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A Template:Nihongo or Template:Nihongo is a Japanese sword. The word is used in the West to refer to a specific type of Japanese straight, double-edged sword used in antiquity (as opposed to curved, single-edged swords such as the katana).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In Japanese the term tsurugi or ken (ja:剣) is used as a term for all sorts of international long, double-edged swords.

HistoryEdit

The term tsurugi (剣) designates a straight, double-edged, bladed weapon from Japan.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> It is a sword with two cutting edges, one on each side of its blade, unlike the tachi, katana, wakizashi, or odachi, which have only one cutting edge on one side of the blade.

The oldest bronze sword excavated in Japan is a Chinese style dagger from around 800 BC in the Yayoi period (1000 BC – 300 AD).<ref>Date of the Formation of the Yayoi Bronze Implements National Museum of Japanese History Repository.</ref> A large number of bronze tsurugi made around 200 B.C. in the Yayoi period were excavated from several sites, and it is thought that tsurugi were mass-produced in Japan in this period.<ref>特別展「出雲-聖地の至宝-」展に荒神谷遺跡出土の銅剣がずらり. Tokyo National Museum</ref><ref>東入部の弥生時代展. Fukuoka City Museum</ref> Bronze tsurugi of this period were mainly used for religious services. The Yayoi period was the transition period from bronze to iron.<ref name ="enc2020">Kazuhiko Inada (2020), Encyclopedia of the Japanese Swords. p30. Template:ISBN</ref> However, the iron tsurugi were usually forged from the 5th century (Kofun period) to the 9th century (Heian period).

From the 10th century, the development of the curved tachi began, from which the katana emerged. For a long time, tsurugi were made as weapons or for religious services, but after the 10th century, they completely disappeared as weapons and came to be made only as offerings to Shinto shrines and Buddhist temples. One of the most famous tsurugi is the one made in the Heian period (794-1185) owned by Kongō-ji and stored by Kyoto National Museum. It is made to imitate the sword Fudo Myōō holds in his right hand, and the hilt is in the shape of a vajra, a Buddhist altar tool.<ref>現世稀なる文化財. Kongo-ji</ref>

Nowadays it is mainly associated with very remote historical times, as well as legends and mythology. There are some similarities with some variants of Chinese jian (called chugokuken (中国剣) in Japanese).

Kusanagi-no-TsurugiEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The most famous example is the legendary sword Kusanagi no Tsurugi which is one of the Three Imperial Regalia of Japan.

Tsurugi-tachiEdit

The tsurugi-tachi (剣太刀), a straight sword with only one side of the blade sharpened throughout, was similar to the tsurugi or ken. The other (back) side was only worked into a second cutting edge in the front part near the tip.

LiteratureEdit

  • Toshiro Suga: Ken, die Wurzeln des Aikido / Ken, les racines de l'Aïkido (DVD). Hagenow Ondefo-Verl., 2006, ISBN 978-3-939703-40-2.

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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