13th August 2009, 02:06 PM
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#11
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Member
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Manila, Phils.
Posts: 1,042
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Quote:
Originally Posted by wilked aka Khun Deng
Rick or scratch, Could you elaborate on the "rarest" comment. I'm unfamiliar with any panabas in this profile? Dan
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Dan, at the Hayes Museum, there's a similar panabas with this description:
Object Name: Ax
Other Name: Panabas
Catalog Number: 1934.706.1
Description: hand-held ax (often refered to as a borong); leaf-shaped blade, thickens on top and narrows towards bottom, and is heavy; handle is wood and has numerous rinds carved into it from middle to top; bottom half is split down the middle (by design) to accommodate the hidden hilt of the blade and held together by four metal bands, one corroded silver and the three botttom ones brass; end cap has ”WP 54” written in black ink; top part of handle side has unreadable marking sticker;
Date: 1900
Dimensions: L - 20.866 inches
Material: wood; metal;
Event: Philippine Insurrection
Provenance: Panabas brought back from the Philippines by Webb C. Hayes
Notes: # 6 in display case; part of a collection of weapons and assorted items Webb C Hayes brought back from the Philippines. According to Ron Zambarrona [Zambarrano], a collector and historian of Moro weapons, this is a rarest form of a Panabas, a smaller version, which is often mistaken for an ax.
Collection: Webb Cook Hayes The panabas below as described above also appeared in this thread.
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