Swords in an Era of Peace — How Swords Transformed During the Edo Period
The Edo period (1603–1868) was Japan's longest era of peace. After Sekigahara, large-scale battles essentially ceased, and the warrior class transformed from "soldiers" to "bureaucrats." This change profoundly altered Japanese swords' role. Originally battlefield weapons, swords deepened throughout Edo into status symbols, spiritual icons, and art objects.
The Shift "From Weapon to Symbol"
Before Edo, Japanese swords were first and foremost practical weapons. Cutting performance, durability, and handling took priority over decoration or aesthetics. In Edo, however, battlefield use virtually disappeared, with sword draws limited to duels, vendettas, and rare incidents.
Under these conditions, swords changed from "battlefield tools" to "symbols of warrior status." The Tokugawa shogunate strictly stratified society, designating "sword-wearing" as a warrior privilege. Warriors were required to wear a pair of swords (daisho) at all times, serving as proof of their status.
Wearing swords was a social declaration: "I am a warrior." Sword quality, decoration, and formality expressed household lineage and rank. This cultural shift largely shaped Edo sword culture.
Shinto and Shinshinto Smithing Cultures
Edo swords divide into "shinto" and "shinshinto" — not merely chronological categories but reflections of smithing philosophy and technical change.
### Shinto Period (approximately 1596–1751)
Shinto smiths aimed to recreate pre-Sengoku koto while developing flashier styles reflecting peacetime aesthetics. Masters worked across Edo, Osaka, and Kyoto: Kotetsu, Nagasone Kotetsu, Horikawa Kunihiro, and Hizen Tadayoshi emerged.
Shinto features include vivid hamon (gunome, choji, ogunome), clear jigane, and ornamental finishing. Unlike koto's rustic strength, these works pursued refinement and technique.
### Shinshinto Period (approximately 1751–1876)
Shinshinto went further in koto revival. Suishinshi Masahide advanced the "koto revival theory," inspiring research and reconstruction of Kamakura–Nanbokucho techniques. Representative smiths include Masahide, Minamoto Kiyomaro, and Taikei Naotane.
Shinshinto went beyond shinto technical flashiness toward bolder, more heroic styling. In an era not expecting battle, these smiths paradoxically attempted to revive "swords useful on battlefields" as art.