View Full Version : Chinese (or other country) sai/parrying weapon
Shakethetrees
15th September 2014, 03:35 AM
I've been struggling with this one for a long time.
It's entirely hand wrought iron and I would have no problem assigning an 18th/19th century date.
I'm sure the grip was wrapped at one time.
Any information y'all have will be appreciated, nationality, an accurate name for it, etc.
I suspect it's a KungFu or other discipline weapon, but I'm open to suggestions.
kai
15th September 2014, 10:13 PM
Seems like a sturdy, genuine piece.
The pommel looks Chinese to me.
Regards,
Kai
Aleksey
15th September 2014, 10:28 PM
Chinese bijiacha (literally it means the "rack for the bruch").
Could be paired or used in single veriant. Some specimens mave the barrel drilled in the central prong.
I think it is the second half of XIX century as the most part of alike items dated not earlier than XIX century by iconography and pieces with dates engraved (or indicated by any other method) and only modern "kungfu movie's legends" attributed them as really ancient pieces of weapon.
The hilt could be wrapped initially with the hemp cord or a band of fabric. I saw a lot with red band wrapping, all old, torn and worn. THis colour is the national color of Chinese so they liked to use it for weapon.
Timo Nieminen
16th September 2014, 12:41 AM
Probably Chinese. These were also used in Indonesia, Okinawa, and elsewhere. Indonesian ones have pommels similar to Chinese ones, so far as I have seen.
They were used as police truncheons (like jutte/jitte in Japan), not just as martial arts weapons.
Sai in English, which is from the Japanese, from Chinese chai. The character 釵 also means "hairpin".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sai_(weapon)
Aleksey
16th September 2014, 08:46 AM
This one is Chinese for sure.
Regarding the name - bijiacha in Chinese, no correspondence to Japanese in spite of the hyerogliphic as they used another tradition - some words in Chinese are written by different hyerogliphs then in Japanese and visa versa.
Regarding the police weapon - not for China. For Japan - it is OK.
The origin of the weapon could be from trishula trident in Buddhist iconocgarphy but this point is not for sure - only assumption.
estcrh
16th September 2014, 12:42 PM
I've been struggling with this one for a long time.
It's entirely hand wrought iron and I would have no problem assigning an 18th/19th century date.
I'm sure the grip was wrapped at one time.
Any information y'all have will be appreciated, nationality, an accurate name for it, etc.
I suspect it's a KungFu or other discipline weapon, but I'm open to suggestions.
Real antique sai are quite rare, there are only a few images available online, from what I have read and seen your sai is not Chinese, it looks like an Okinawan sai, the antique Chinese sai like weapons that I have seen looked different then this. I have uploaded a few images of antique sai, from left to right, two Okinawan sai found in Japan with wrapped hilts and the smaller sai with no wrapping came from Indonesia, your sai has some similar traits to the ones I posted.
In Indonesia the sai seem to have been more for martial arts use, in Okinawa they had more of a weapons type use. Okinawa was under Japanese control for several hundred years and the Japanese weapon known as the jutte sometimes took the form of a sai, I have included an image of two Japanese sai jutte.
The bottom image is a quote from"The Secret Royal Martial Arts of Ryukyu"
by Kanenori Sakon Matsuo, which discusses the use of the sai in Okinawa.
estcrh
16th September 2014, 11:11 PM
This one is Chinese for sure.
Regarding the name - bijiacha in Chinese, no correspondence to Japanese in spite of the hyerogliphic as they used another tradition - some words in Chinese are written by different hyerogliphs then in Japanese and visa versa.
Regarding the police weapon - not for China. For Japan - it is OK.
The origin of the weapon could be from trishula trident in Buddhist iconocgarphy but this point is not for sure - only assumption.
Aleksey, were are you getting this information from, if you search for the word "bijiacha" you do not find one image or mention of a sai, if you search for "Chinese sai you will not find much either, if you search for "Okinawan sai" you will find many similar looking sai to the one being discussed.
Here is a section from "Taiho-Jutsu: Law and Order in the Age of the Samurai" by Don Cunningham which discusses sai in China and Okinawa as well as some other Chinese iron bar weapons.
