The Shinshinto Era: How the Tenpo Reforms and Revivalism Shaped a New Tradition of Sword Making
What Is the Shinshinto Era? The Late Edo Sword Renaissance
Japanese sword history is broadly divided into three eras: koto (old swords, up to approximately 1596), shinto (new swords, roughly 1596–1780), and shinshinto (new-new swords, roughly 1780–1876).
The defining characteristic of the shinshinto era is that, whereas the shinto era had pursued the aesthetic fashions of its own day, shinshinto swordsmiths consciously set out to return to the great swords of the past—particularly the masterworks of the Kamakura and Nanbokucho periods. This "revivalism" was not mere nostalgia; it was a deeply considered intellectual movement driven by the political and social anxieties of the age.
Historical Context: The Tenpo Reforms and an Age of Crisis
The shinshinto era coincides with a period of intense pressure on Japan from within and without.
External threats: From the late eighteenth century, Russian and British ships appeared with increasing frequency along Japan's coastlines. Incidents such as the Phaeton Affair of 1808—when a British warship entered Nagasaki harbor—drove home the urgency of coastal defense. The shogunate and individual domains were compelled to strengthen maritime defenses, and demand for functional swords began to rise again.
The Tenpo Reforms (1841–1843): Senior Councilor Mizuno Tadakuni's program of shogunal reform targeted sumptuary excess, social discipline, and fiscal reconstruction. In a social climate calling for austerity and a return to fundamentals, the sense among the samurai class that swords—as their spiritual pillar—deserved renewed reverence intensified.
The rise of sonnō-jōi thought: As Japan moved toward the upheavals of the late Edo period, the idea of returning to Japanese traditional values centered on the Emperor spread among warriors and intellectuals. Reverence for ancient swords resonated with this intellectual climate.
The Pioneer of Shinshinto: Suishinshi Masahide
The most important theoretical and practical pioneer of shinshinto revivalism was Suishinshi Masahide (1750–1825).
Masahide was born in Dewa Province (present-day Yamagata), moved to Edo, and after years of study published Tōken Bengi (Discourse on Swords, 1797), in which he criticized the aesthetic direction of the shinto era and called for a return to ancient methods. His central argument was that shinto smiths had sacrificed cutting performance and the quality of jigane in pursuit of decorative sophistication and visual flamboyance.