Quote:
Originally Posted by Philip
The knife on the bottom, in that image leading off this thread -- the one with the recurved edge and somewhat kukri-esque (kukroid?) profile -- I've seen the form on some Thai knives, and also on a SE Asian rattan splitting knife which, if memory serves correctly, is called a piso raut.
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Hi Philip,
Agree completely. That is a fairly common utility blade profile in Thailand and neighboring areas of Laos and Cambodia, and into parts of Vietnam. The spine of the blade is recurved and the edge is convex. The hilt style in the original post is found to a degree throughout the region, but the single iron ferrule is somewhat favored in Cambodia and Vietnam. The latter may be the most likely origin for this one.
Attached are pictures of one form of these knives and the bamboo "sheath" it is often carried in. This is a small bladed example to which the name
pisau raut (rattan knife) has been applied. Larger blades of this form may be carried in woven basket sheaths or sheaths comprising two pieces of wood bound together with rattan strips or simply nailed together.
Ian.