越中則重
Etchū Norishige
別名: Norishige; The Eccentric Genius of Matsukawa-hada; Maverick Among Masamune's Ten
解說
Etchū Norishige is one of the most distinctive voices in the history of Japanese swords — a smith whose defining feature, the 'matsukawa-hada' (pine-bark skin), is unlike anything produced by any other school before or since. This jigane of large, turbulent itame flowing like the bark of an ancient pine tree represents a deliberate aesthetic of controlled wildness — the opposite of the uniformly refined grain most smiths pursued. Norishige was trained in the Sōshū tradition (counted among Masamune's Ten Disciples) and worked in Etchū Province, the same region that produced Go Yoshihiro, his near contemporary. His hamon, like his jigane, surges with heavy nie, kinsuji, and inazuma. No smith before or after him has successfully reproduced the matsukawa-hada, making him one of the most studied mysteries in Japanese sword history.
逸話與傳說
The question of how Norishige created the matsukawa-hada has never been fully answered. Modern metallurgists and sword scholars have proposed theories involving the unique iron sand of Etchū, specialized folding techniques learned from Masamune, and even the specific charcoal and water of the region — but no modern smith has successfully reproduced it. The pine-bark skin remains one of the most studied mysteries in the history of Japanese craft. Norishige's relationship to Masamune is also debated: his technique differs so radically from his supposed teacher's that scholars argue he must have reinvented rather than inherited the Sōshū tradition. If so, the matsukawa-hada is not a variation on an existing aesthetic but a completely original creation — perhaps the most radical individual innovation in the entire history of the Japanese sword.