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#1 |
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Thanks Sajen , David,
I think its possible it could still have been owned by a head hunter at least? I heard they used many blades, and that when European steel became available it was used by choice. Here is another thought I have been holding in the back of my mind used as a , Pirate Sword? Something I just staring researching... British officer swords circa 1800 carrying this same G mark Last edited by JoeCanada42; 25th February 2023 at 11:04 PM. |
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#2 |
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the G. , stamped marks
?The S matches with Mandau, Werecow found swords dating from 1796-1803 |
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#3 |
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#4 |
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I read about pre regulation Dutch klewang blades and found that interesting..
but with the scabbard, handle and more unique to mandau style blade i am thinking this is older then the Dutch klewangs. maybe this form was developed by the natives , using a British blade from earlier. I heard the natives preferred trading with the British over the Dutch because the British gave things the natives wanted like knives whereas the Dutch brought like blankets to the jungle.. perhaps even maybe this form blade was made by British in Galle for trade to the natives. |
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#5 |
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I just heard on an episode of forged in fire with Klewangs
"when the Dutch colonial government was in Malaysia , they encountered and found the klewang so deadly they outlawed it before developing their own" Ian thank you for your post on Dutch klewangs I found it very interesting. and it lead me the the post that included the pre regulation klewangs, thanks also Amuk Murugul whom shared that one. |
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#6 |
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Well, Joe, please take every factual statement you hear on FIF with a huge chunk of salt if you may...
![]() ![]() Malaysia derives from the British colonial sphere of influence - the Dutch did not enter there. The Dutch klewang was never based on any indigenous blade. During the Aceh war(s) and resistance periods, Indonesian conscripts (mainly from the Moluccas and Madura IIRC) found the performance of the issued Dutch swords wanting, especially in close quarters - no big surprise there. Them resorting to local Aceh swords and other traditional blades initiated the development of the Dutch-Indo klewang. These are thin and slender blades - you'd need to join at least 2 klewang blades to obtain a mandau blade. Thus, klewang blades are an unlikely source. Have you followed up on Wilkinson and other British suppliers? Another possibility might be modern Sunda smiths moving to Borneo and setting up shop there (most likely after independence and possibly transmigrasi). Regards, Kai |
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#7 |
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Hi kai
concerning the FiF episode they did say it was a short lived Dutch venture. Thanks again for the suggestion ,but I found it hard to find any info on British suppliers and on Wilkinson blades in the area. I will try researching again. I don't know about the other idea with the Sunda smiths. Kai, can you say anything about the style handle? Iban or? thanks |
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