本阿弥家と刀剣鑑定の伝統
The Hon'ami Family and the Sword Appraisal Tradition
The Hon'ami family served as the official sword polishers and appraisers to successive rulers from the Muromachi period onward, establishing the ori-gami certification system that defined the standards of sword valuation throughout the Edo period and beyond.
Beschreibung
The Hon'ami family served as the shogunate's official sword polishers and appraisers from the Muromachi through Meiji periods. Their ori-gami (folded paper certificate) system established standardized valuations of blades by smith, period, and assessed gold value, becoming the supreme authority in the Edo-period sword market. Blades with Hon'ami ori-gami commanded significantly higher prices. The Kyōhō Meibutsu-chō, a shogunate-commissioned catalog of famous swords, drew heavily on Hon'ami appraisals and remains a foundational reference. Hon'ami Kōetsu, the most celebrated family member, combined the family's appraisal tradition with polymathic artistic achievement in calligraphy, ceramics, and lacquerwork. The modern NBTHK sword certification system is the institutional heir to the Hon'ami tradition.
Merkmale dieser Epoche
- Ori-gami certificates standardizing smith attribution, period, and monetary valuation
- Integrated family profession combining polishing, ritual purification, and appraisal
- Contribution to the Kyōhō Meibutsu-chō as the defining catalog of famous ancient swords
- Shogunate-sanctioned authority as official appraisers to the Tokugawa
- Hon'ami Kōetsu's synthesis of sword culture with broader artistic achievement