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28th May 2009, 06:52 PM | #1 |
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Unknown Pedang Melayu (Malay Sword) ?
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28th May 2009, 09:05 PM | #2 |
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That's a pedang jenawi, according to Gardner.
It's usually a Japanese katana blade in local fittings or sometimes a Chinese blade. Gardner speculates that some of them are left overs from Japanese mercenaries employed both by the Portuguese and the Dutch. Michael PS Garder's book is from 1936. Of course a lot more Japanese swords entered Malaysia during WWII. One of the Singapore-based Silat styles use the katana in their curriculum, according to an old video (I have somewhere). Last edited by VVV; 28th May 2009 at 09:53 PM. Reason: added PS |
29th May 2009, 09:10 AM | #3 |
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Hullo everybody,
Akum HangPC2. The sword in your picture apparently follows the katana form. Samurai-type swords were popular among Occidental travellers/'tourists' during the 19thC. This induced some local foundaries in the archipelago to manufacture them. One such enterprise was in the Soenda village of Tjikeroeh (Tatar Soenda/Pasoendan/Parahijangan), which started to produce them in the 1850s. (This tapered off in the 1890s, when Tjikeroeh switched to producing the more-familiar scimitar/sabre/cutlass -style swords.) During the Japanese occupation, local militias/heiho were allowed to train using real edged-weapons but wooden firearms. Needless to say, a lot of these edged-weapons which were newly-produced, were samurai-type. I have attached pix of such swords in my collection (apologies for the poor quality).The one on top is inscribed in Arabic along the blade and date-stamped 1945-46. The bottom one has the guard embossed with GPII (Gerakan Pemoeda Islam Indonesia) and dated 1946. Best, |
4th July 2009, 10:24 AM | #4 |
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Pedang DiRaja (Malaysia Royal Regalia Sword)
Sources : http://www.malaysianmonarchy.org.my/....php?id=rk4_11 |
5th July 2009, 07:43 PM | #5 |
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i think the japanese stype dates far back as ive seen very old japanese swordswith thai and burmese fittings, and the fittings look several 100 years old, also phillipine swords with japanese blades.. i can imagine that at one point japanese traders and mercenaries and pirates were common all over eastern asia.
many vietnamese swords use japanese blades also. to be honest although in the past the japanese imported korean and chinese blades .. it seems a long time back the japanese surpassed the chinese in the export of their blades. as you can see many chinese swords with japanese blades also, or japanese style and japanese blades seem far more common in south east asia than chinese. i suppose after ww2 all the "jap towns" in asia were pretty much destroyed by the local populations and so there is little evidence of these once numerous japanese settlements |
7th July 2009, 08:43 PM | #6 |
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Then we have this East Sumatran sword - Pelitai(?).
I have always thought that its blade was inspired by a japanese sword. Michael |
17th March 2012, 10:59 AM | #7 | |
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Quote:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q0lD_L5Ikd |
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16th April 2012, 11:31 AM | #8 |
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Pedang Jenawi Patani
Origin : Pattani (Sultanate Patani / Ayutthaya Period) |
17th April 2012, 05:21 PM | #9 |
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In a lecture at the Leeds Royal Armoury some time ago, Ian Bottomly quoted a figure of over 100,000 blades a year being exported from Japan to China, during the Edo period. Not surprising if they turn up all over East Asia in different forms.
One of the swords on display in the Chinese section of the RA is a Nodachi blade mounted Chinese style, with a leather wrapped hilt nearly as long as the blade. Oddly enough, the tang had been re forged into a long form and peened over at the pommel, Chinese style rather than Japanese. |
29th January 2013, 09:31 AM | #10 |
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People often think that single edge and curvature are attributes of Japanese blades, thus south east asian must have borrowed those elements from the Japanese. However, there are many solid evidence pointing out that the curved blade has been around in this region ages prior to first contact with Japanese.
