enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Japanese swords in fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_swords_in_fiction

    The most common depiction, especially in the Western world, of the Katana is a weapon of unparalleled power, often bordering on the physically impossible. Katana are often depicted as being inherently "superior" to all other weapons possessing such qualities as being impossibly light, nigh-unbreakable and able to cut through nearly anything.

  3. List of fictional swords - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fictional_swords

    SPD practice Katana: A basic katana for practice. Shadow Saber : The personal blade of the Shadow Ranger. Excelsior : A sword sought by Thrax, it was held by a female statue that eventually came to life after seeing the determination of the then-powerless Operation Overdrive Rangers and deemed them worthy of wielding the sword.

  4. Katana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katana

    The katana belongs to the nihontō family of swords, and is distinguished by a blade length (nagasa) of more than 2 shaku, approximately 60 cm (24 in). [9] Katana can also be known as dai or daitō among Western sword enthusiasts, although daitō is a generic name for any Japanese long sword, literally meaning "big sword". [10]

  5. Also, if I can point out that "katana" refers to how you wear it, technically speaking. -JD On 4), I wrote a new section about works of fiction and katana with minimal informations intending to expand it into a full article. Because katana appears in so many fictions including video games, I think it deserves an article solely dedicated to it.

  6. The Book of Five Rings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Book_of_Five_Rings

    The main difference that Musashi notes between the Ichi School and other strategists and schools is that other schools do not teach the "broader" meaning of strategy. There is a strategy above sword-fencing: "Some of the world's strategists are concerned only with sword-fencing, and limit their training to flourishing the long sword and ...

  7. Musashi (novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musashi_(novel)

    It is a fictionalized account of the life of Miyamoto Musashi, author of The Book of Five Rings and arguably the most renowned Japanese swordsman who ever lived.. The novel has been translated into English by Charles S. Terry, with a foreword by Edwin O. Reischauer, published by Kodansha International under ISBN 4-7700-1957-2.

  8. Sword - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sword

    The Japanese katana, wakizashi and tantō are carried by some infantry and officers in Japan and other parts of Asia and the kukri is the official melee weapon for Nepal. Other swords in use today are the sabre , the scimitar , the shortsword and the machete .

  9. 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.