女性と刀——薙刀・懐剣の文化
Women and Swords: Naginata and Kaiken
The relationship between Japanese women and swords deepened with the rise of the warrior class. Naginata became the emblematic weapon of female warriors and noble ladies, while the kaiken served as both protective tool and symbol of feminine honor in the bridal trousseau.
Beschreibung
Female Warriors and the Naginata
The naginata, a curved-blade polearm, emerged as a monk-warrior and samurai weapon in the Heian period but increasingly became associated with women from the Nanbokuchō period onward. Its emphasis on technique and footwork over brute strength made it effective for women defending castles and households. The legendary Tomoe Gozen, consort of Minamoto no Yoshinaka, is recorded in the Azuma Kagami as fighting alongside mounted samurai during the Genpei War, cementing the naginata's association with female martial valor.
Naginata Blades and Smiths
Naginata blades were made by the same smiths producing tachi and tantō. Yamato-tradition schools (Tegai, Taima, Senjuin) were especially prolific producers for temple monk-warriors. Most surviving ancient naginata blades were later shortened into tachi or katana forms—called naginata-naoshi—making unaltered examples exceptionally rare. The signatures of the conversion are a distinctive taper from base to tip and shallow curvature beginning near the base.
The Kaiken: Bridal Sword
The kaiken (pocket dagger) was carried by noble and samurai women as a self-defense tool and symbol of honor. By the Edo period it became a mandatory element of the bridal trousseau in warrior households. Fine kaiken feature elaborate silk brocade bags, lacquerwork, and cloisonné mountings, while their blades bear Sanskrit carvings and kurikara motifs. The finest examples with imperial or daimyō provenance are designated National Treasures or Important Cultural Properties.
Modern Legacy
The Meiji government promoted naginata in girls' schools as a female martial art, creating a modern sports and educational tradition. The All-Japan Naginata Federation continues this living inheritance, and contemporary smiths still receive commissions for kaiken and naginata from female patrons.
Merkmale dieser Epoche
- Naginata-naoshi forms — converted polearm blades; identified by thin kasane at the base and dramatic taper toward the tip
- Kaiken as total artwork — blade quality combined with silk, lacquer, and cloisonné mountings create composite art objects
- Religious carvings predominant — Sanskrit, Fudō, and kurikara motifs especially common on female-oriented blades
- Strong provenance chains — bridal trousseau kaiken with genealogical records offer among the best-documented sword provenances