Treasure Hunt America

Chapter 831: nasty exhibition

The reason why this knife caught Jin Muchen's attention was first of all because of the shape of the knife.

You must know the shape of the Japanese sword, but what is deeply rooted in the hearts of the people is the unique curved arc, plus the sharp tip and blade, plus the gorgeous scabbard, people can see it at a glance. A Japanese sword.

Compared with so many Japanese knives that Jin Muchen has seen before, the knife in front of me is very unique, because the handle of this knife is not long, and the blade is also very soft, and the curvature is also very small. It is not as bent as the usual Japanese swords, plus the narrow scabbard and the round wrist guards on the handle, it looks like a western sword at all, and it is not Japanese at all. Knife.

Such a western knife appeared in the Japanese weapons exhibition hall of the Tokyo National Museum, and it immediately seemed very abrupt.

Before, Jin Muchen was also anxious to search for the treasure, so he didn't pay much attention to this knife, that is, the moment he came out of the lacquerware exhibition hall, the corner of his eyes was so wide, and when he saw this knife, Jin Muchen remembered it. The origin of the knife, so I came over and took this knife in my pocket with great interest.

This is a veritable trophy. Jin Muchen stretched out his hand and gently pulled out the blade. Although this blade has been born for nearly a hundred years, it is still cold.

Although this knife is not handcrafted by Japanese professional knife masters like other Japanese knives, but a knife machined in large quantities, but because of the excellent materials and very careful maintenance, Therefore, even today, this knife is still shining with cold light and murderous aura.

Coupled with the extraordinary identity of the owner of this knife, this ordinary Western-style saber suddenly became extraordinary in terms of material and workmanship.

And why is this knife so famous? Who was its previous owner?

This has to start from the fact that Jin Muchen saw a farce news a few days ago. It was said that a few days ago, Jin Muchen was rather bored one day. Just watch TV in the room.

I just happened to see a Japanese news program in which an exhibition of Chinese cultural relics was introduced, but this time, these Japanese hosts did not have any respect or politeness in their mouths. Rather, it was full of sarcasm.

It turns out that this Chinese cultural relics exhibition is a saber exhibition held at the No. 5 Middle School in Beijing, and the sabres displayed in this exhibition are very special, all of which are said to be the captured sabres of Japanese war criminals in World War II.

The original owners of these sabers were all during the invasion of China. Those great characters in Japan such as: Emperor Meiji of Japan, Prince Zain, Kishi Nobuyuki, Ito Hirobumi, Kawashima Yoshiko, Doihara Kenji, etc., but anyone who is familiar with that period of history can be a catchy Japanese war criminal The name of this exhibition is said to be the 108 sabres enshrined by the families of these war criminals.

It is said that these sabres were captured by the Chinese side after the surrender of Japan.

As for this statement, the Japanese host of this news program scoffed and said that he definitely did not believe it. You Chinese are talking big.

Not to mention other praises, just say that Kishi Shinsuke's saber, you have made a mistake.

Who is this Nobuyuki Kishi? How can you be caught by the Japanese and won't let go?

Many Chinese people may have never heard of this guy. But if he talks about his grandson, then Chinese people today must know that his grandson is the current Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo who often jumps out and sings against China!

Nobusuke Kishi is his grandfather. Before World War II, he was a senior civil servant of the Japanese cabinet government. During the war, he also served as the Prime Minister of Japan for a period of time.

At that time, when the Japanese news media introduced the Chinese exhibition, they deliberately enlarged and displayed the photos of the saber of Kishi Nobuyuki who the Chinese said was "captured".

Jin Muchen could see it very clearly on the big screen in his room. Shinsuke Kishi's saber, which was exhibited at the exhibition at the Beijing Fifth Middle School, is a typical Japanese sword.

The scabbard is also very luxurious, with black gilt and key parts. There are also exaggerated relief inlay decorative patterns, and the typical Japanese gold maki-e decorative style is also used. This style is one of the most gorgeous carving techniques in Japan, but it is rarely used on objects such as decorative scabbards. So appearing on this scabbard is very inconsistent.

And the most amazing thing is. The knife edge part of this knife, the knife edge part is actually a Ukiyo-e **** image pattern, these Japanese people saw it, and they jumped and cursed angrily.

You bastards, what are you doing? Even if you want to kill the ancestors of our Japanese Prime Minister, you can't throw dirty water on his old man like this, right?

