富田江
Tomita-Gō
Also known as: Tomita-Gō; one of the Maeda Clan's Gō blades
Description
Tomita-Gō is a katana attributed to the legendary smith Gō Yoshihiro of Etchū Province (present-day Toyama Prefecture), who worked in the late Kamakura to early Nanbokuchō period (early 14th century). Gō Yoshihiro is among the most enigmatic and celebrated smiths in Japanese sword history — his surviving works are extraordinarily few, yet each is considered a supreme masterpiece. His style belongs to the Sōshū-den tradition pioneered by Masamune and his circle, characterized by vivid complex jigane with strong nie activity, fluid nie lines (kinsuji, sunagashi), and wild energetic hamon that set his work apart from any other school. Tomita-Gō passed through the hands of several powerful lords before becoming one of the treasured named swords (meibutsu) of the Maeda clan, lords of the great Kaga domain (one million koku), who maintained one of Japan's finest sword collections. The 'Gō group' — famous Gō Yoshihiro blades with nicknames containing the character for 'Gō' (江) — were largely assembled by Toyotomi Hideyoshi, whose connoisseurship of Yoshihiro's work helped establish the smith's supreme reputation, and were subsequently distributed among Japan's great daimyo houses after Hideyoshi's death. Now held by the Maeda Ikutokukai foundation in Tokyo, Tomita-Gō is designated an Important Cultural Property.
Legends & Stories
The legend surrounding Gō Yoshihiro centers on his mysterious relationship with the great Masamune of Kamakura. Tradition includes Yoshihiro among the 'Ten Great Students of Masamune' (Masamune Jittetsu) — the circle of master smiths said to have studied under the greatest swordsmith who ever lived. If true, the young Etchū smith would have traveled from northern Japan to Kamakura to absorb the revolutionary Sōshū-den techniques at their source, then carried them home to produce work that in some eyes surpasses even the master. The legend is unverifiable, but the deep stylistic kinship between Yoshihiro's work and the Sōshū tradition is undeniable — making the 'disciple who became the equal of his teacher' narrative irresistible to those who study these blades. Tomita-Gō, as one of the few confirmed Gō Yoshihiro works with a traceable provenance, carries this legend in its steel: a blade forged by a smith who may have learned from the greatest master of the age, preserved through centuries by Japan's wealthiest outside lord, and still speaking today through the fire-bright nie of its hamon.