I have posted an image of what was said to be a Chinese sai, it is quite long and pointed.
ausjulius
28th September 2014, 10:10 PM
it is indeed anodd weapon.. its hard to say the origin of them if they dont have a grip wrapping any more..
the malay style with have a spiraling bount cord that makes it easy to distinguish..
also malay ones almost always have some for of point as it is a weapon after all.
but in china and japan laws forbidding general public from having pointy things turn many of these into a steel baton..
malay name is trisula.. which lets you know its origins by its indo-aryan name .. being a trident i would imagine it was originally some scaled down version of the fork like Indian spears that have spread through asia with indian religion.
many of the malay trisula have indeed chinese multifaced pommels.. and ive seen japanese ones like it too.
the sai and the tonfa batons both have their origins in malay martial arts.(the tonfa baton is also present in burma and thailand.. as is the trisula.. although very uncommon so again the real origin of both may be indian martial arts.. )
.
we must remember that 1200 years ago the malay kingdoms were powerful states controlling the sea beween east asia and india and although they are long forgotten today at one time they were naval super powers of the region, - controling the seas of south east asia.. so lots of these things spread very rapidly and were ingested locally.
Neil
2nd October 2014, 07:05 AM
In my opinion this is most likely a Chinese example. Its construction and form is quite consistent with many examples I have seen and handled, many purchased directly from China.
estcrh
2nd October 2014, 08:08 AM
In my opinion this is most likely a Chinese example. Its construction and form is quite consistent with many examples I have seen and handled, many purchased directly from China.
Do you have any pictures of some of the ones purchased from China so we can compare, as far as I know the Chinese do not allow export of their antique weapons, they do export vast amounts of fakes, some quite good. On the other hand I have seen several antique sai that originated from Japan, which makes sense since Okinawa was part of Japan for several hundred years. I am not saying that it is impossible that the Chinese did not make and use sai of this exact type, its just that I have so far not seen any evidence that they did, the antique sai that I have seen that were labeled as Chinese looked quite different. Here is another sai that originated in Japan, again quite similar to the one being discussed.
Neil
2nd October 2014, 03:16 PM
I would wager the one just posted is Chinese too. The tip and pommel form lead me to believe that. Once you see enough of these Chinese maces in there many forms the same patterns are repeated over and over with some variation. I will try to post a couple pictures after work as you asked.
estcrh
2nd October 2014, 04:13 PM
I would wager the one just posted is Chinese too. The tip and pommel form lead me to believe that. Once you see enough of these Chinese maces in there many forms the same patterns are repeated over and over with some variation. I will try to post a couple pictures after work as you asked.
Okinawa was close to both China and Japan so it would not be unusual for a Chinese influence to be seen in Okinawan sai, I know for a fact that two of the sai I posted came here directly from Japan, and there is way more chance that they got to Japan through Okinawa than through China. Several forum members have mentioned China as a possibility of the origin for the sai being discussed here but so far no one has posted any Chinese sai to compare with or any reference from a book.
Here are two searches, one for "Chinese sai" and one for "Okinawan sai", see what both bring up.
Chinese sai.
https://www.google.com/search?q=chinese+sai&safe=off&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ei=EmQtVLrUNaT-8AGqnYD4CA&ved=0CAgQ_AUoAQ&biw=1842&bih=995
Okinawan sai.
https://www.google.com/search?q=okinawan+sai&safe=off&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ei=LGQtVOG6CumL8gG0zIDQBw&ved=0CAgQ_AUoAQ&biw=1842&bih=995
Timo Nieminen
3rd October 2014, 11:55 PM
Several forum members have mentioned China as a possibility of the origin for the sai being discussed here but so far no one has posted any Chinese sai to compare with or any reference from a book.
Here's a Chinese example (the Japanese name would be "manji no sai"; I don't know if there is a specific Chinese name, or whether it is just "cha" like a normal sai). In rather poor condition. 715g.
Pre-Meiji Okinawan sai are built much like Chinese ones. How would one tell the difference? How can one tell whether it was made where it was found? (Mark Bishop's book, "Okinawan Weaponry" has some old Okinawan sai, and notes one that might have been imported from China.)
These days, Okinawan sai are best known, but that's a result of the spread of karate and the inclusion of the sai as a karate weapon.
Also attached is a picture of an iron ruler that's half-way to becoming a sai. (Pg. 55 in 中国古代冷兵器 (Ancient Chinese cold weapon) (http://www.worldcat.org/title/zhong-guo-gu-dai-leng-bing-qi/oclc/430270431)
estcrh
4th October 2014, 12:42 AM
Pre-Meiji Okinawan sai are built much like Chinese ones. How would one tell the difference? How can one tell whether it was made where it was found? (Mark Bishop's book, "Okinawan Weaponry" has some old Okinawan sai, and notes one that might have been imported from China.)
These days, Okinawan sai are best known, but that's a result of the spread of karate and the inclusion of the sai as a karate weapon.