For example, this is a 13th century blade from Vietnam : the way the hilt is not detachable from the blade is fundamentally different from the common Japanese blade Hi res picture http://i722.photobucket.com/albums/w...a/DSC04505.jpg |
2nd July 2013, 06:01 AM | #11 | |
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Quote:
However, they come from another country's long swordmaking tradition which includes double-edged blades and single-edged blades. This particular design sees to have been strongly influenced by Japanese swords, though it could have also been influenced by Chinese swords. Japanese swords did however reach this area. I've seen one sword that dates from the Sultanate Patani that has a Japanese blade and a proper habaki. Probably Edo, with not much sori. Rather rusted now, and engraved with local designs, with a tsuka made of the local wood and bound with thread, but still a functional sword. Presumably the blade got there via trade. Having done some digging yes, there were direct and indirect trading links between Japan and the Sultanate Patani. Chinese merchants started trading there in the early 15th century and played a major role in its rise as a regional trade centre. The Chinese were soon joined by the Portuguese (who traded with Japan) in 1516, the Japanese in 1592, the Dutch (who traded with Japan) in 1602, the English in 1612, and many Malay and Siamese merchants. After 1620 the Dutch and English both closed their warehouses, but a prosperous trade was continued by the Chinese, Japanese, and Portuguese for most of that century. Most foreign merchants abandoned trading with Patani after the 1688 invasion by Ayudhya which resulted in fifty years of political disorder and widespread lawlessness. Which means that the influence of Japanese sword design on Malayan swords has a longer history than supposed. Of course, the influence of various forms of the Chinese dao are equally possible. The zhanmadao, mentioned in an 11th century military text, was similar in appearance to a katana. However, you’re now into the rather complex subject of Chinese influences on Japanese sword design, and the wider subject of the influence of Chinese technology and culture on Asia as a whole. sometimes the Japanese influenced the Chinese. In the 16th century a Chinese general obtained a Japanese military manual featuring o-dachi and their use as an anti-cavalry weapon. This was of interest to him, since he was engaged in warfare with the Mongols. The general promptly replaced the zhanmadao, which had been used for this purpose, with the Japanese design. Ideas of who influenced what in the wider Asian context therefore get exceedingly complex if the katana and its variations were originally derivatives of the zhanmadao and the zhanmadao was subsequently replaced with Japanese-derived blades. There are therefore multiple possible influences on the development of the Malayan pedang jenawi and similar swords in the region. That some of these are *not* Japanese can be shown by the use of a permanently fixed hilt and a soldered guard. It is therefore overly simplistic to say that these are just faux Japanese swords. There are Japanese influences, sure – however Japan has been influenced by China, and China had a direct influence on places like Vietnam, Malaya, Thailand etc. The Japanese also influenced these area, either by direct or indirect trade, and smiths indigenous to these area interpreted these influences in their own way. |
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5th September 2015, 01:07 AM | #12 |
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6th February 2010, 04:00 AM | #13 |
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NGC Fight Master - Silat
Pedang Jenawi (Sundang) Training Sources : http://narapatinantaboga.blogspot.com/ http://dcmilitary.com/stories/071609...nt_28201.shtml |
21st April 2010, 05:28 PM | #14 |
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Pedang Jenawi
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13th October 2010, 03:03 AM | #15 |
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26th October 2011, 02:51 AM | #16 |
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[size=4]Pedang Jenawi Kelantan[/
Photos and links deleted. Please no hot links to photos and no links to twitter and other blogs Last edited by Lew; 26th October 2011 at 12:30 PM. |
26th October 2011, 12:28 PM | #17 |
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Pedang Jenawi.... Eerily reminiscent of the straight-bladed variant of Moroccan Koummya, called Janwi, - genovese.
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2nd March 2013, 11:04 AM | #18 |
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Pedang Jenawi Singapura
Origin : Singapore Date : 1940s (World War 2) Sources : facebook.com/Ryujinswords |
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