Lee
18th April 2019, 05:20 PM
Findings of interesting ethnographic artifacts at the local gun show continue to diminish and I am sad to report that almost all that I did see was third rate and once aimed at the tourist.
But one table did have this interesting old tool that I am interpreting as being a utility knife commonly used for working with bamboo or rattan for a price that I could not resist.
The overall length is about 21 inches with the blade being just under 9½ inches long. The blade is sharp along the straighter edge and tapers from about 3/8 inch thickness at its origin to about 1/16 inch just before the tip. The handle appears to be bamboo or rattan and is hollow centrally with a thick wall.
Decoration is limited to shallow annular carvings on the handle. I do not believe that this suggests a weapon, as handmade tools often have limited decoration.
I tried holding it as Ian suggested in post 19 of an early thread (http://vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=605) and it made really good sense as the arm muscles could clearly do the bulk of the work. These were also discussed in a more recent thread (http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=24506)
Does anyone have any idea of a more specific area of origin?
But one table did have this interesting old tool that I am interpreting as being a utility knife commonly used for working with bamboo or rattan for a price that I could not resist.
The overall length is about 21 inches with the blade being just under 9½ inches long. The blade is sharp along the straighter edge and tapers from about 3/8 inch thickness at its origin to about 1/16 inch just before the tip. The handle appears to be bamboo or rattan and is hollow centrally with a thick wall.
Decoration is limited to shallow annular carvings on the handle. I do not believe that this suggests a weapon, as handmade tools often have limited decoration.
I tried holding it as Ian suggested in post 19 of an early thread (http://vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=605) and it made really good sense as the arm muscles could clearly do the bulk of the work. These were also discussed in a more recent thread (http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=24506)
Does anyone have any idea of a more specific area of origin?