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2nd July 2015, 03:19 PM | #1 |
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Jutte, Edo period
bought this japanese police weapon/badge of office yesterday, bit more expensive than the modern chrome plated 'martial arts' ones with red tassles. grip looks like it is wrapped in rattan. looks more traditional anyway. it'll compliment my folded steel katana.
in the mid 1980's i stopped in japan for two weeks on my annual leave from KSA and bought a traditionally made katana made by one of the two then living national treasures. had to get a special export license. got it the day before i had to leave. probably my most expensive ever sword purchases & the start of my current collection. anyway, it's on it's way from chiba, japan. Length : 39.5 cm ( 15.6" ) Weight : 460 g (1 lb) Material : Iron Last edited by kronckew; 3rd July 2015 at 06:15 AM. |
3rd July 2015, 03:59 AM | #2 |
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That weapon is actually a jutte, despite what many people think, a jitte is an entirely different weapon. Here is a karakuri jitte (hand held spear with a swiveling guard).
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3rd July 2015, 06:14 AM | #3 |
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interesting - the japanese vendor covered his bases by calling it a "Jutte Jitte Japanese traditional weapon 15.6 in. Black Edo police". must have lost something in the transliteration i figured they were synonyms.
anyway, just jutte from now on... love the swing guard and the pin that forms another at 90 degrees on the jitte. begs the question tho, why a short heavy spear with a big guard rather than a tanto or wakizashi? is it the guard those really lack? a tsuba is not much hand protection. then that begs the question why do waks and katana/tanto/tachi not have decent guards? they obviously had seen spanish/portugese rapiers for centuries. even a more primitive extended 'd' guard like they finally used in the 20th C. would be better & still allow two handed use. ah, well, they had many weapons weird and wonderful for the western collector. ah, well. now i'll keep my eyes peeled for a kabutowari/hachiwari that doesn't break my bank. Last edited by kronckew; 3rd July 2015 at 06:42 AM. |
3rd July 2015, 01:32 PM | #4 |
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The weapon you have (jitte/jutte) is 十手, "ten hands", which can be read as "power of ten hands weapon". In hiragana, じって, which has Hepburn romanisation "jitte". "Jitte" is the correct romanisation of the Japanese name of the weapon.
The usual romanisation of 十, "ten", is "ju", and the usual romanisation of 手, "hand", is "te" (as in "kara-te"), so we find "jutte", though this doesn't reflect the Japanese hiragana writing or the Japanese pronunciation. It could be argued that "jutte" is the correct (or incorrect) English name for the weapon. The spear-point jitte shown above is, according to Serge Mol, "Classical Weaponry of Japan", 實手, or "real hand"/"true hand" (or "fruit hand"). I haven't seen this elsewhere, and as far as I can tell, 實 (or the equivalent 実) doesn't have a romanisation of "ji" or "ju". For romanisations of these, see: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/%E5%AF%A6#Japanese https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/%E5%AE%9F#Japanese Mol uses "jutte" for the truncheon to distinguish between the two weapons, akin to "kris" and "keris" being used to distinguish between Philippine and Indonesian versions. Is either jutte or jitte given in the OED? (Compare "jujutsu", "jujitsu", "jiujitsu" as variant romanisations of the same word.) |
3rd July 2015, 08:30 PM | #5 | |
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Quote:
Why a jutte is called "jutte" and not "jitte". Taiho-Jutsu: Law and Order in the Age of the Samurai By Don Cunningham. Page 72. Last edited by estcrh; 3rd July 2015 at 08:40 PM. |
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3rd July 2015, 11:57 PM | #6 | ||
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Quote:
But if two weapons have the same pronunciation but different characters, they don't have the same names. Their names are homophones. However, your quote from Cunningham suggests that the name of Mol's "jitte" was used for the "jutte/jitte", and the name/kanji changed from one homophone to another, which would make it two names (both homophones) used for the same weapon, with one of the names also used for a different weapon (Mol's "jitte"). Quote:
As I said, "jutte" is a possible candidate for an English name for the weapon. But so is "jitte", and while there might be reasonable grounds for saying that "jutte" is correct, or even better, as an English name, there are no reasonable grounds for saying that "jitte" is wrong. I usually use "jutte" as the English name, or note the use of both "jutte" and "jitte" for the weapon. I think "jutte" is more common. (Stone gives "jit-te" and "jittei".) |
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3rd July 2015, 01:45 PM | #7 | |
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Quote:
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3rd July 2015, 02:53 PM | #8 | |
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more info from my vendor in japan: (confirming timo's post above)
Quote:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z2oJVgCsn7M Last edited by kronckew; 3rd July 2015 at 03:15 PM. |
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3rd July 2015, 08:36 PM | #9 | |
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Quote:
Jutte: Japanese Power of Ten Hands Weapon, George Kirby (Author), Mike Lee (Author), 1987. The study of the use of the jutte weapon is a logical extension of the jujitsu student's training, as that knowledge can be applied to a variety of weapons and thereby enhance that weapon's capabilities. The jutte is weapon ideally suited to the study of extending the art of jujitsu. Fully illustrated with sequential photos. |
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