手掻包清
Tegai Kanekiyo
Description
Tegai Kanekiyo was a swordsmith of the mid to late Kamakura period (c. 1249–1305), active in Yamato Province (modern Nara Prefecture) and one of the central figures of the Tegai school — a major branch of the Yamato-den tradition. The Tegai school takes its name from a district near Tōdaiji temple in Nara, reflecting the school's deep connection to the great Buddhist institutions of the ancient capital. Kanekiyo's blades embody the distinctive Yamato-den aesthetic: masame-hada jihada (straight wood-grain pattern), predominantly suguha hamon with ko-midare, and a solemn, austere beauty quite unlike the more decorative schools. The masame hada — flowing parallel grain lines — gives Yamato blades their characteristic directness and spiritual severity, reflecting the ethos of the warrior monks and temple guardians who were their primary customers. The great Buddhist temples of Nara — Tōdaiji, Kōfukuji, and others — maintained large armed forces of monk-soldiers, creating sustained demand for quality swords. This religious military context gave Yamato-den swords a unique character: functional severity combined with spiritual gravity. The Tegai school, alongside the Taima, Shikkake, Hoshō, and Senjuin branches, represents the full breadth of the Yamato tradition. DATEKATANA presents Kanekiyo as a master of Yamato's austere beauty — blades that speak of the ancient capital's spiritual gravity.
Famous Works
- 太刀(重要文化財)