A3621

天田昭次

| 1927-08-04 | 2013-06-26

AMATA Akitsugu

| 1927-08-04 | 2013-06-26

Names
  • 天田昭次
  • AMATA Akitsugu (index name)
  • Amata Akitsugu (display name)
  • 天田昭次 (Japanese display name)
  • あまた あきつぐ (transliterated hiragana)
  • 天田誠一 (real name)
Date of birth
1927-08-04
Birth place
Niigata Prefecture
Date of death
2013-06-26
Gender
Male
Fields of activity
  • Crafts

2021
Tokyo Bunkazai Kenkyūjo (Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties). “Amata Akitsugu.” Nihon Bijutsu Nenkan Shosai Bukkosha Kiji. Last modified 2021-12-10. https://www.tobunken.go.jp/materials/bukko/236751.html

日本美術年鑑 / Year Book of Japanese Art

日本刀で重要無形文化財保持者である天田昭次は6月26日死去した。享年85。  1927(昭和2)年8月4日、新潟県北蒲原郡本田村本田(現、新発田市)に刀匠天田貞吉の長男として生まれる。本名誠一。37年、父貞吉は死去したが、父の3回忌に訪れた東京の刀匠で日本刀復興運動の提唱者でもあった栗原彦三郎昭秀の誘いを受け、40年小学校卒業するとすぐに上京し、昭秀が設立した日本刀鍛錬伝習所に入門する。最初の作刀...

「天田昭次」『日本美術年鑑』平成26年版(458-459頁)

Wikipedia

Akitsugu Amata (天田昭次, Amata Akitsugu) (also known as Amata Seiichi (天田 誠一)) (born 1927 – July 5, 2013) was a Japanese swordsmith. Amata followed his father Amata Sadayoshi into the trade of sword-making after the latter died in 1937, moving to Tokyo from his home in Niigata Prefecture in order to enroll in a specialist sword-making school. This school, the Nihonto Tanren Denshu Jo, was run by the noted swordsmith Kurihara Hikosaburo, who originally employed Amata as a masseur before teaching him the basics of sword-making when the boy was thirteen. Amata worked at Kurihara's institute for the next six years. After leaving Tokyo, Amata returned to his home village. He resided there since, claiming that the local water and clay (which contains a large amount of iron oxide) were very suitable for the yaki-ire (hardening process) of sword manufacture. He also smelted his own tamahagane steel at home. After the Second World War the American occupying forces prohibited the manufacture of traditional swords in Japan. When the ban was partially lifted, Amata was awarded an official swordsmith's licence from the Cultural Properties Protection Committee in 1954; that same year he won the Yushu-wo prize at the first National Sword-Forging Competition. An illness at 33 rendered Amata an invalid for eight years. However, after his recovery he went on to win the Masamune Prize (the highest accolade) at the New Katana Sword Exhibition in 1968; he also won the same award at the Sword-Forging Competition in 1977, 1985 and 1996. In 1997 he was named as a Living National Treasure of Japan. Amata was the Chairman of the All Japan Swordsmith's Association and a director of the Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyokai.

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  • 2023-02-20