What I know about bugles you can read here. Japanese Army Bugle and here, too.
日京 Nikkyo stamped on the mouthpiece is supposedly the manufacturer, but I cannot find any info on them.
Last edited by Nick Komiya; 05-02-2021 at 01:03 AM.
Thank you for the links. As far as I can tell this is a WW2 era bugle. Tassels are marked, and I believe it has three loops..
3 loops make it a Type 90 bugle, but it is likely postwar civilian as it lacks army markings. Bugles were class 2 weapons in the army like bayonet frogs and as such had to have acceptance markings, but your example has none of that.
Where would I look for an acceptance mark?
Thank you
Acceptance and Arsenal ID stamps were generally placed side by side to the manufacturers stamp, but there is nothing besides the 日京 stamping on the mouthpiece of your bugle. One notable feature unique to army bugles used in Manchuria is a fiberglass mouthpiece. This was to prevent the lips from sticking to the mouthpiece in extreme cold.
Here's another example nicely marked with cherry blossom, yet just another commercial model.
Thank you for the help
For your info, the chart here shows how buglers in various branches were armed with weapons.
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