則光大太刀
Norimitsu Ōdachi
Aussi connu sous le nom de: Great Sword of Norimitsu; Kibitsu Shrine Great Sword; the Giant Sword
Description
The Norimitsu Ōdachi, enshrined at Kibitsu Jinja in Okayama City, is one of the largest surviving Japanese swords in existence — 377 cm (12.4 ft) in total length, with a blade of 228.8 cm (7.5 ft) and a weight of approximately 14.5 kg (32 lb). Forged by the Bizen Osafune smith Norimitsu during the late Muromachi period (post-Ōnin War, late 15th century), the sword far exceeds the limits of any practical weapon — its size and weight make it impossible to wield in combat — and was almost certainly crafted from the outset as a votive offering to the god of Kibitsu Shrine. Bizen Osafune (present-day Setouchi City, Okayama) was the greatest sword-producing center in Japanese history, with masters such as Mitsutada, Nagamitsu, Kagemitsu, and Kanemitsu defining the golden age of the craft. Norimitsu worked in the turbulent decades after the Ōnin War when demand for blades surged dramatically. The creation of a sword of this scale — requiring enlarged furnaces, multiple smiths working in coordination, and radically adapted heat-treatment techniques — represents the outer boundary of what the craft's technology could produce, and was understood as an act of supreme religious devotion: offering to the god the maximum possible expression of human skill. Kibitsu Jinja is one of Okayama's most ancient sanctuaries, dedicated to Ōkibitsu Hiko no Mikoto — the warrior deity credited with subduing the Kibi region, whose legend gave rise to the Momotarō (Peach Boy) folk tale. The Norimitsu Ōdachi stands today as the most dramatic possible illustration of the extremes of Japanese sword culture — a blade that transcends its function as a weapon to become a monument of faith, skill, and the aspiration to touch the divine.
Légendes et récits
The Norimitsu Ōdachi's legend begins with the god to whom it was offered. Kibitsu Jinja is dedicated to Ōkibitsu Hiko no Mikoto, the great warrior deity who, according to ancient tradition, was dispatched as one of the Four Road Generals during the reign of Emperor Sujin to subdue Ura — a fearsome demon-king of the Kibi region who terrorized the land with his iron-working power and supernatural strength. The battle between the god and Ura was legendary in its ferocity: Ura fired stones at the hero, who split them with his arrows; Ura turned into a fish and fled into the sea, and the hero became a cormorant to pursue him; until at last Ura was beheaded and his severed head was buried beneath the site of the shrine. The head, tradition says, is still alive, and its groans animate the 'ringing cauldron' ritual (naru-kama shinji) through which the shrine still offers oracular divination today. This myth of the divine warrior slaying the demon of Kibi is widely recognized as one of the principal sources of the Momotarō (Peach Boy) folktale — Japan's most beloved legend of a hero who defeats demons — making Kibitsu Jinja the mythological homeland of Japan's most famous story of righteous sword-bearing heroism. Into this sacred space — where a god-hero's battle with evil is physically present in the groaning earth beneath the shrine's floor — Norimitsu the smith offered the greatest sword ever made: a blade so enormous that no human could wield it, a weapon fit only for a god. The Norimitsu Ōdachi is thus more than a technical marvel; it is an act of faith — the maximum expression of human craft offered as tribute to divine power, the ultimate answer to the question of what a Japanese sword can be.