enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Nagamaki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nagamaki

    The nagamaki was a long sword with a blade that could be 60 cm (24 in) or more and a handle of about equal length to the blade. [3] The blade was single-edged, resembling a naginata blade, but the handle (tsuka) of the nagamaki was not a smooth-surfaced wooden shaft as in the naginata; it was made more like a katana hilt.

  3. Ōdachi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ōdachi

    One of the longest ōdachi is the Odachi Norimitsu with a total length of 377 cm (148 in). [3] It was forged by the Japanese master bladesmith Norimitsu Osafune in the former Bishū province in August 1446. [3] It is kept in the Yahiko jinja (弥彦神社) in the village of Yahiko, Nishikanbara District, Niigata Prefecture, Japan. [3]

  4. Tenka-Goken - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenka-Goken

    The Tenka-Goken (天下五剣, "Five [Greatest] Swords under Heaven") are a group of five Japanese swords. [1] Three are National Treasures of Japan, one an Imperial Property, and one a holy relic of Nichiren Buddhism. Among the five, some regard Dōjigiri as "the yokozuna of all Japanese swords" along with Ōkanehira (ja:大包平). [2]

  5. Hotarumaru - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hotarumaru

    The ōdachi was designated an Important Cultural Property of Japan (then-National Treasure) on December 14, 1931. [3] Since the end of World War II, however, it has been missing. [6] In 2015, Touken Ranbu fans raised ¥45 million through crowdfunding to construct a replica of the Hotarumaru. During the reconstruction, the Aso Shrine was ...

  6. List of National Treasures of Japan (crafts: swords) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_National_Treasures...

    Confiscated by the GHQ in the aftermath of World War II and subsequently lost, but re-discovered by chance in 1963 and returned to Terukuni shrine a year later by an American Dr. Walter Compton (owner of one of the greatest Japanese sword collection outside Japan, he returned Kunimune by himself and without seeking any compensation) ; curvature ...

  7. Iron sword, almost 9 feet long, unearthed at 1,700-year-old ...

    www.aol.com/news/iron-sword-almost-9-feet...

    Archaeologists in Nara City, Japan, came across the weapon along with other items alongside a coffin excavated at the site, officials said. Iron sword, almost 9 feet long, unearthed at 1,700-year ...

  8. Dōjigiri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dōjigiri

    The sword was forged in the 10-12th centuries by the swordsmith Hōki-no-Kuni Yasutsuna (伯耆国安綱). Dōjigiri (童子切, "Slayer of Shuten-dōji") is a tachi-type Japanese sword that has been identified as a National Treasure of Japan. [1] This sword is one of the "Five Swords Under Heaven" (天下五剣 Tenka-Goken).

  9. Nagasone Kotetsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nagasone_Kotetsu

    Perhaps one of the most famed Kotetsu blades was a fake: that of Kondō Isami, the commander of the late Edo-era patrol force called Shinsengumi.However, this sword was not a Kotetsu, but instead a sword made by the foremost smith of that era (known in Japanese swordmaking history as the shinshin-to era), Minamoto Kiyomaro, and bearing a forged Kotetsu signature made by master signature-faker ...