Timo, I personally have not seen an authentic, antique sai that was proven to have originated from China and looked anything like the sai currently posted, they may have had some similarities but they also had glaring differences.
I have watched, dealers, auctions, Ebay, Yahoo Japan for years and have only seen a couple of antique sai, surviving ones are rare. Of the ones I posted I know for sure that two came directly from Japan, and one came here from Indonesia, the other one was said to be from Japan but I have no proof. So if I see a sai that is of unknown origin and it is quite similar to the ones I know did not come from China I have to assume that it is not Chinese.
Here are two Chinese sai, as you can see they have some similarity to the sai previously posted but they have more in common with the ones you posted.
estcrh
4th October 2014, 12:56 AM
Here is a quick comparison, notice the similarities.
Timo Nieminen
4th October 2014, 02:35 AM
Some more (possibly) Chinese cha/sai:
Group of Highbinder weapons including a sai: http://amst312.umwblogs.org/2009/01/29/the-highbinders/
http://www.jikishinkobudo.com/articles/4586442844/Antique-Sai-in-the-British-Collection/8756081
Further to my earlier comments on trying to identify the origin of a particular sai, Okinawa was a major trade centre, connecting China, Korea, Japan, and the Philippines. A lot of trade went through Okinawa, with Chinese goods proceeding to Japan and the Philippines, and Japanese goods going to Chinese and SE Asia. Given domestic Okinawan iron production being what it was (I've seen it described as "absent"), a lot of "Okinawan" iron goods may well have been imported in the finished state, rather than being locally made.
Neil
4th October 2014, 05:36 AM
Here are a couple examples pictured below that I know were collected in northern China.
It was mentioned before that this style of antique mace is "quite rare". I do not necessarily agree with that statement. I have seen a couple dozen examples in the past several years that are very similar or of some variant that I strongly believe were Chinese due to either their association with other weapons in the same collection or where they were being sold from. I have also seen photo evidence of Qing era Chinese prison guards using these weapons. As far as nailing down a consistent form goes, that would be difficult. Its been my experience that variation is the rule rather than the exception when it come to Chinese "cold" weapons. I do appreciate estcrh's desire for proof though. I hope the two mace that I posted will be of interest. I also like the comments Timo made about the flow of iron goods between countries.
estcrh
4th October 2014, 03:12 PM
Some more (possibly) Chinese cha/sai:
Group of Highbinder weapons including a sai: http://amst312.umwblogs.org/2009/01/29/the-highbinders/
http://www.jikishinkobudo.com/articles/4586442844/Antique-Sai-in-the-British-Collection/8756081
Further to my earlier comments on trying to identify the origin of a particular sai, Okinawa was a major trade centre, connecting China, Korea, Japan, and the Philippines. A lot of trade went through Okinawa, with Chinese goods proceeding to Japan and the Philippines, and Japanese goods going to Chinese and SE Asia. Given domestic Okinawan iron production being what it was (I've seen it described as "absent"), a lot of "Okinawan" iron goods may well have been imported in the finished state, rather than being locally made.
Timo, as you know sai have been discussed repeatedly on various forums with many claims being made but usually no proof is furnished or images posted to back up what anyone is saying and in the end no new evidence is produced. Here we finally have at least a few images and some information to work with.
I have no knowledge of whether Okinawa produced its own iron products or if they imported tools and weapons from China etc, what I do know is that from the 1600s on Okinawa was under samurai control and I think that would preclude the open importation of weapons except possibly for the use of sanctioned police and security officials. Other individuals would have had to secretly import or forge their own from existing metal supplies. That is why Okinawa developed martial arts and wooden weapons from what I understand. This would also explain the scarcity of antique sai today.
Your one link was to a newspaper / magazine article from the late 1800s early 1900s? depicting the Chinese criminal element brought to American with imported Chinese laborers. It shows the types of weapons confiscated from Chinese criminals including a sai with a wrapped hilt.
Highbinder, a member of a Chinese-American secret society that engaged in blackmail, murder, etc, named after the High-binders, a New York city gang.
The other links is very interesting, its shows a sai from the Royal Armories identified as being Chinese while at the same time it questions were it actually originated and asks for help in identifying it, which is exactly what we are discussing here.
Antique Sai in the British Collection
By Jikishin Kobudo, Sep 27 2013 11:00AM
We are fortunate to practice martial arts amongst one of the largest collections of arms and armour in the world, at the Royal Armouries Museum in Leeds, England.
