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#1 |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 619
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Hi Alan 62, inglered, and Valjhun,
Alan 62 the pichok site you posted is much appreciated (I copied it out for my library immediately). Thanks also to ingelred for the information on the Germanic forms. Given the morphological similarities between the pichok and the trudenmesser, what is most intriguing is the link between the protective magical qualities attributed to both. Could it be that the pichok and trudenmesser represent a reinterpretation of the same blade across ethnic and religious barriers? If we further consider the Turkish bichak, the Greek machiara, and the Coorg pichangati to be related, the geographical scope of this blade type is impressive indeed. To go even further, the Canary Isle (aka Mediterranian) knife bears more than a little similarity to this group. If the Gaucho facon and the Brazilian faca da ponta are considered new world offspring of those Mediterranian blades then the lineage of this knife stretches from Malabar to Uzbekestan to the former Yugoslavia to the Mediterranian to western Europe to the new world. Whew! Could the above conjecture be correct? If it is, even the jambiya can't lay claim to a greater geographical range and it certainly can't claim an equal cross cultural/religious acceptance. On a more mundane level, I understand that messer means knife but what does truden (druden), neunkreuzer and schneid mean? Sincerely, RobT |
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#2 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 164
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Interesting thought RobT
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#3 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Moenchengladbach, Germany
Posts: 62
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Hello RobT,
"Druden" or "Truden" are evil spirits or persons (mostly women) possesed by evil spirits. These evil spirits or persons were made responsible for nightmares. To protect the sleeping persons the "trudenmesser" was punched innthe bed-head. Other names are "Drudenfeitel", were "Feitel" is local (Austrian, Bavarian or South Tyrolian) word for knife. "Neunkreuzer" means nine crosses. This is because the "Trudenmesser" the blade was often adorned with seven or nine. Also these knives often had Christian mottoes and 7 or INRI punched into the blade. I did not mention it before have two "Trudenmesser" in my collection (no fotos because I am a bad photographer), one a folding knife and one fixed just like the one of Alan62 but not that beautiful. Actually the previous owner had polished and sharpened it Geetings, Helge |
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