During the Edo period, only the most skilled swordsmen were chosen to test swords, so that the swordsman's skill was not questionable in determining how well the sword cut. The materials used to test swords varied greatly. Some substances were wara (è—; rice straw), goza (茣蓙; woven rush mats) or tatami-omote (畳表; the top layer of tatami mats), bamboo, and thin steel sheets.[2]
Aside from specific cuts made on cadavers, there were the normal cuts of Japanese swordsmanship, i.e. downward diagonal Kesa-giri (袈裟斬り), upward diagonal (Kiri-age (切り上ã’) or Gyaku-kesa (逆袈裟)), horizontal (Yoko (横) or Tsuihei), and straight downward (JÅdan-giri (上段斬り), Happonme (八本目), MakkÅ-giri (真å‘斬り), Shinchoku-giri (真直切り), or Dotan-giri (土壇切り)).
There is an apocryphal story of a condemned criminal who, after being told he was to be executed by a sword tester using a Kesa-giri cut, calmly joked that if he had known that was going to happen, he would have swallowed large stones to damage the blade.[4]
In modern times, the practice of tameshigiri has come to focus on testing the swordsman's abilities, rather than the sword's cutting capability. The swords used are typically inexpensive ones.[7]
Targets today are typically made from goza, the top layer of the traditional tatami floor covering, either bundled or rolled into a cylindrical shape. They may be soaked in water to add density to the material. [citation needed] This density is to approximate that of flesh. [citation needed] Green bamboo is used to approximate bone.[citation needed]
Once the goza target is in this cylindrical shape, it has a vertical grain pattern when stood vertically on a target stand, or horizontally when placed on a horizontal target stand (dotton or dodan). This direction of the grain affects the difficulty of the cut.
The difficulty of cuts is a combination of the target material hardness, the direction of the grain of the target (if any), the quality of the sword, the angle of the blade (刃ç‹; hasuji) on impact, and the angle of the swing of the sword (太刀ç‹; tachisuji).
When cutting a straw target that is standing vertically, the easiest cut is the downward diagonal. This is due to a combination of the angle of impact of the cut against the grain (approximately 30-50 degrees from the surface), the downward diagonal angle of the swing, and the ability to use many of the major muscle groups and rotation of the body to aid in the cut.
Next in difficulty is the upward diagonal cut which has the same angle, but works against gravity and uses slightly different muscles and rotation. The third in difficulty is the straight downward cut, not in terms of the grain but in terms of the group of muscles involved. The most difficult cut of these four basic cuts is the horizontal direction (against a vertical target) which is directly perpendicular to the grain of the target.
Historical European Martial Arts reconstructors, under the term "test cutting", engage in similar exercises with various European swords. While goza, green bamboo (though rarely), and meat are the preferred cutting targets, other substances are commonly used due to being cheaper, and much easier to obtain: pool noodles, various gourds (pumpkins, squash, etc.), water-filled plastic bottles, soaked newspaper rolls, synthetic targets or wet clay.
Mitsuhiro Saruta, founder of Ryuseiken, set the initial Guinness World Record for completing 1000 cuts (senbongiri) in 1 hour 36 minutes on September 20, 1998.[8][unreliable source?]
In 2000, Russell McCartney of Ishiyama-ryū completed 1181 consecutive cuts without a missed attempt in 1 hour 25 minutes.[9] Both Saruta and McCartney performed senbongiri using a kata-based approach as one of the criteria for their challenge.[10]
Isao Machii of Shūshinryū currently has the record for the fastest senbongiri performance of 36 minutes and 4 seconds completion of 1,000 cuts of rolled straw mats.[11]
Machii also holds records for the most cuts in three minutes (252) on 21 April 2011.[12]
Machii also has most cuts to 1 mat (Suegiri) with a total of 8 times on 23 April 2015.[13]
The record for most martial arts sword cuts in one minute (73) is held by Agisilaos Vesexidis of Greece on 25 June 2016.[14]
Toshishiro Obata holds the record for Kabuto Wari (兜割), or helmet cutting, for his cut on a steel Kabuto (兜; helmet).[15]
Obata also holds the Ioriken BattÅjutsu speed cutting record for 10 cuts on 10 targets over three rounds. His times are 6.4, 6.4, and 6.7 seconds respectively.
Brandt Noel of San Yama Ryu Bujutsu holds the Guinness World Record of 19 mats with Katana using Kesa-giri.[16]
The current record for total number of mats cut with a DaitÅ (25 mats) was set by Bruce Baldwin at the 2009 Japan Festival in Houston. The world record was certified and confirmed by the Consul General of Japan at Houston.[17]
On February 24, 2013, at the Sherwood Fair, Bruce Baldwin cut 26 mats to take the world record in the Odachi class sword.[18]
Target configurations
The targets can be placed in different configurations:
Most frequently, there is a single stand on which a single target is placed vertically.
A second configuration involves multiple targets in place vertically on a long stand (a yoko-narabi).
A third configuration involves multiple targets placed horizontally on a different type of stand called a dodan or dotton.
A fourth configuration involves single (#1) or multiple targets (#2), each on separate stands.
A fifth configuration (particular to rolled goza) involves multiple targets rolled together to create a thicker and denser target. This can be used in the previous configurations (#1, #2, #3).