One of the objects on is display is exhibit XXVIM.17: Listed as a Chinese parrying weapon. The weapon is steel and measures 48.9cm in length. Its shaft is octagonal and the hilt is very sturdy.
The exact age of this weapon has not yet been determined, but we believe it to be at least one hundred years old. This weapon was purchased from a collection of South and East Asian weapons in the second half of the 20th century.
At the moment we are investigating as to whether this item is Okinawan or indeed Chinese and would welcome the thoughts of other martial artists with experience in this area. The item can be viewed at the museum inside the Oriental Gallery.
Timo Nieminen
4th October 2014, 10:19 PM
Note the very similar sai in post #10. Overall, very Chinese. Pommel is in a Chinese style, guard is attached in a Chinese style, the tip is in a Chinese style (also seen on longer jian maces). Of course, if other people used the same styles, it could be from elsewhere. But to me, it looks very Chinese.
I've only seen a few sources comment on Okinawan iron production (all Japanese, all saying there was none). Okinawa certainly imported weapons and iron tools from both Japan and China. A lot of Japanese weapons passed through on the way to China as well. Iron tools (and probably weapons) were manufactured locally from imported iron. This last point means that while we might be able to identify iron as Chinese or Japanese (or Indian, or more recently, European scrap iron) in origin, it still doesn't tell us where the item in question was made, since iron was traded as a raw material and locally smithed.
Weapons restrictions on Okinawa predate Japanese rule (iirc, they date to the unification by the kings of Chuzan (ruling from Shuri)). However, a lot of karate mythology talks about the development of karate to fight the Japanese, so blames disarmament on the Japanese. It's best to largely ignore the mythology (which includes choice elements such as karate punches being designed to pierce Japanese wooden/bamboo armour, which was not what Japanese soldiers/samurai wore). The sai certainly has history on Okinawa as a police truncheon. This role was taken by jutte in Japan, so I wouldn't expect to see many Japanese sai. As noted upthread, the sai was also used by Chinese police (but I think less often than the iron ruler). It's very likely that the sai was adopted in Okinawa from Chinese use.
In China, the main use of the Sai seems to have been in Fujian and Taiwan. Taiwanese use would have come from Fujianese use. Fujian was also closely connected by trade and travel to Okinawa and SE Asia, and is a likely entry point for the sai into China if it was adopted from Indonesian use.
(The Highbinder sai might well be American-made, but would have been made in the traditional Chinese style.)
estcrh
5th October 2014, 03:44 AM
Here are a couple examples pictured below that I know were collected in northern China.
It was mentioned before that this style of antique mace is "quite rare". I do not necessarily agree with that statement. I have seen a couple dozen examples in the past several years that are very similar or of some variant that I strongly believe were Chinese due to either their association with other weapons in the same collection or where they were being sold from. I have also seen photo evidence of Qing era Chinese prison guards using these weapons. As far as nailing down a consistent form goes, that would be difficult. Its been my experience that variation is the rule rather than the exception when it come to Chinese "cold" weapons. I do appreciate estcrh's desire for proof though. I hope the two mace that I posted will be of interest. I also like the comments Timo made about the flow of iron goods between countries.
Neil, do you have any pictures of the Qing era Chinese prison guards, that would be interesting. I myself would call something rare when there are almost no images available online.
Here is something I think we can agree is probably an indicator of Chinese manufacture, this particular four sided cross section. I have never seen a sai from either Indonesia or Okinawa that had this cross section.
Timo Nieminen
5th October 2014, 03:49 AM
Diamond section is found on Chinese jian maces (among other cross-sections).
estcrh
5th October 2014, 04:03 AM
Note the very similar sai in post #10. Overall, very Chinese. Pommel is in a Chinese style, guard is attached in a Chinese style, the tip is in a Chinese style (also seen on longer jian maces). Of course, if other people used the same styles, it could be from elsewhere. But to me, it looks very Chinese.
But did other cultures have the same pommel style, either before the Chinese adaptation of it or by copying the Chinese style, I think a lot of information from Okinawa and Indonesia is missing.
