畠田守家
Hatakeda Moriye
Description
Hatakeda Moriye is one of the most accomplished swordsmiths of the mid-Kamakura period (ca. 1240–1280), representing the Hatakeda school of Bizen Province (modern Okayama Prefecture). He worked at the height of Bizen sword-making's golden age, contemporaneous with the Fukuoka Ichimonji school's greatest masters. Moriye's blades are distinguished by their exceptionally refined jihada — a tight, bright ko-itame with a luminous, almost milky quality rarely matched in Bizen work. His hamon is characterized by "koshi-no-hirai-ta choji" (wide-based clove pattern) with a rich, layered structure of nie, ashi, and yo that exemplifies Kamakura-era Bizen aesthetics at their finest. Several of Moriye's tachi are designated National Treasures or Important Cultural Properties, with examples held at the Tokugawa Art Museum and the Tokyo National Museum. His technical refinement influenced subsequent generations of Bizen smiths including Nagamitsu and Kagemitsu, cementing his place as a pivotal figure in the evolution of Bizen sword aesthetics.
Famous Works
- 太刀(国宝・徳川美術館)
- 太刀(重要文化財・東京国立博物館)