20th January 2024, 06:57 PM
			
			
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			#9
			
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			 Vikingsword Staff 
			
			
			
				
			
			
				 
				Join Date: Dec 2004 
				Location: The Aussie Bush 
				
				
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			From:  https://www.jacarandatribal.com/items/shona-knife
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				Shona Knife - Bakatwa, Zimbabwe
			
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				In historical times, all Shona men carried a knife or sword of some kind, for use in self-defense and hunting. The ceremonial bakatwa  can be distinguished from everyday Shona blades (known as banga)  because of its double-edged form and the intricate woven brass wire  decoration on the hilt. This weapon was accorded a high level of  prestige in traditional Shona religious practice. 
  
Bakatwa  were and are passed downfrom generation to generation in a lineage and  were used in religious rituals to symbolize the presence of the owner's  ancestors, the sword's previous owners. In these rituals, the owner  addressed the bakatwa as if it was the physical embodiment of his ancestors. This link between the spirits and these swords also meant that n'angas (diviner-healers) and svikiros (spirit-mediums)  carried them as the insignia of their profession. Certain Shona hunters  were traditionally believed to be under the spiritual influence and  guidance of deceased hunters, known as shave spirits, so they also carried bakatwas as a symbol of their spirit ally. 
 
The  traditional carrying of plainer, more functional swords as everyday  weapons dwindled under the influence of Christian missionaries.  TheGovernment also launched drives to prevent men traveling armed during  the civil unrest of the 1970s. This meant that knives and swords were  largely restricted to ceremonial use. However, bakatwa have  enjoyed something of a renaissance in recent years, as symbols of  traditional cultural identity and Zimbabwean independence from British  imperialism. Some recent examples of bakatwa have even been  forged to resemble AK-47 machine-guns, with the blade sheathed inside  the gun's barrel. (cf Pitt Rivers Museum, Bakatwa).
			
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