美濃伝
Mino Tradition
The Mino tradition, rooted in Gifu Prefecture, grew from Shizu Kaneuji's transplanted Sōshū technique into a major production center. During the Sengoku period, Seki and other towns mass-produced practical swords that armed the armies of countless warlords.
解說
Origins: Shizu Kaneuji
The Mino tradition traces to Shizu Saburō Kaneuji, one of the Jittetsu (Masamune's ten disciples), who brought Sōshū technique to Mino province. His powerful, nie-laden hamon and strong forging marked a revolutionary departure from the Yamato-style work previously dominant in the region, establishing the foundation for what would become Japan's most prolific sword-producing region.
Development Through the Muromachi Period
From the Nanbokuchō period through the early Muromachi era, Kaneuji's disciples developed distinctive Mino characteristics: large itame hada mixed with masame flow, and a gradually emerging hamon style called "sanbon-sugi" (three-cedar pattern), in which three peaks of gunome repeat in rhythmic succession. This pattern became the visual signature of Mino swords.
Sengoku-Era Mass Production
After the Ōnin War (1467–1477), Seki and neighboring towns in Mino became Japan's largest sword manufacturing center. Organized production systems—with specialization for forging, hardening, and finishing—allowed Mino smiths to supply armies across Japan. Warlords including Oda Nobunaga, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, and Tokugawa Ieyasu relied heavily on Mino output.
Legacy
The practical spirit of the Mino tradition persists in modern Seki City, now a global center for cutlery. Mino's contribution was democratizing high-quality swords for the masses, shifting Japanese sword culture from elite individual artistry toward organized craft production.
此時代的刀劍特徵
- Sanbon-sugi hamon (three-cedar pattern) — the visual signature of Mino-den; rhythmic triple peaks of gunome
- Masame-nagare — itame mixed with flowing masame; distinct from Bizen or Yamato steel
- Nie-based hamon inherited from Sōshū via Shizu Kaneuji
- Organized mass production system — enabled large-scale supply to Sengoku-era armies