長船長光
Osafune Nagamitsu
Auch bekannt als: Nagamitsu; Grand Master of Bizen Osafune at Its Peak; Colossus of Mid-Kamakura
Beschreibung
Bizen Osafune Nagamitsu is the supreme master of Bizen Osafune at its peak — the son and successor of Mitsutada, the school's founder, who took his father's already-great achievement and expanded it into a tradition of unmatched scale and variety. Working through the second half of the 13th century and into the early 14th, Nagamitsu produced tachi and tantō in vast numbers, each displaying the characteristic Osafune features — vivid billowing hamon with ko-midare, deft combinations of chōji and gunome, and a bright utsuri in the dense mokume-itame jigane — while incorporating his own distinctive tendency toward complexity and visual richness. His dated masterpiece at the Tokyo National Museum (1293) was made just after the Mongol invasions, in the most militarily charged moment of the Kamakura era. Multiple National Treasures, and the definitive name in Bizen Osafune.
Legenden & Geschichten
The two Mongol invasions of 1274 and 1281 shattered the conventions of samurai warfare. When Japanese warriors found their traditional one-on-one mounted dueling ineffective against massed enemy formations, exploding shells, and poisoned arrows, Japan's entire weapons culture was forced to adapt. Nagamitsu's workshop was at the center of this transformation: demand surged for longer-pointed thrusting tachi, practical short blades, and weapons that could be produced in large quantities without sacrificing quality. Nagamitsu met this challenge while maintaining Bizen artistry at its highest. His dated masterwork of 1293 — twelve years after the second invasion, in a country still preparing for a third — carries the energy of that historical moment: a society under pressure producing its greatest art. His son Kagemitsu and grandson Kanemitsu extended his legacy into the Nanbokuchō period, making the Nagamitsu–Kagemitsu–Kanemitsu lineage the most celebrated three-generation chain in all of Japanese sword history.