Tokyo Nihonto
Antique Japanese Katana with Seated Sages Iron Tsuba and Suguha Hamon, Mumei, Edo Period
Antique Japanese Katana with Seated Sages Iron Tsuba and Suguha Hamon, Mumei, Edo Period
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USA SHIPPING ⚠️ From 9 oct. 2025
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): 無銘 Mumei (unsigned)
- Attribution: Mumei — school unattributed
- Period / Province: Edo Period (1603–1868) / Kyoto Prefecture (registered)
- Mounting: Period koshirae — iron maru-gata tsuba with two seated sages in taka-bori relief and gold zōgan accents, matched gilt brass fuchi-kashira with kiku decoration, black ito tsuka-maki over samegawa
- Blade Length (Nagasa): 68.0 cm
- Curvature (Sori): 2.0 cm
- Mekugi-ana: 2
- Shape: Shinogi-zukuri, ko-kissaki
- Hamon: Suguha to very shallow notare, nioi-deki, refined and controlled nioiguchi
- Boshi: Ko-maru with calm turnback
- Nakago: Mumei, kijimomo shape, katte-sagari yasurime, 2 mekugi-ana, deep kuro-nugui patina
This antique Edo-period katana is a blade built on restraint. Mumei — unsigned — it carries no swordsmith's name, yet its geometry makes a clear statement: a smith working in the classical tradition, deliberately choosing form and discipline over the decorative elaboration that dominated much Shintō-period production. At 68.0 cm nagasa with a clean 2.0 cm sori and a controlled ko-kissaki, the proportions are those of a blade that takes its aesthetic cues from an earlier age — slender, precise, and serious.
The hamon runs as a refined suguha (straight temper line), transitioning at intervals into a very shallow notare — an understated undulation that never breaks into the busy activity of gunome or chōji. The nioiguchi (boundary line between hardened and unhardened steel) is tight and even, consistent with careful nioi-deki execution. This is not the hamon of a production blade — it is the choice of a smith who understood that a well-executed suguha is one of the most demanding demonstrations of forge control available, with no rhythmic complexity to conceal inconsistency.
The boshi in the kissaki turns back in ko-maru — a small, rounded return that closes the hamon with quiet elegance. The overall impression of the blade's temperline is one of classical Yamashiro-influenced aesthetics: schools operating in Kyoto and its orbit during the Edo period frequently looked back to the great Kamakura and early Muromachi suguha masters as their model, producing Shintō blades of considerable refinement in this vein.
The nakago (tang) is mumei, presenting a kijimomo shape with katte-sagari yasurime (file marks angling diagonally toward the cutting edge side), a filing style used across multiple Edo-period traditions. The deep kuro-nugui patina covering the nakago surface is entirely consistent with genuine Edo-period age — dark, stable, and unabraded. Two mekugi-ana are present and clearly visible, indicating the blade has been properly fitted in mountings across its history. The nakago reads as intact and unshortened.
Registered under Kyoto Prefecture toroku-sho 京都府 第 43673 号, this blade is fully documented for legal ownership and international export. It represents an authentic piece of Edo Japan — a period when swordsmanship became as much a philosophical and artistic discipline as a martial one, and when the finest smiths responded by producing blades of corresponding refinement.
Koshirae Details
The sword is presented in a complete period koshirae whose components form a coherent ensemble of considerable quality. The overall aesthetic is black and gold — disciplined in color, rich in detail.
The tsuba is a round (maru-gata) iron plate of good weight, its surface carrying a deep, stable black patina consistent with Edo-period iron work. Both faces are decorated in low-to-medium taka-bori relief (raised carving) with figural and botanical compositions highlighted by surviving gold zōgan (inlaid gold) accents. The omote face presents a naturalistic composition of pine branches, chrysanthemum (kiku) blossoms and foliage, with delicate gold-inlaid branch lines still vivid against the aged iron ground. The ura face carries the more ambitious scene: two elderly sages or scholars — robed figures seated or crouching, heads inclined forward in an attitude of contemplation or quiet conversation — set within a landscape of rocks, pine, and chrysanthemum, their surroundings accented with gold zōgan highlights. This subject — wise men at rest in a natural setting, unhurried and self-contained — belongs to a well-established iconographic tradition in Edo-period decorative arts, drawing on Chinese literati imagery and themes of scholarly withdrawal from worldly affairs. It is a subject that would have appealed strongly to a cultivated samurai patron of the period, for whom the pairing of martial discipline with Confucian learning was an ideal rather than a contradiction. Both hitsu-ana (openings for kozuka and kōgai utility tools) retain their oval metal plugs (sekigane). The quality of the narrative composition and the gold inlay technique point to a skilled Edo-period iron tsuba school — the work merits closer attribution by a fittings specialist.
