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Will M
24th April 2017, 04:45 PM
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urumi

I came across this and thought someone here may have more info regarding these. I've never heard of one before.
Seems like a dangerous weapon for the opponent and user.

Ian
25th April 2017, 12:35 AM
I've seen two examples in southern India (Karnataka) but never seen one used. The examples I saw were of recent manufacture and made roughly from poor quality spring steel. They seemed like a novelty item, so I passed on them.

Ian.

ariel
25th April 2017, 06:23 AM
Those are , of course, exaggerated versions of the real belt swords: very conventionally-looking but with thin blades capable of being wrapped around the waist. They have a hole on the tip and a button on the handle.

Tirri's collection had one. Elgood showed 2 examples in his book on South Indian weapons. The picture concentrated on the handle ends of them and did not show the entire blades. That was the reason one person of our mutual acquaintance boldly questioned the veracity of Elgood's description. Well....:-)

As a matter of fact, some Caucasian shashkas had very thin and springy blades and were kept fully bent in round flour sieves. So the idea is not limited to South India. The fighting capability of belt swords is unlikely to compare with traditional swords, but they were intended to be hidden weapons of the last resort.

The multibladed Kalaripayattu versions are in some way similar to Chinese chain whips. I suspect all of them are rather recent developments of martial arts schools.

ausjulius
29th April 2017, 04:15 PM
Those are , of course, exaggerated versions of the real belt swords: very conventionally-looking but with thin blades capable of being wrapped around the waist. They have a hole on the tip and a button on the handle.

Tirri's collection had one. Elgood showed 2 examples in his book on South Indian weapons. The picture concentrated on the handle ends of them and did not show the entire blades. That was the reason one person of our mutual acquaintance boldly questioned the veracity of Elgood's description. Well....:-)

As a matter of fact, some Caucasian shashkas had very thin and springy blades and were kept fully bent in round flour sieves. So the idea is not limited to South India. The fighting capability of belt swords is unlikely to compare with traditional swords, but they were intended to be hidden weapons of the last resort.

The multibladed Kalaripayattu versions are in some way similar to Chinese chain whips. I suspect all of them are rather recent developments of martial arts schools.

the shashka have stiff blades. the story of them being bent 360 like that is a test of quality if you could take a handled example and in the mouth of a barrel roll the blade round to a full circle and then the demonstrator grasping the handle withdraw it form the mouth of the barrel and it spring true without a bend then its to be of good quality. crazy but i guess impressive way to test it

kronckew
29th April 2017, 11:53 PM
... I've never heard of one before.
Seems like a dangerous weapon for the opponent and user.

see:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eMAsCuDFSUI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HuaU9ceXogA