来国次の太刀
Rai Kunitsugu Tachi
Auch bekannt als: Rai Kunitsugu; one of the supreme works of the Rai school
Beschreibung
Rai Kunitsugu was one of the foremost smiths of the Rai school — the great Yamashiro-province lineage based in Kyoto that is one of the four foundational traditions (along with Bizen, Yamato, and Sōshū) of classical Japanese swordmaking. Working in the late Kamakura to early Nanbokuchō period, Kunitsugu is counted alongside Rai Kunitoshi and Rai Kunimitsu as one of the three supreme masters of the Rai tradition. The Rai school's defining character — a pristine, tightly packed itame jigane alive with fine ji-nie, a dignified hamon of gentle suguha or ko-midare with refined activity — reflects the aesthetic world of Kyoto's court culture, where the school was based. Among the Rai masters, Kunitsugu is distinguished by a particularly varied range of hamon expression, extending from classic quiet suguha to energetic gunome and chōji patterns that show broader influence, earning him the reputation of the most versatile of the Rai masters. His tantō are especially celebrated, with several designated National Treasures or Important Cultural Properties held in the Tokyo and Kyoto National Museums. The Rai school as a whole was the preferred supplier of swords to the imperial court, Kyoto's nobility, and the Ashikaga shōgunate — their blades embodying the particular refinement of capital culture that distinguished Yamashiro-den from the more robust traditions of the provinces.
Legenden & Geschichten
The legend of the Rai school is inseparable from the legend of Kyoto itself — the imperial capital for over a thousand years, the city where the court culture of the Heian period created aesthetic sensibilities that remain distinctively Japanese. The smiths of the Rai tradition worked within an environment saturated by the most refined artistic culture in Japan: the poetry of the imperial anthologies, the garden aesthetics of Buddhist temples, the austere elegance of the Zen arts that came to dominate from the Kamakura period onward. When you look at a Rai Kunitsugu blade — the crystalline clarity of the jigane, the quiet depth of the suguha hamon, the dignified proportions of the tachi curve — you are looking at steel that has absorbed the aesthetic philosophy of that environment. In the Muromachi period, the Ashikaga shōguns who patronized Nō theater, the tea ceremony, and ink-wash painting also chose Rai-school blades for their ceremonial swords — a confluence of aesthetic judgments that recognized something in the Rai tradition that was congruent with all the other arts of refined Japanese culture. Kunitsugu, as one of the three supreme Rai masters, stands at the center of this tradition. His willingness to vary his expression — to move from the classic Rai suguha to more dynamic gunome and chōji patterns — reflects the same creative ambition that drove his contemporaries in poetry and painting to explore the boundaries of their received traditions while remaining rooted in classical form.