The fuchi-kashira form a matched set in gilt brass, decorated with a dense, high-relief composition of chrysanthemum blossoms, leaves, and botanical elements. The kashira end cap is particularly striking: the carving is deeply worked and three-dimensional, with large kiku heads dominating a richly layered floral ground, and a small figural element — possibly a bird or creature — nestled within the composition. The warm gold tone of the brass reads handsomely against the black ito wrapping. The fuchi collar mirrors this vocabulary exactly, making the matched set visually seamless. These are not generic fittings — the quality of the casting and finishing reflects a specialist metalworker operating at the higher end of Edo-period production.
The tsuka (handle) is wrapped in black silk ito in the classic hishimaki (diamond) pattern, laid over samegawa (ray skin) that shows its natural cream-white tubercles through the wrap windows. The wrap retains its tension and geometric regularity. Two menuki ornaments are set beneath the braid: one in dark metal (shakudō or similar), presenting a small figural subject; the other in gold-toned metal in a kiku floral form — a pairing that echoes the botanical and figural vocabulary of the tsuba and kashira across the entire koshirae.
The habaki (blade collar) is a single-piece construction in gilt copper or brass, showing honest wear — the gilding partially abraded to reveal the base metal — consistent with genuine age and sustained use within these mountings.
On Mumei Blades
The absence of a swordsmith's signature — mumei (無銘) — is not a deficiency in a nihonto. It is simply a fact of the blade's history, and a common one. A significant proportion of surviving antique Japanese swords are unsigned, for reasons that range from the straightforward (the smith chose not to sign work intended for personal use or as gifts) to the circumstantial (an already-signed nakago shortened during a later re-mounting, removing the mei). In this blade's case, the nakago reads as intact, making the mumei an original condition rather than a consequence of alteration.
During the Edo period specifically, mumei blades were produced by smiths at every level of the craft — from provincial smiths supplying local samurai families to accomplished masters who simply preferred their work to speak without a name attached. The registered provenance under a Kyoto-prefecture toroku-sho is itself a meaningful document: Kyoto remained one of the most important centers of sword culture throughout the Edo period, with a long lineage of skilled smiths working in the city and surrounding region.
For the serious collector, a well-preserved mumei Edo-period blade in period koshirae offers something that signed works often cannot: an object that must be evaluated entirely on its physical merits — the quality of the steel, the discipline of the hamon, the integrity of the nakago — without the premium (or the risk) attached to a famous name. This katana earns its place on those terms.
The Suguha Tradition in Shintō Swords
By the Edo period, the suguha (straight temper line) had become a deliberate aesthetic and philosophical statement. The elaborately undulating hamon styles — gunome-midare, ō-midare, chōji — had reached their technical zenith and were the dominant commercial currency of Shintō swordsmiths competing for the attention of daimyō and wealthy samurai patrons. Against this backdrop, a smith who chose suguha was making a conscious choice to align with classical authority.
The great Yamashiro tradition — centered in the ancient capital of Kyoto — had built its Kamakura-period reputation on suguha above all other hamon styles. Schools such as the Awataguchi, the Rai, and their successors produced straight temper lines of extraordinary internal richness: fine nie, delicate sunagashi (brushed-steel activities within the hamon), and kinsuji (gold thread-like bright lines) that rewarded sustained examination under proper lighting. During the Edo period, smiths working in what became known as the Yamashiro-den revival — particularly those active in Kyoto and the Kinai region — returned to this straight-hamon ideal as a mark of refined taste and historical depth.
A suguha hamon on an Edo-period blade is, in this context, a signature of intent. It tells the informed viewer that the smith valued classical form, that he was technically capable of executing the most demanding and unforgiving of hamon styles, and that he was operating in a tradition with deep roots in Japan's sword-making history. This katana sits squarely within that tradition — measured, accomplished, and built to outlast fashion.
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- You can't return sword to Japan because procedures are too strict.
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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.