Talk:Kodachi

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This article states that the wakizashi is cereremonial and not used in combat. As the wakizashi is worn with the katana, it will be clearly used in combat if the owner needs it as clearly indicated on the wakizashi article. The relevant line might just need deleting her.

I think that kodachi is the same weapon as wakizashi, except that the term wakizashi is used together with katana when speaking of daisho, and kodachi rhymes with odachi, which is also a synonym to katana in some texts, and synonym to nodachi in others, which is a different type of a weapon. How to sort this mess out? jni 11:40, 22 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Swords described as kodachi have diffrent lenght - some of them are the same size as wakizashi while other have blade lenght of tanto. I think that the main difference between wakizashi and kodachi is that kodachi is used single handed (it has a short tsuka). Kodachi techniques are rather defensiv. Wakizashi can be used with one or two hands. References: Serge Mol, Classical Fighting Arts of Japan (ilustrations of wakizashi and kodachi kata & waza) H. Ozawa, Kendo, The Definitive Guide (kodachi kata) "temed" 19:45, 9 April 2005 (GMT)

No, a kodachi and wakizashi are different. Though sometimes refered to as an o-wakizashi (o meaning long) They are different weapons.

[edit] Conflict between wakizashi and kodachi

This article states that "Kodachi length is a bit greater than a standard wakizashi," but the wakizashi page says the opposite ("quite longer than a kodachi"). My only "experience" being the game Final Fantasy X (both are used, and the kodachi LOOKS shorter), I can't say for sure.


The kodachi is (was) a set length, depending upon certain variables such as the rank, position, and status of the wielder. Also, it's curvature is greater than that of the wakizashi and thus the measurement of it will vary depending upon the way it is measured. The wakizashi, is (was) built for a specific warrior, and so the length of its blade varied depending on the warrior it was made for. Wakizashis were also sometimes made to specifically pair a katana, and so were a set length shorter than the katana, and the katana was built for a certain warrior. The hilt or grip of a wakizashi as compared to a kodachi however, may or may not be longer. Tassadar237 07:09, 30 December 2005 (UTC)

This seems to be causing a lot of confusion, so I re-phrased much of your above statement and added it to the article. Hope you don't mind. -Toptomcat 03:18, 1 October 2006 (UTC)

i'm not an expert but my understanding is that the BLADE of a wakazashi is between 12 and 24 inches but the OVERALL length of a kodachi is 24 inches. hopefully that helps clear it up, the wakazashi is generally longer than a kodachi. when you consider its overall length is about 2 ft a good chunk of which is handle, the kodachi is just barely longer blade wise than some deer skinners i've seen...it really is the intermediary between sword and knife.--71.145.198.228 01:43, 22 December 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Disambiguation

I think that the characters should not be on the same page as the blade, that we need a disambiguation.

I agree. Furthermore, the passage in the text about the kodachi being used as a shield sounds like it is qouted from the anime series Rurouni Kenshin. I am training a koryu with some kodachi techniques, and have never seen nor heard of such use of the kodachi. In the techniques I have seen, the kodachi wielder moves quickly to avoid the attackers sword and get close enough to use the kodachi. The actual cut is initiated almost at the same time as the movement, and is aimed at some soft part of the body, like the throat or the stomach.

I would appreciate if an expert could clean up the article, and preferably make a clear distinction between fiction and historical facts.

Speaking of Rurouni Kenshin bullshit: "Two Kodachi were sometimes carried in one scabbard, one with the handle fittings, the second hidden as the bottom of the scabbard. Kodachi sheathed in this style was normally carried on the back with the handles pointing to the sides, thus enabling them to be drawn simultaneously."

This is pure garbage inspired by RuroKen's Shinamori Aoshi. There is no historical evidence that kodachi were EVER used in this mannor, and further more, the practicality is almost non-existent.

[edit] Kodachi in fiction (Trivia)

Moved from main page per WP:TRIV. These facts are arguably not interesting, and definitely not notable within the context of "kodachi". Unless they somehow enhance the reader's understanding of the history or use of the kodachi, they belong on the page for the referenced piece of fiction, not here. Bradford44 18:03, 25 January 2007 (UTC)

Kodachi also serves its anime theme in the game Gunz, a popular fps/rpg game.