Meiji Restoration and the Sword Crisis — How Japanese Swords Survived the Haitōrei
The 1876 Haitōrei (Sword Abolishment Edict) marked one of the gravest crises in Japanese sword history. Overnight, swords — the very symbol of the warrior class — became "illegal weapons," shaking sword culture to its roots. This article follows the fate of swords before and after the Meiji Restoration, and how Japanese swords overcame this crisis.
Background of the Haitōrei
After the Meiji Restoration (1868), the new government pushed rapid modernization and Westernization. As part of this, warrior privileges were dismantled, creating "commoners" as members of a modern nation-state. Key measures included Hanseki Hokan (1869), abolition of han (1871), Chitsuroku Shobun (stipend disposition), and the introduction of universal conscription.
In this sweeping reform, the warrior symbol of "sword-wearing" also came under attack. The 1871 Sanpatsu Datto Decree liberalized sword-wearing. Many former warriors still carried swords, however, and warrior culture lingered. Finally, the 1876 Haitōrei fully banned sword-wearing for civilians except police and military.
Smith Closures and Economic Blow
The Haitōrei dealt a fatal blow to sword smiths. With warrior demand gone and new orders virtually nil, smithies across the country closed.
Mass-production centers like Bizen Osafune and Mino Seki were no exception; centuries-old smithing industries collapsed. Many smiths transitioned to making farm tools, kitchen knives, or railroad parts, and while they applied their skills, they could never recover former glory.
Particularly devastating was apprenticeship-based skill transmission. Techniques passed master-to-apprentice for generations lost their transmission context with demand's disappearance, and precious knowledge was rapidly lost.
Mass Outflow of Swords
During the Haitōrei chaos, enormous numbers of Japanese swords were disposed of, sold off, or exported abroad. Causes include:
Economic hardship: Many samurai who lost stipends sold heirloom swords for daily survival. Buyers were often antique dealers and foreigners, and transactions frequently occurred at rock-bottom prices.
Changed values: "The sword is the warrior's soul" faded under new rational and modern pressures. Some discarded swords as mere "old weapons."
Outflow abroad: Foreigners visiting Meiji Japan (diplomats, merchants, travelers) took home vast numbers of cheap Japanese swords. Many swords in Western museums and private collections today trace to this period.