Title Forging Japanese Swords

  • Ishikawa
Topic(s):
Regional Specialties
Medium/Media of Use:
$SETTINGS_DB.mediaClassificationMap.get($item)
Text Length:
≤250 Words
FY Prepared:
2022
Associated Tourism Board:
Ishikawa Crafts and Cultural Heritage Digital Contents Promotion Council

日本刀の鍛造


日本刀は、湾曲した片刃の刃物で、非常に強い鋼と複雑な鍛え肌・地肌や刃文で知られている。1955年、日本刀づくりは重要無形文化財に指定された。


日本刀の特徴は、鍛錬と焼き入れの方法にある。原料は不純物の少ない砂鉄で、これを炭と混ぜて製錬し、鍛錬して玉鋼(たまはがね)と呼ばれる鋼を作る。玉鋼の塊を何度も折り曲げ、打ち延ばすことで不純物を取り除き、炭素を均一に分散させることで、高品質な多層鋼に仕上げる。刃を熱し、焼き入れする前に粘土を混ぜたものを刃先以外のすべての部分に塗ることで、全く独自の刃文をつけることができる。最後に刃を磨き上げ、なかご(柄の内側に納まる部分)に鍛冶職人の銘を刻む。


それ以前の刀も存在するが、真の日本刀の起源は平安時代(794-1185)の太刀と呼ばれる長く湾曲した刀の出現にある。15世紀から16世紀にかけて、太刀はカタナと呼ばれるやや短い刀に取って代わられ、主流となった。しかし、一口に「日本刀」といっても、時代のニーズやスタイルに応じて、短刀から長刀までさまざまな刀が生まれた。


17世紀から19世紀にかけて、加賀藩(現・石川県・富山県)の前田藩主は、刀鍛冶や鞘・鍔などの刀装具の職人を引き寄せた。前田家の支援のもと、職人たちは技術を磨き、武士の上位階級に精巧な刀や華麗な装飾を施した刀を供給することができた。

Forging Japanese Swords


Japanese swords, or nihontō, are curved, single-edged blades known for their exceptionally strong steel and complex grain and temper patterns. Their making was designated an Important Intangible Cultural Heritage in 1955.


Japanese swords are distinguished by the way they are forged and tempered. The raw material is a low-impurity iron sand that is mixed with charcoal, smelted, and forge-welded into a type of steel called tamagahane. Tamagahane blocks are repeatedly folded and hammered out to remove impurities and evenly distribute the carbon, resulting in high-quality, multilayered steel. A clay mixture is applied everywhere but the cutting edge before the blade is heated and quenched, which gives it a completely unique temper pattern. Finally, the blade is polished and the smith’s signature inscribed on the tang (the part of the blade that fits inside the hilt).


Although earlier swords exist, the origin of true nihontō is the emergence of long, curved blades called tachi during the Heian period (794–1185). Tachi were supplanted by a slightly shorter style called katana as the dominant form in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. However, the term nihontō covers a wide variety of both short and long blades that emerged at different times in response to the needs and styles of the era.


During the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries, the Maeda lords of Kaga domain (now Ishikawa and Toyama Prefectures) attracted many skilled swordsmiths, as well as artisans who crafted sword components, like scabbards and hand guards. Under the Maedas’ patronage, they were able to pursue and refine their crafts, supplying elite members of the warrior class with finely wrought swords and ornate fittings.

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