Here are a couple of known Indonesian sai to compare.
estcrh
6th October 2014, 07:58 PM
The lack of iron production in Okinawa is mentioned in this book "Okinawa:The History of an Island People" By George Kerr, the restrictions on importing weapons into Okinawa is mentioned as well.
josh stout
6th October 2014, 10:55 PM
The top one I posted is from an area of Northern Sumatra where Chinese laborers were brought by the British in the late 19th c. The set of two and the other one with a wooden handle are all Chinese. All three are octagonal. The set with brass guards and pommel has a scoring line accentuating the rounded points. The other wooden handled Chinese example has a flat tip. The Sumatran one looks exactly like the other Indonesian examples shown.
estcrh
7th October 2014, 07:23 PM
The top one I posted is from an area of Northern Sumatra where Chinese laborers were brought by the British in the late 19th c. The set of two and the other one with a wooden handle are all Chinese. All three are octagonal. The set with brass guards and pommel has a scoring line accentuating the rounded points. The other wooden handled Chinese example has a flat tip. The Sumatran one looks exactly like the other Indonesian examples shown.
Josh, thanks for adding your sai here, I put it next to some other sai from the same area to compare. I think this is the most images of sai from the Indonesian area ever in place. Unfortunately I do not know of any sai that is known to have come from Okinawa. Your Chinese sai are quite nice, the vast majority of achinese sai seem to be four sided.
josh stout
8th October 2014, 12:14 AM
That is very interesting. One of them looks so much like mine that I think it may be the same one. As far as I know I have never posted a photo, so it would have had to come from the Indonesian seller and be several years old.
What do you think?
estcrh
8th October 2014, 12:23 AM
That is very interesting. One of them looks so much like mine that I think it may be the same one. As far as I know I have never posted a photo, so it would have had to come from the Indonesian seller and be several years old.
What do you think?
I thought they looked similar, it did not occur to me that the pictures may have been of the same sai, small world.
Timo Nieminen
8th October 2014, 01:04 AM
Some more antique sai (mostly Chinese, including sai/iron ruler hybrids) at http://museum.hikari.us/weapons/
estcrh
8th October 2014, 06:58 PM
Here is a modern example of Indonesian sai, you can see that the two pieces are welded together but the form is the same.
estcrh
8th October 2014, 08:55 PM
Some more antique sai (mostly Chinese, including sai/iron ruler hybrids) at http://museum.hikari.us/weapons/
They have a lot of items but the site and images etc have not been updated for years, some of the descriptions are suspect, they have this sai described as being an Okinawan sai. Iron with cord and fabric wrapping with small wooden inserts. It looks just like a four sided Chinese sai, this is how the vast majority of Chinese sai are made, what would make this one particular sai "Okinawan".
Neil
10th October 2014, 03:38 PM
"Neil, do you have any pictures of the Qing era Chinese prison guards, that would be interesting. I myself would call something rare when there are almost no images available online."
"Here is something I think we can agree is probably an indicator of Chinese manufacture, this particular four sided cross section. I have never seen a sai from either Indonesia or Okinawa that had this cross section."
Sorry for the slow response. I am putting my seasonal business to bed for the year and the hours are long.
I am also about to leave town for the weekend but I will share that image when I return. When I found it I was very excited. It is an important piece to the puzzle.
I thought I would also mention that I have owned a forked mace that I know was collected in China with a fully rounded percussion bar like a soda straw. With that said using the shape of the cross section of that area as an indicator of origin may not be the most reliable approach.
It might also be worth mentioning that the grip wrapping style on the mace pictured right above looks quite Chinese to me.
I am loving the actual pair example that Josh posted as well. To me that is rare and worth exploring further.
Lastly, I just want to say this is a great topic and discussion. I really appreciate hearing others thoughts and seeing pieces from their collections.
estcrh
10th October 2014, 10:39 PM
"Neil, do you have any pictures of the Qing era Chinese prison guards, that would be interesting. I myself would call something rare when there are almost no images available online."
"Here is something I think we can agree is probably an indicator of Chinese manufacture, this particular four sided cross section. I have never seen a sai from either Indonesia or Okinawa that had this cross section."
Sorry for the slow response. I am putting my seasonal business to bed for the year and the hours are long.
I am also about to leave town for the weekend but I will share that image when I return. When I found it I was very excited. It is an important piece to the puzzle.
I thought I would also mention that I have owned a forked mace that I know was collected in China with a fully rounded percussion bar like a soda straw. With that said using the shape of the cross section of that area as an indicator of origin may not be the most reliable approach.
It might also be worth mentioning that the grip wrapping style on the mace pictured right above looks quite Chinese to me.
I am loving the actual pair example that Josh posted as well. To me that is rare and worth exploring further.
Lastly, I just want to say this is a great topic and discussion. I really appreciate hearing others thoughts and seeing pieces from their collections.
Neil, without enough representitive examples its hard to accutately attribute origin to these type of weapons. To help out I have put together a Pinterest gallery of Chinese sai, mace, truncheons etc. There may be some replicas amoung the images but I have tried by best to weed them out. I think this is the largest collection of Chinese examples in the world.
