Page:Brinkley - Japan - Volume 7.djvu/480

 *Sano. Naotsune. 19th cent. Metal-worker of Yedo.
 * Sano. Takachika. Present day. A metal-chiseller of Tokyo.
 * Saotomo. Vide Nobuyasu.
 * Sasaki. Family name. Vide Shigekata, Tadatsura, etc.
 * Sato. Yoshi. 19th cent. Metal-worker of Yedo.
 * Seibei. Shōami. 1760. Worked at Nihonmatsu in Aizu.
 * Seijiro. Goto. 1630. A great expert; but not well known. Kaga.
 * Seijo. Goto. 1630. Mitsunaga. Kyoto.
 * Seimin. Murata. 1820. Sozaburo. A celebrated chiseller, but chiefly remarkable for his skill in casting bronzes. Yedo.
 * Seiriyoken. Vide Ogiya Katsuhira.
 * Seiroku. Vide Masanaga (Nara) and Masachika (Nara).
 * Seiseisai. Vide Masatoki.
 * Seishichi. Shōami. 1840. A guard-maker of Osaka.
 * Seishinken. Vide Mototomo.
 * Seiunsai. Vide Motoshige (Mimura).
 * Seiunsai. Vide Taki Yeiji.
 * Seiunsha. Vide Tōhō.
 * Seizayemon. Goto. 1670. An artist of remarkable skill. Kaga.
 * Seki. Yoshinori. 19th cent. Metal-worker of Yedo.
 * Sekibun. Shōami. 1820. Shichiroyemon. Art name, Yurōsai. Worked at Shonai in Dewa.
 * Sekiguchi. Ichiya. 19th cent. (d. 1895.) A skilled metal-chiseller of Tokyo. One of the last of the carvers of sword-furniture.
 * Sekijō. Goto. 1570. Mitsutsune. Son of Goto Takujō. Kyoto.
 * Sekijoken. Vide Motozumi (Yasuyama).
 * Senjō. Goto. 1620. Mitsukyo. Kyoto.
 * Sensai. Vide Atsuoki.
 * Senshichi. Nishiyama. 1640. A pupil of Goto Yenjō. Kyoto.
 * Senshisai. Vide Shōami.
 * Senyushi. Vide Yoshitsune.
 * Setsuju. 1780. A skilled expert of Mito, said to have been connected with the Miyōchin family.
 * Setsuya. 19th cent. Art name of a Yedo metal-worker.
 * Setsuzan. Vide Nagatsune.
 * Shiatsu. Shinji. Present day. Metal-sculptor. Pupil of Unno Shōmin.
 * Shichibei. 1700. A renowned inlayer. His skill was so great that the name Zoshichi came to be applied to particularly fine damascening. Kyoto.
 * Shichirobei. Shōami. 1710. A pupil of Katsusaburo. Worked at Tsuyama in Mimasaka.
 * Shigeaki. 19th cent. Metal-worker of Yedo.
 * Shigechika. Machida. 1740. Kinzō. A pupil of Sōyo, and a skilled expert. His father, also called Kinzō, worked in the same way but with less skill. Yedo.
 * Shigechika. Yokoya. 1720. Called also Machida. Kuizō.
 * Shigeharu. Nara. 1710. A pupil of the first Toshinaga. Common name, Jiubei.
 * Shigehiro. Yoshioka. 1580. Morotsugu. Called also Sōtaku. He had the title at first of Buzan-no-suke and afterwards of Inaba-no-suke. Founded the Yoshioka family. Yedo. With regard to the title Inaba-no-suke, which is found on some of the works of the Yoshioka family and not on others, the explanation is that its use in such a manner was interdicted when a member of the noble family of Inaba happened to hold the office of Gorōju. The Yoshioka family worked for the Yedo Court and had a yearly allowance of two hundred koku of rice and eighteen rations.
 * Shigekata. Sasaki. 1630. Common name not known. A Kyoto expert of some repute.
 * Shigekuni. Miyōchin. 1560. A great expert of Kozuke.
 * Shigemichi. Shōami. 1760. A Kyoto expert, celebrated for chiselling guards with clam-shell decoration à jour.
 * Shigemitsu. Omori. 1710. Shiroyemon or Bunshiro. He also called himself Kinriuzan Fumoto. A celebrated artist; generally regarded as the founder of the Omori family, but his father, Shirobei, a Samurai of Odawara, was the first carver in that family. Yedo.
 * Shigemitsu. Nara. 1720. Yedo.
 * Shigemitsu. 18th cent. Metal-worker of Yedo. Pupil of Nara Yasuchika.
 * Shigemoto. Kubo. 1780. Commonly known as Tetsuya Kimbei. A pupil of the celebrated Tetsuya Dembei, and himself very famous. Many of