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#1 | |
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![]() Regards, Detlef |
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#2 |
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Hello Detlef,
Good one! (Let me know... ![]() I'm fairly sure this one is from Sulawesi. Would be good to see the blade stained - this might help to narrow things down. Regards, Kai |
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#3 | |
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Thank you for comment! Sulawesi was my guess as well but wasn't very sure since never have seen a similar one before. But the cross section with the very prominent spine I only know from very old Sulawesi blades. An etch would need a good polish before and I still have a lot of blade polish jobs in front.... ![]() ![]() ![]() Will let you know in case...... ![]() Regards, Detlef |
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#4 |
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This sort of broad, general weaponry is a bit outside my knowledge base, so what I'm putting up for consideration cannot be taken as any sort of expert opinion, only general knowledge based on experience.
There is a Batak sword like this that has a hollow grind --- ie, concave blade face --- it has a name something like rudos, or rodos or similar. Over the years I've had several, and quality and detail varies a lot. This style of bifurcated hilt is usually associated with Sumatra, lots of stylistic variations, but in other places, including Sulawesi it is somewhere between rare and non-existent. |
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#5 | |
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I think you mean the so called rudus (a search here will show some examples), there are similarities but also a lot of differents. It's also called cojang see for example here: http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showth...ighlight=rudus I will take a picture from this one side by side with my cojang for comparison. The hilt was the reason that I was unsure about the Sulawesi origin since I never before have seen such a hilt by a Sulawesi sword. Regards, Detlef |
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#6 |
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To me it also looks like a Sulawesi blade, perhaps traded.
Do we see something similar in van Zonneveld's book, p. 137, picture 575 (a sword from Tanimbar)? |
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#7 |
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Yes Gustav, that 575 picture is very similar.
A rudus Detlef? Just looked it up, seems its got a plethora of names, actually there is Javanese thing that has a blade like this too, but all the hilts I've seen on the Jawa ones are different to the hilt on this one. Thing is this:- these blades don't just stay in one place, they move all over the entire region. I often feel that attaching a geographic location as point of manufacture is a little bit silly. Maybe the idea of "collected in" is a better way to describe things, or for stuff bought well outside the region where there are reliable examples from somewhere or other it could be "attributed to". |
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#8 | |
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A very good hint and information. The sword on page 137 look indeed very similar. Regards, Detlef |
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#9 | |
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Hello Gustav,
Quote:
It is well known that blades got exported from eastern Sulawesi and Buton in considerable numbers; there may be a good chance that this hilt also originated there. Regards, Kai |
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#10 | |
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Hello Detlef,
Quote:
Regards, Kai |
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#11 | |
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#12 | ||||
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Hello Detlef,
Quote:
There are quite some bifurcated pommel types from Sulawesi, too (cp. Sumara); the more simple ones like this are quite rare though. Quote:
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![]() Regards, Kai |
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