From these images its easy to see that a four sided cross section whether rectangular, square, diamond shaped etc was very popular. As far as handles go wood, cord seem to be used.
http://www.pinterest.com/worldantiques/chinese-mace-truncheon-sai-iron-whips-etc/
Shakethetrees
11th October 2014, 03:55 AM
As I recall, there are images to be found in the W.O. Oldman catalog.
They are not sai, but basically iron or bronze bars or tapering straight form with sword like hilts.
I will have to locate my copy and see if I can get a clear enough scan to use here. While the pictures are old and a bit faded, I believe the add a few interesting types that are scarcely seen these days.
In reading translated accounts of riots and crowd control during the 19th century's many upheavals I recall that they simply called these weapons "iron bars". This is probably due to translation issues as the Chinese term for them is never mentioned.
I will have a look around tonight.
spiral
11th October 2014, 06:56 PM
Id guess these may be the weapons the Brits banned in Hong Kong & Shanghai as fighting irons?
It would be fascinating to see old photos of them in situ!
Given the mostly primitive black smithing structure of them Id guess we would have to assume there many fakes out there. Especially from China?
Ive heard hearsay of some being made & sold from Cornwall 20 to 30 years ago, by a fellow who collected & traded authentic Japanese swords....
spiral
Timo Nieminen
12th October 2014, 02:12 AM
The various potential "fighting irons" are:
1. Iron ruler (鐵尺 (traditional), 铁尺 (simplified) , Pinyin tiě chǐ). Short iron bar, with or without distinct grip, with or without guard.
2. Jian (usually translated as "mace", 鐧 (traditional), 锏 (simplified), Pinyin jiǎn). Not the same character as jian "sword", which is 劍 (traditional), 剑 (simplified), Pinyin jiàn. Sword length (short sword) rather than dagger length.
3. Bian ("whip", 鞭, Pinyin biān). Apparently distinguished from jian by having a knobbed or segmented shape. Also "hard whip", to distinguish it from jointed metal whips (also bian) and flexible soft whips.
Jian and bian are often called "swordbreakers" in English. They appear in the Ming classic, The Water Margin, as weapons used by some of the heroes. Traditionally used in pairs.
At least some jian/bian are training devices, rather than weapons per se. If they're very heavy, or cast iron: probably trainers.
Some antique and modern examples shown in http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=16220
Some more examples, some with scabbards:
Pair of tie chi: http://www.oriental-arms.com/item.php?id=2499
Jian:
http://www.oriental-arms.com/item.php?id=2004
http://www.oriental-arms.com/item.php?id=2280
http://www.oriental-arms.com/item.php?id=2463
http://www.oriental-arms.com/item.php?id=1704
Long jian: http://www.oriental-arms.com/item.php?id=3624
Bian: http://www.oriental-arms.com/item.php?id=4309
There were also long two-handed jian, like the long one above, but with longer grips.
estcrh
12th October 2014, 05:59 AM
As I recall, there are images to be found in the W.O. Oldman catalog.
They are not sai, but basically iron or bronze bars or tapering straight form with sword like hilts.
I will have to locate my copy and see if I can get a clear enough scan to use here. While the pictures are old and a bit faded, I believe the add a few interesting types that are scarcely seen these days.
In reading translated accounts of riots and crowd control during the 19th century's many upheavals I recall that they simply called these weapons "iron bars". This is probably due to translation issues as the Chinese term for them is never mentioned.
I will have a look around tonight.
If you can find any additional images of any type that would be helpful.
KraVseR
14th October 2014, 08:17 PM
Timo, as you know sai have been discussed repeatedly on various forums with many claims being made but usually no proof is furnished or images posted to back up what anyone is saying and in the end no new evidence is produced. Here we finally have at least a few images and some information to work with.
I have no knowledge of whether Okinawa produced its own iron products or if they imported tools and weapons from China etc, what I do know is that from the 1600s on Okinawa was under samurai control and I think that would preclude the open importation of weapons except possibly for the use of sanctioned police and security officials. Other individuals would have had to secretly import or forge their own from existing metal supplies. That is why Okinawa developed martial arts and wooden weapons from what I understand. This would also explain the scarcity of antique sai today.
Your one link was to a newspaper / magazine article from the late 1800s early 1900s? depicting the Chinese criminal element brought to American with imported Chinese laborers. It shows the types of weapons confiscated from Chinese criminals including a sai with a wrapped hilt.
