Skip to main content
"Kai-gunto" Pattern Sword for a Naval Officer
"Kai-gunto" Pattern Sword for a Naval Officer
Image © Worcester Art Museum, all rights reserved.

"Kai-gunto" Pattern Sword for a Naval Officer

Dateprobably 1937–1945
Mediumsteel, wood, copper alloys, gilding, cord and rayskin
Dimensions90.2 × 64.1 cm (35 1/2 × 25 1/4 in.), 2 lb, 4 oz (weight)
ClassificationsArms and Armor
MarkingsArsenal stamp at top of tang.
Credit LineThe John Woodman Higgins Armory Collection
Object number2014.335
DescriptionSingle edged slightly curved blade with reinforced back. Square guard ('tsuba') with heart-shaped cutout in each corner. Both faces decorated with floral motifs. Long grip covered in rayskin & wrapped with blue cord. A 'menuki' consisting of 4 flowers present on both faces. Pommel cap decorated to match 'tsuba'.
Label TextUntil the end of World War II, the Japanese military continued the age-old tradition of carrying swords in combat. The kai-gunto was based on the ancient tachi, or “slung sword,” and was a dress arm carried by naval officers. Allied forces in the Pacific captured vast numbers of swords, some of which contained ancient blades. Of the more than six hundred thousand edged weapons estimated in American hands shortly after the war, nearly one-half were promptly destroyed in compliance with orders for Japanese disarmament. ProvenanceGift of Donald R. McKay (Amherst, MA) on November 4, 1982. Collection transfer from Higgins Armory, January 2014.
On View
Not on view
Katana (sword)
1600s, with later mountings
Katana (long sword of a daisho set)
Japanese
early 1400s, mountings of early 1800s
Katana (sword)
Yoshimitu Masatsugu
1700s, with later mountings
Loose ephemera
Japanese
February 1859
Wakizashi (short sword of a daisho set)
Japanese
1416, mountings early 1800s
Wakizashi (short sword)
Japanese
1800s, blade perhaps 1500s
Three-Tiered Box adorned with Recycled Sword Fittings
Japanese
about 1900, based on elements from the 1700s and 1800s
Ol alem (sword)
late 1800s