Iaitō

Iaitō

Iaitō (居合刀) is a modern metal practice sword, without a cutting edge, used primarily for practicing iaido.[1]

Other Japanese swords

A real (sharp) katana is called a shinken (, lit., real sword). In contrast to shinken, iaitō have no cutting edge and are designed for iai/battō practice and are usually unsuited for sword-to-sword contact. These should not be confused with other fake swords, which are primarily made for decorative reasons and generally unsafe for martial arts practice.

Materials and manufacture

Japanese girl practicing iaido. The iaitō shown in this photograph was custom made according to the weight and size of the student. The blade is made of aluminum alloy, and lacks a sharp edge for the student's safety.

Most iaitō are made of an aluminium-zinc alloy which is cheaper and lighter than steel. This use of alloy and a blunt edge also avoids the Japanese legal restrictions on the manufacture of swords made of ferrous metals. As such, Japanese-made iaitō are intended as practice weapons and are not suited for any type of contact. The best alloy blades are rather faithful reproductions of real swords with authentic weight and shape along with similarly high-quality finish and fittings.[2] Iaitō may even have a mock hamon (刃文, lit., blade pattern, the temper line of a tempered steel blade). The average weight for a real uchigatana (打刀) is typically 1,200 g without the scabbard while a typical alloy iaitō is roughly 820 g. Some steel iaitō are also constructed and can weigh around 900–950 g for a 74 cm blade.

Some imitation Japanese swords are made in countries other than Japan. They may even be made of folded steel, much like a real katana, but with a blunt edge. Such weapons would face the same use and ownership restrictions in Japan as genuine swords, and would not be called iaitō in Japan.

First iaitō were made after the Second World War, to permit people without means to own a real sword, to have a tool for their practice of modern budo. Iaito are produced by specialized workshops not in direct relations with shinken sword smiths.[3]

Some dōjō in Japan recommend that only alloy blades be used for practicing iaidō until the practitioner’s skill is consistent enough to safely use a sharp-edged sword, Some iaidō schools may require a practitioner to start with a shinken right away, while other schools prohibit the use of a shinken altogether.

The matching of iaitō length, weight, and balance to the practitioner’s build and strength is of utmost importance to safely and correctly perform the iaidō forms (kata). Due to the repetition involved in the practicing of iaidō, iaitō are often constructed with the balance point of the blade being set farther from the blade’s point (kissaki) and closer to the guard (tsuba) than other blades.

Legislation

The Act for Controlling the Possession of Firearms or Swords and Other Such Weapons[4] established in 1958, forbid the possession, production and importation of any sharpened (or sharpenable) sword. Very few exceptions to this rule exists, but notably the exception of the traditional Japanese sword smith allowed to produce a restricted number of blades. The Japanese sword smiths have a special status and the weapons they made are considered work of art rather than weapons. (This also explains why nihontō exported outside Japan must go through a declassification process before their exportation).

See also

References

  1. Hall, David A., ed. (2012), Encyclopedia of Japanese Martial Arts, (Reviewing.) Irie Kōhei, Omiya Shirō and Koike Masaru., New York, United States: Kodansha USA, Inc., p. 169, ISBN 978-1-56836-410-0 .
  2. Jordy Delage, « The origin and manufacture of the Iaito, replica of the Japanese sword, the Katana », Magazine Dragon Spécial Aikido, no 4 hors série, april 2014, published in French (ISSN 2261-1134, online English translation
  3. The Secrets of Modern Japanese Swordmaking - Iaito Manufacture at the Minosaka Workshop - Reportage at the Minosaka Workshop, 2017.
  4. Act for Controlling the Possession of Firearms or Swords and Other Such Weapons, Japanese ministry of justice, 1958. (Japanese language)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.