The other links is very interesting, its shows a sai from the Royal Armories identified as being Chinese while at the same time it questions were it actually originated and asks for help in identifying it, which is exactly what we are discussing here.
What weapons are depicted on this image? Help please.
estcrh
15th October 2014, 12:59 AM
What weapons are depicted on this image? Help please.
Do you mean this image?
KraVseR
15th October 2014, 02:32 PM
Do you mean this image?
Yes.
Timo Nieminen
15th October 2014, 11:52 PM
If you're asking what they are:
A Chinese fighting knife, of the kind shown/discussed in http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=15217 and http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=15728
A revolver. (Is that the holster at the top above it?)
A pair of butterfly swords (hudiedao) in one scabbard.
What looks like a fan-knife, a knife disguised as a folded fan.
Another (larger) fighting knife like the above.
A cha/sai.
A hatchet (looks Western).
A cooking knife.
A pair of jian maces in one scabbard, like the ones linked a few posts upthread.
Shakethetrees
16th October 2014, 04:24 AM
Since we seem to be drifting into a more general discussion, I would like to show a little piece that I've had for thirty years.
It's marked "Made by Rollin White for Smith and Wesson".
.22 caliber short, but the most interesting thing to this discussion (and to me, personally), is that the cylinder is engraved with three Chinese characters (old style) "People of Min (Fujian) Province"
I was stumped on this character but an old Chinese man recognized it and explained that Min Province became Fukien (Fujian in pinyin) sometime in the early 20th century.
This pistol bears a striking resemblance to the one illustrated in the old newspaper article.
It also could have been used in China during one or another revolutionary uprising during the 19th or 20th centuries, or, by a member of a Tong during the aforementioned periods, possibly in San Francisco.
estcrh
16th October 2014, 05:01 AM
Since we seem to be drifting into a more general discussion, I would like to show a little piece that I've had for thirty years.
It's marked "Made by Rollin White for Smith and Wesson".
.22 caliber short, but the most interesting thing to this discussion (and to me, personally), is that the cylinder is engraved with three Chinese characters (old style) "People of Min (Fujian) Province"
I was stumped on this character but an old Chinese man recognized it and explained that Min Province became Fukien (Fujian in pinyin) sometime in the early 20th century.
This pistol bears a striking resemblance to the one illustrated in the old newspaper article.
It also could have been used in China during one or another revolutionary uprising during the 19th or 20th centuries, or, by a member of a Tong during the aforementioned periods, possibly in San Francisco.
Rollin White (June 6, 1817 – March 22, 1892) was an American gunsmith who invented a bored-through revolver cylinder that allowed metallic cartridges to be loaded from the rear of a revolver's cylinder.
In interesting gun, is it the 7 shot model? Thanks to posting it and your other items, all part of history. I have seen several weapons from other countries end up in China, brought there by foreign military forces, one in particular is a very distintive Indian axe, most likely left by Indian troops serving with the British in China. The other possibility is that the pistol was inscribed in America by a Chinese national working in the US.
josh stout
17th October 2014, 03:24 PM
Since we seem to be drifting into a more general discussion, I would like to show a little piece that I've had for thirty years.
It's marked "Made by Rollin White for Smith and Wesson".
.22 caliber short, but the most interesting thing to this discussion (and to me, personally), is that the cylinder is engraved with three Chinese characters (old style) "People of Min (Fujian) Province"
I was stumped on this character but an old Chinese man recognized it and explained that Min Province became Fukien (Fujian in pinyin) sometime in the early 20th century.
This pistol bears a striking resemblance to the one illustrated in the old newspaper article.
It also could have been used in China during one or another revolutionary uprising during the 19th or 20th centuries, or, by a member of a Tong during the aforementioned periods, possibly in San Francisco.
Thanks for posting the very interesting handgun. I am fascinated for a number of reasons, but I am worried that this will get us off the more general thread on "fighting irons" or "sword-breakers". Perhaps you could post a separate thread? I would love to comment.
KraVseR
17th October 2014, 06:25 PM
Thanks.
Shakethetrees
17th October 2014, 06:41 PM
Since we seem to be drifting into a more general discussion, I would like to show a little piece that I've had for thirty years.
As I said in my initial posting when I put the images of the pistol up, I plan on re posting this in its own thread.
It was only due to the illustration and the almost exact similarity to the pistol shown in the weapons vignette!
benny.lee
14th June 2016, 03:14 PM
I've been struggling with this one for a long time.
