豊後国行平作太刀
Tachi by Yukihira of Bungo Province
Also known as: Yukihira; Bungo Yukihira
Description
Yukihira of Bungo Province (modern Ōita Prefecture, Kyushu) is among the oldest named swordsmiths in Japanese history, active during the late Heian period (11th–12th century) at the moment when the characteristic curved, single-edged Japanese tachi was crystallizing into its definitive form. His surviving blades — several of which are designated National Treasures — are among the earliest known examples of what we would recognize as fully-formed Japanese swords, placing Yukihira alongside Ko-Bizen Masatsune and Ko-Bizen Tomonari as a witness to the very birth of the art form. The tachi attributed to Yukihira display what scholars call 'Heian archaic style' (Heian koyō): a characteristic koshi-zori curvature (with the deepest curve near the base rather than the center), relatively simple hamon of straight or gently undulating form, and a jigane of itame grain that predates the more complex surface textures of later schools. This simplicity is not a limitation but an origin — the elegant economy of a form that had not yet been elaborated into the complexity of the Kamakura or Muromachi schools, still carrying the essential logic of the sword-as-sword in its purest expression. The Kyushu National Museum in Dazaifu holds important examples and has made Yukihira's work central to its presentation of the historical origins of Japanese sword culture in Kyushu.
Legends & Stories
Yukihira's surviving blades carry a quality that no later masterwork, however brilliant, can replicate: they are witnesses to a beginning. When we look at a blade by Mikazuki Munechika or Dōjigiri Yasutsuna — the supreme masterpieces of late Heian and early Kamakura swordmaking — we are looking at the apex of a tradition that had already reached self-awareness of its own formal possibilities. When we look at a Yukihira tachi, we are looking at that tradition in the moment before self-consciousness arrived, when the form was still discovering itself, when the curve of the blade and the simplicity of the hamon had the freshness of something being done for the first time. This 'archaic style' (koyō) is not a failure to achieve what came later; it is the expression of a different relationship between maker and form — an intimacy with the pure logic of the blade before that logic had been elaborated into the dazzling complexity of the Bizen, Yamashiro, or Sōshū traditions. That such blades survived at all across nine centuries of warfare, fire, flood, and social upheaval is remarkable enough. That several of them survive in condition sufficient to be designated National Treasures — the highest category of cultural preservation in Japan — is a kind of historical miracle. Yukihira of Bungo stands at the threshold of Japanese sword history as the smith who, somewhere in the hills of ancient Ōita, helped give definitive form to an object that would become Japan's most distinctive contribution to the world's traditions of edged weapons.