Quote:
Originally Posted by wildwolberine
Posting these for comment. One old knife I’ve always referred to as a tenegre. Figural hilt in good condition, I assume it’s wood as there’s no insect damage? Brass ferrule, thick blade with minimal damage, elongated clip point profile. Wood scabbard with upper part covered in hide. Part of the scabbard retains the thin horn covering (I thought this was turtle shell but see others have ID’d it as buffalo horn).
Second is very similar but recently made in last 6-8 years. Was imported by Kris Cutlery (RIP!) and purchased on electronic bay. Seller described it as a “Sinuwak”. It’s similar to the old forum photo (attached) I found when I searched the forum. I noticed it has a similar blade shape, ferrule, and scabbard as the older tenegre. Honestly it’s probably my favorite contemporary, utilitarian piece even though it hardly cost anything.
So, does the term “Sinuwak” mean anything, and is there a relationship between the two swords? A web search returns a lot of examples of this knife from Badiangan, Iloilo.
Lastly, I may try to do some work on the tenegre. Could the blade be a candidate for etching?
|
Halloo,
The antique sword is a tenegre with a sinuwak blade profile (refers to clip-point). It's my favorite blade profile for Panay blades. The term may vary as the location changes (Panay is a big island with four provinces) but that's the proper term for it in Iloilo province. I think that's still carabao horn; some of them were treated or just somehow escape insect damage (I've had at least 3 tenegre figurals, all carabao horn, which didn't get attacked by insects).
So yeah the two swords are related, although if I'm not mistaken, the modern version you have is geared towards utility (and not fighting anymore).