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  2. Japanese sword mountings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_sword_mountings

    A diagram of a katana and koshirae with components identified. Fuchi (縁): The fuchi is a hilt collar between the tsuka and the tsuba.; Habaki (鎺): The habaki is a wedge-shaped metal collar used to keep the sword from falling out of the saya and to support the fittings below; fitted at the ha-machi and mune-machi which precede the nakago.

  3. Shoami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoami

    Apprentices to sword-guard makers must have grown in numbers, and probably feudal lords outside the capital invited these men to work for them. From the Muromachi period until the nineteenth-century edict prohibiting the carrying of swords, Shoami guards in a wide range of styles were being produced all over Japan. In fact, so numerous are the ...

  4. Ninjatō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ninjatō

    [24] [25] The tsuba (hand guard) of the ninjato is described in one contemporary source as being larger than average and square instead of the much more common round tsuba. One source's belief about the ninjatō tsuba size and shape is that the user would lean the sword against a wall and would use the tsuba as a step to extend his normal reach ...

  5. Nagamaki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nagamaki

    Description. The nagamaki was a long sword with a blade that could be 60 cm (24 in) or more and a handle of about equal length to the blade. [3] The blade was single-edged, resembling a naginata blade, but the handle (tsuka) of the nagamaki was not a smooth-surfaced wooden shaft as in the naginata; it was made more like a katana hilt.

  6. Jitte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jitte

    Tsuba, a hand guard present on some types of jitte. Koshirae. Jitte can occasionally be found housed in a sword-type case hiding the jitte from view entirely. This type of jitte can have the same parts and fittings as a sword, including seppa, tsuba, menuki, koiguchi, kojiri, nakago, mekugi-ana and mei.

  7. File:藻鯉図鐔, Sword Guard (Tsuba) with the Carp and Seaweed ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:藻鯉図鐔,_Sword...

    Description 日本語: 藻鯉図鐔、寛斎作 1868年(寛永4年)、メトロポリタン美術館蔵 English: Sword Guard (Tsuba) with the Carp and Seaweed Motif, Edo period

  8. Tsuba in the collection of Wolverhampton Art Gallery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsuba_in_the_Collection_of...

    The tsuba were part of a wider collection of weapons and sword guards donated by Councilor Davis Green in October 1924. Originally the collection belonged to a Mr. C.E.F. Griffiths and was loaned to the gallery. The collection was reclaimed by the family, it is presumed that Mr. Griffiths died, and put it up for auction at Dudley Auction Rooms.

  9. Glossary of Japanese swords - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_Japanese_swords

    Glossary of Japanese swords. Diagram showing the parts of a nihontō blade in transliterated Japanese. This is the glossary of Japanese swords, including major terms the casual reader might find useful in understanding articles on Japanese swords. Within definitions, words set in boldface are defined elsewhere in the glossary.