It's entirely hand wrought iron and I would have no problem assigning an 18th/19th century date.
I'm sure the grip was wrapped at one time.
Any information y'all have will be appreciated, nationality, an accurate name for it, etc.
I suspect it's a KungFu or other discipline weapon, but I'm open to suggestions.
yes
This is China's "hand fork". (手叉)(SHOUCHA)Pair use
Can hit, block and thorn
There are similar weapons in other Asian countries.
Japan, Southeast Asian countries have
The difference lies in the tail, Chinese fork usually have a" eight tail"
estcrh
14th June 2016, 04:50 PM
yes
This is China's "hand fork". (手叉)(SHOUCHA)Pair use
Can hit, block and thorn
There are similar weapons in other Asian countries.
Japan, Southeast Asian countries have
The difference lies in the tail, Chinese fork usually have a" eight tail"
Benny, when is search using 手叉 there are no images of shoucha / sai....just forks, is there another word? Do you think that either of these are Chinese, these are in my collection.
Shakethetrees
14th June 2016, 06:53 PM
Chinese fork usually have a" eight tail"
Do you mean eight sided?
estcrh
14th June 2016, 07:04 PM
Do you mean eight sided?Is he referring to the butt being octagon or the shaft?
benny.lee
15th June 2016, 02:09 AM
Is he referring to the butt being octagon or the shaft?
Yes, there are eight sides.
benny.lee
15th June 2016, 02:11 AM
Benny, when is search using 手叉 there are no images of shoucha / sai....just forks, is there another word? Do you think that either of these are Chinese, these are in my collection.
These two are also China's weapons
Because of this weapon is not a standard equipment, so many of his titles in the civil
Can be called "铁尺"(Iron ruler)(TIE CHI)
Gavin Nugent
15th June 2016, 10:44 AM
An image I have on file that was shared elsewhere recently.
Gavin
Gavin Nugent
21st July 2016, 11:52 AM
I bought this quite some time ago in a box lot of Tibet and Mongolian knives and trousse and upon playing with it recently, it is a most effective and destructive little item...the question is, is it actually a weapon, i.e; an iron ruler or something else like a sharpening steel?
It is just under 34.5cms long. the grip is rectangular and shaped for fitment in the hand. The "blade" for want of a better word is thicker and broader than the handle and an elliptical cross section and a tapering tip...no sharp edges, just effective blunt force trauma.
POB is at the half way mark, which is putting all the weight forward but little to no effort in the hand.
Gavin
josh stout
21st July 2016, 08:33 PM
Does it have a hairpin lamination? It looks like it has something. How thick is it? It certainly looks like it could be a weapon but I have not seen anything like it.
Gavin Nugent
21st July 2016, 11:25 PM
Does it have a hairpin lamination? It looks like it has something. How thick is it? It certainly looks like it could be a weapon but I have not seen anything like it.
Hi Josh,
No hairpin lamination, but I too see activity within the patina.
It is 7mm thick at the base and 4cms wide.
Gavin
josh stout
22nd July 2016, 02:30 PM
Thanks for the info Gavin! This is certainly a strange one. It certainly seems too well made and too solid to be anything other than a weapon, but I have seen laminated heat-treated scissors. The "tonkou" brass work looks vaguely like it could have been made in Western China/Eastern Tibet. It reminds me of Yi swords. When you look closely at the lamination, does it have a "Tibetan" feel to it even if it is not hairpin?
Miguel
22nd July 2016, 07:28 PM
This is a fascinating thread which until now I have missed :o
Miguel
Gavin Nugent
25th July 2016, 09:56 AM
Thanks for the info Gavin! This is certainly a strange one. It certainly seems too well made and too solid to be anything other than a weapon, but I have seen laminated heat-treated scissors. The "tonkou" brass work looks vaguely like it could have been made in Western China/Eastern Tibet. It reminds me of Yi swords. When you look closely at the lamination, does it have a "Tibetan" feel to it even if it is not hairpin?
I am at a total loss with this one Josh, it could just as well be a "higher" end iron spatula that one had a large ring to the pommel end...one thing is for certain though, it is very well forged and very devastating in the the wrong hands.
Gavin
estcrh
25th July 2016, 02:20 PM
I am at a total loss with this one Josh, it could just as well be a "higher" end iron spatula that one had a large ring to the pommel end...one thing is for certain though, it is very well forged and very devastating in the the wrong hands.
Gavin
I would also say it is a weapon, based on what the fact that the Japanese and Chinese used a vast array of blunt force weapons, there afre bound to be some that are not well known, this could an example.
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