Important Japanese Swords and Armour from the Paul L. Davidson Collection
Important Japanese Swords and Armour from the Paul L. Davidson Collection
Lot Closed
March 25, 03:40 PM GMT
Estimate
12,000 - 14,000 USD
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Description
A katana
Signed Hizen no kuni Tadayoshi (Tadayoshi [8th generation] from Hizen Province)
Edo period, 19th century
Sugata [configuration]: shinogi-zukuri, iori-munei, tori-zori, chu-kissaki
Kitae [forging pattern]: konuka hada mixed with itame in places
Hamon [tempering pattern]: suguha in fine jinie
Boshi [tip]: komaru-boshi with turnback
Nakago [tang]: ubu, ha-agari kurijiri, single mekugi-ana
Habaki [collar]: single clad, copper
In shirasaya [plain wood scabbard]
Koshirae [mount]: the itomaki no tachi koshirae with lower section in brown lacquer, upper section in striated gold and black lacquer design, iron fittings, chased and engraved fuchi-kashira with crests of chrysanthemum on swirling waters (kikusui), iron tachi tsuba, the shakudo and gilt menuki in the form of stylised arrowheads (yanone)
Nagasa [length from kissaki to machi]: 73 cm., 28¾ in.
Saki-haba [width at the yokote]: 2.9 cm., 1⅛ in.
Moto-haba [width at the machi]: 3.1 cm., 1¼ in.
Accompanied by a certificate of registration as Tokubetsu Hozon Token [Sword Especially Worthy of Preservation], no. 146507 issued by the Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyokai [Society for the Preservation of the Japanese Art Sword], dated Heisei 13 (2001); with further papers
Art of the Samurai: The Paul L. Davidson Collection (New York, 2023), p. 59.