What makes the Type 98 Shin Gunto distinct from a traditional katana?
Updated Feb 2026
The Type 98 Shin Gunto was standardized in 1938 for Imperial Japanese Army officers and differs from classical samurai katana in several deliberate ways. The most visible difference is the military-pattern mounting: a metal saya (often iron painted olive or leather-covered) instead of lacquered wood, a regulation floral or chrysanthemum tsuba, and a machine-finished grip wrap that replaced the bespoke ito of civilian swords. The blade profile retains the traditional curvature and may carry a hamon if hand-forged, but officer swords of the period ranged from factory-ground blades to true hand-forged pieces brought from family smiths — making each replica's steel specification an important collector consideration. Understanding this distinction helps collectors choose a replica that accurately represents either the NCO or commissioned officer variant.