長船の工房制度と刀剣産地の形成
The Osafune Workshop System and Formation of Sword Production Centers
Osafune in Bizen Province (modern Setouchi City, Okayama) became Japan's largest sword production center during the late Kamakura and Nanbokuchō periods, achieving this dominance through an organized workshop system and producing master smiths including Mitsutada, Nagamitsu, Kagemitsu, and Kanemitsu.
Description
Osafune in Bizen Province became Japan's dominant sword production center from the late Kamakura through Nanbokuchō periods, leveraging the Yoshii River's sand iron deposits and transport advantages. The Osafune school under Mitsutada, Nagamitsu, Kagemitsu, and Kanemitsu achieved a workshop-based production system that could fulfill large-scale orders while maintaining high quality. The Nanbokuchō period's demand for long odachi further stimulated organized production. Nagamitsu's refined nioi-deki hamon and Kagemitsu's distinctive inverse-choji patterns influenced swordsmiths across Japan for centuries. The Osafune lineage continued as the 'Late Osafune' (Sue-Osafune) tradition into the Muromachi period.
Caracteristiques de cette epoque
- Refined nioi-deki hamon with neat, dense choji patterns characteristic of Bizen-den
- Organized workshop system enabling both high quality and large-scale production
- Geographic advantage: sand iron deposits, charcoal forests, and river transport
- Kagemitsu's distinctive saka-choji (reverse-choji) hamon as a technical landmark
- Dominant role in producing large odachi during the Nanbokuchō warfare period