The blade length of the
uchigatana during the 16th century is said to have been from 60 cm to no more than 70 cm, with a stout
sugata, a steep
saki-zori, and it could be used as a one handed sword due to its thin
kasane (thickness) and short tang
(nakago) making it relatively light. As opposed to the
tachi, the
uchigatana was worn edge-up in the belt, this and usually being slightly smaller than the
tachi was the main difference between the
tachi and the
uchigatana. Since the
uchigatana is worn differently than the
tachi, the signature
(mei) carved into the tang of the
uchigatana is also opposite to the
tachi mei, making the words still upright instead of upside down as when one wears the
tachi in the manner of the
uchigatana.
Uchigatana had become popular for several reasons. Firstly, the
uchigatana had proven more convenient to wear, and did not get in the way of using a polearm as much as a
tachi. The
uchigatana's rapid acceptance had also owed to the frequency of battles fought on foot as well as to a developing emphasis on soldiers' speed, indicating that battlefield combat had sharply intensified. Since the
uchigatana was shorter than the
tachi, it could be used in more confined quarters, such as inside a building. Furthermore, tactics of the period had dictated unseating mounted soldiers by cutting off the mounts legs; hence, mounted combat had become seen as inherently disadvantageous. ==Use==