghostly white reflection in the body of the blade that connects this work to its ancient Yamato roots.

The boshi in the kissaki follows through cleanly with a composed ko-maru turnback, the hamon narrowing gracefully to meet the fukura of the point. The kissaki itself is a well-formed chu-kissaki — neither too elongated nor too compact — with a keen, sweeping profile that speaks to both aesthetic balance and practical cutting geometry. The two mekugi-ana in the nakago confirm the blade's age and authentic history of use, while the yasurime file marks on the tang retain their period character beneath the clearly inscribed zaimei.

This katana represents the Jumyō school at its most dignified — a blade forged not for the chaos of the Sengoku battlefield, but for the refined world of Edo-period samurai culture, where a sword's name, provenance, and aesthetic merit were as significant as its cutting ability.

Koshirae Details

The sword retains a complete period koshirae of exceptional character, unified by a sophisticated dragon motif that runs from kashira to fuchi with remarkable artistic coherence. The saya is lacquered in a warm, deep reddish-brown nashiji-nuri (pear-skin lacquer) finish — a technique that suspends fine metallic particles within layered urushi to produce a rich, textured surface reminiscent of autumn embers. The lacquer shows honest age and a beautiful, deep patina that only centuries of careful stewardship can produce. Black horn koiguchi and kurikata fittings accent the saya with restrained elegance, and the overall form follows the natural curvature of the blade within.

The fuchi-kashira (collar and pommel) constitute the most spectacular element of this koshirae. Both pieces are worked in shakudō — the refined copper-gold alloy prized by Edo-period metalworkers for its deep, lustrous black patina — and feature a dramatic gold dragon in high relief, depicted amid swirling karakusa clouds with exceptional sculptural detail. The dragon's scales, claws, and fierce expression are rendered with the confident chiseling of a skilled kinko (metalworking) artisan. The kashira shows the dragon coiling across the entire face of the cap with gilt highlights that have aged to a rich, warm gold, while the fuchi continues the motif with a second dragon emerging from clouds, the two pieces forming a thematic narrative that encircles the hand of the bearer.

The tsuba is a solid mokko-gata (four-lobed) iron guard with a robust, hammered tsuchime surface texture, its deep black patina and honest, weighty construction speaking to functional Edo-period taste. Three hitsu-ana — the central nakago-ana flanked by kozuka and kogai hitsu — are neatly formed, and the overall surface carries the aged patina of genuine period use. The simplicity of this iron tsuba provides a powerful visual counterpoint to the ornate drama of the fuchi-kashira.

The tsuka is wrapped in tightly braided black silk tsuka-ito in the classic hishi-maki diamond pattern over white same (rayskin), the nodules of the same catching the light through each diamond aperture. Set within the wrapping are a pair of menuki depicting botanical forms — a blossoming flower on one side, a foliate spray on the other — rendered in shibuichi with selective gilt detail. The combination of matte dark silk, luminous same, and the warm glint of the gilt menuki creates a handle of considered elegance entirely appropriate to the sword's aristocratic pedigree.

Swordsmith Background: The Jumyō Lineage

Jumyō (壽命), also known as Toshinaga, heads a swordsmiths' lineage whose origins trace to Yamato Province (modern Nara Prefecture) — the ancient heartland of Japanese sword culture and home to the revered Yamato-den traditions. During the Kamakura period, the school relocated to Mino Province, where it became integrated into the thriving and technically innovative Mino sword-forging world. This migration proved enormously consequential: the Yamato spiritual and technical heritage fused with the pragmatic, battle-proven Mino approach to produce a school of uncommon versatility and longevity.

The school's name — meaning life span or longevity — was imbued with profound auspiciousness in samurai culture. A Jumyō sword presented as a gift carried not merely material value but a symbolic wish for the recipient's long life and enduring prosperity. This made Jumyō blades among the most sought-after ceremonial gifts exchanged between daimyō households and great samurai families throughout the Edo period, elevating the school to a status that transcended mere weapon production. The tradition continued with unbroken vitality from the Kamakura period through the close of the Edo era — a remarkable testament to the school's sustained quality and cultural relevance across nearly six centuries.

School History: Mino-den Tradition

The Mino-den (Mino tradition) stands as one of the gokaden — the five great traditions of Japanese sword forging — and is distinguished above all by its characteristic togari-ba: pointed, angular protrusions rising from the hamon that give Mino blades their instantly recognizable visual signature. Rooted in the ancient Yamato-den of the late Kamakura period (circa 1280–1330), the Mino tradition was transplanted southward and transformed into something distinctly its own — more dynamic, more geometrically assertive, and perfectly adapted to the demands of an age of constant warfare.

Mino-den flourished spectacularly during the Sengoku Jidai (Warring States period, 1467–1615), when the province's geographical position proved as decisive as its swordsmiths' skill. Mino Province stood at the crossroads of Japan's most powerful domains: Akechi Mitsuhide controlled Mino itself, Oda Nobunaga ruled neighboring Owari, and Tokugawa Ieyasu governed adjacent Suruga. These titans of the age and their armies demanded swords in quantities no other tradition could match, and the Mino smiths answered with a combination of prolific output and consistently high quality. The proximity to the Kanto–Kyoto corridor — the main theater of Japan's defining conflicts — ensured that Mino blades reached every corner of the country.

By the Edo period, the battlefield urgency had given way to a new kind of demand: swords as objects of refined cultural expression, heirlooms, and ceremonial gifts. Mino-den adapted with characteristic resilience. Smiths like the Jumyō lineage maintained the tradition's technical hallmarks — the togari hamon, the crisp nie, the controlled jitetsu — while refining their aesthetic sensibilities to meet the elevated expectations of a peacetime samurai culture that prized beauty and provenance as highly as cutting ability. The tradition continued unbroken until the Meiji Restoration brought the age of the samurai sword to a close.

This Jumyō katana stands as an authentic embodiment of that enduring legacy — a blade whose very name was an invocation of life, forged within a tradition that itself proved remarkably long-lived, now offered to those who understand that a great Japanese sword is never merely a weapon but a concentrated expression of an entire civilization's highest aspirations.

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Customs and Taxes

・Import duties, taxes and charges are not included in the item price or shipping charges. These charges are the buyer’s responsibility.
・Please check with your country’s customs office to determine what these additional costs will be prior to bidding/buying.
・These charges are normally collected by the delivering freight (shipping) company or when you pick the item up - do not confuse them for additional shipping charges.

Shipping and Return

  • Swords are shipped from Tokyo, Japan. We manage all the procedures to export the sword.
  • You can't return sword to Japan because procedures are too strict.
  • We work with a shipping company that have experience with Nihonto so you don't have to worry.
  • Please check the rules of your country before importing the sword. We do not take any responsibility, including (not limited to) refund, due to the above reasons.
  • We can NOT cancel an order once, we already applied for the export authorization. As this document is made to customer name.

We have shipped authentic Japanese swords to the USA, UK, Canada, Mexico, Germany, France, Hong Kong, and Australia. If you don’t live in these countries and like to order, please contact us first before purchasing. We normally ship by EMS (Express Mail Service) provided by Japan Post.

If you live in the UK, please contact us BEFORE order.

Export Procedure (We manage it)

・All our swords are registered in the Agency for Cultural Affairs as artwork and The Board of Education(Cultural properties protection Committee); therefore each sword has the registration card, issued by the Board of Education.
・After receiving the full payment of the items,we return the registration card and get the permission from Ministry of Cultural Affairs to export the swords legally from Japan. It will take about 1 to 3 months for that step.
・After the receiving the permission, we will inform you by email and send the items immediately.

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