籠手切江
Kotegiri-Nakamura
Aussi connu sous le nom de: Kotegiri; the Gauntlet-Cutter Aoe blade
Description
Kotegiri-Nakamura ('Gauntlet-Cutter, Nakamura transmission') is a wakizashi of the Aoe school from Bitchū Province (modern western Okayama Prefecture), dating to the Kamakura period (13th century). The name 'kotegiri' — literally 'gauntlet-cutter' — records the sword's origin as a weapon that cut through an opponent's kote, the armored gauntlet protecting the forearm and hand, a piece of armor difficult to penetrate with a standard cutting stroke. This naming convention, where a blade is remembered by what it cut, places Kotegiri-Nakamura in the long tradition of Japanese swords whose practical use was legendary enough to attach to the object permanently. The Aoe school stands as the representative tradition of Bitchū-den — one of the Five Classical Traditions (Gokaden) of Japanese swordmaking — and is recognizable above all by the unique visual phenomena in its jigane: 'kuro-nagare' (black streaming lines) and 'miotsukushi' (channel-marker patterns, resembling aquatic plants), which arise from the particular tamahagane of Bitchū Province and the school's folding technique. The blade is designated an Important Cultural Property and was long held by the Nakamura family before passing to a private collection. It represents a rare surviving example of Aoe-school wakizashi work from the peak Kamakura period, preserved to a standard sufficient to demonstrate the full quality of Bitchū-den workmanship.
Légendes et récits
The name 'Kotegiri' carries within it a compressed record of a moment in battle — the moment when a short blade, wielded in close quarters, severed the armored gauntlet of an opponent and decided the outcome of a contest at the closest human distance. Japanese sword names that record what the blade cut ('kiri' = cutter) form one of the most direct naming traditions, collapsing the distance between the weapon's physical nature and its historical use into a single word. Alongside Heshikiri Hasebe (the 'Pressing Cutter'), Bone-biter Tōshirō (Honebami), and the Dragonfly Cutter Tonbogiri, Kotegiri belongs to a group of named blades whose identities are inseparable from acts of extreme cutting. What makes this wakizashi remarkable is that the cutting event it commemorates was not a symbolic or legendary act — cutting a ghost, cutting a Buddhist statue, cutting through supernatural space — but a perfectly mundane act of battlefield violence: one armored man cutting through the arm-armor of another. The Aoe school jigane, with its streaming black lines and water-grass patterns, gives the blade an aesthetic character that stands in quiet contrast to the violence its name records — Bitchū's watery, poetic surface texture housing a weapon that earned its name in the brutal close-quarters fighting of the Kamakura warrior class. Now preserved as an Important Cultural Property in a private collection descended from the Nakamura family, Kotegiri-Nakamura is one of those blades whose survival across eight centuries of Japanese history is itself a kind of miracle — a fragment of the Kamakura battlefield preserved in iron and steel.