南紀重国
Nanki Shigekuni
別名: Sword-Smith of the Kishu Tokugawa; Master of Wakayama; Shigekuni-Masamune
解說
Nanki Shigekuni was the master swordsmith under the patronage of Tokugawa Yorinobu, founder of the Kishu (Kii Province, modern Wakayama) branch of the Tokugawa — one of the three senior Tokugawa branches (Gosanke). Working in the early Edo period, Shigekuni distinguished himself from contemporaries by consciously emulating the Soshu-den (Kamakura) style of Masamune and Sadamune: powerful ōnitae hamon, flowing ōitame-nagare hada with thick ji-nie, and bold, turbulent activity rather than the decorative styles fashionable among many Edo-era smiths. His status as a retained swordsmith (okakae tōkō) gave him ideal conditions — secure income, finest materials — to produce work of the highest level. Multiple Important Cultural Properties and Important Swords survive. His work represents the Edo-era sword world's serious engagement with the lost glories of Kamakura technique.
逸話與傳說
Tokugawa Yorinobu — the tenth son of Ieyasu, founder of the Kishu branch — was both a serious swordsman and a political figure who understood that the quality of one's retained swordsmith was an expression of domain culture and Tokugawa prestige. The relationship between the great lord and the swordsmith he elevated represents the ideal of Japanese arts patronage: the lord provides perfect conditions, the craftsman delivers his best work, and the resulting objects become the cultural face of a dynasty. Shigekuni's choice to emulate Soshu-den — in an era when most smiths chased novelty with elaborate decorative hamon — reflects a craftsman's integrity and historical consciousness: the admission that the Kamakura masters set a standard worth spending a lifetime trying to approach. The great Osaka Summer Campaign (1615) that ended the Toyotomi and confirmed Tokugawa supremacy formed the backdrop of Shigekuni's mature work — swords made for a peace that would last 250 years, shifting the meaning of the blade from instrument of war to emblem of culture.