And even if you're going to throw dirty water on him, why bother to be more professional? What does it mean to be so shoddy?

Although we Japanese are lustful, we are not at the point where we have to decorate the **** palace map on the sword, right?

But when it comes to this, the confidence of those Japanese hosts is not very strong. It turns out that the Japanese have the habit of decorating **** pictures on the sword and even the scabbard for a long time.

Especially in the middle and end of the Edo period, some wandering ronin really liked it very much, and decorated the **** palace pictures on the swords and scabbards to show their uniqueness.

But who are those people? Those are ronin, and who is Kishi Shinsuke?

That is the son of a Japanese political family, a well-educated senior management talent, how can those street rogues compare?

As the former prime minister of Japan, how could Kishi Shinsuke have such low taste?

This is obviously because you Chinese people have been disliked by our Prime Minister recently, so you took out his grandfather, poured dirty water on him, and eliminated his old man.

A few Japanese hosts talked a lot on the show. Anyway, they all laughed at the Chinese and eliminated the Chinese people's words.

It probably means that your Chinese methods are too inferior, and even if you want to do it, you should do it more realistically. You don't even know the historical data of the investigation, so you just make it up out of thin air. Isn't this deliberately embarrassing?

What kind of international saber exhibition is going on, just by seeing this knife by Kishi Nobuyuki, you know that your exhibition is bullshit, it is purely a fake exhibition.

Then these Japanese hosts took out the materials they had prepared and began to argue for their former prime minister.

It turns out that this Kishi Nobusuke was a civilian before World War II. Before World War II, especially after the successful occupation of the three eastern provinces of China, the Emperor of Japan built a sword-casting furnace in the Yasukuni toilet in order to commend those 'heroic' soldiers. We invited famous swordsmith masters from all over the country and asked them to forge a batch of Japanese swords.

And these knives were rewarded to those 'meritorious ministers' in the military, and in the end only one was left as the national knife used in sacrifices.

But those knives are all rewarded to military officers, so what about those civil servants?

According to the "xx Governor's Office/Provincial Civil Service Uniform System" launched by the Japanese government at that time, Japanese civil servants can actually wear knives, but the knives they are allowed to wear, if they are Japanese knives, must be short knives, if they are long knives If so, it must be in the form of a Western sword.

So later, in order not to favor one another over another, the Emperor of Japan made a batch of sabres in the style of Western swords and rewarded them to the civil servants in the government at that time.

And **** his grandfather was one of the civil servants who was rewarded at that time, and he got a Western-style saber.

Then the Japanese refuted the credibility of which saber exhibition in China from another aspect.

That is the experience of this Kishi Nobusuke before and after World War II. This guy did go to China before World War II, from 1936 to 1939.

But in 1939, he returned to Japan and served as the Prime Minister of Japan for a period of time. Later, he stepped down from his position and gave way to the famous Japanese Class A war criminal Hideki Tojo.

And he also served as a minister of civil service in Tojo Hideki's cabinet for a period of time. Later, in 1944, after the general resignation of Tojo's cabinet, he also stepped down.

Later, when Japan surrendered, he happened to have no job and was just idle at home.

However, because of his relationship with the Tojo cabinet~www.wuxiaspot.com~ During the World War II trial, the Americans did not let him go, and still sentenced him as a Class A war criminal.

When these Japanese hosts talked about Shinsuke Kishi, they said that the old man had only been active in China for three years, and that time happened to be the most powerful time of the Japanese Empire in China. The army was defeated and occupied more than half of China at one time.

As for Nobuyuki Kishi, he did not go to the war zone at that time, but stayed in Manchukuo at that time. How did you Chinese seize his saber under such circumstances?

And before the United States intervened in the war, people had already returned to Japan until Japan surrendered. Did you Chinese hit Tokyo Bay like the United States at that time and occupied Tokyo?

Therefore, this exhibition of yours is completely an ugly copycat exhibition. The purpose of doing this is to discredit the ancestors of our great prime minister. It is shameful for you to do so.

Two days after the show, the Japanese Prime Minister **** actually announced that he donated the saber left by his grandfather Nobuyuki Kishi to the Tokyo National Museum, and it also made headlines in various Japanese media at that time. In fact, his purpose of doing this was , is nothing more than a demonstration against the Chinese. . . (To be continued.) Enable new URL

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