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Old Yesterday, 11:46 PM   #1
Sajen
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Default Aceh peudeung restored

Lately I was able to add an Aceh peudeung to my collection. It was described by a German auction house as a firangi. But after I have received it I have seen that it was in a very bad state, someone had attached the handle with a white compound mixed with steel wool but pushed the handle not deep enough to the blade, glued a green modern synthetic hand cushion inside the handle which made it impossible for an adult hand to grip it and the handle was badly corroded. It takes me some effort to open the handle and to remove this white compound completely. I bathed the handle long in vinegar to remove the rust. After all was cleaned I reattached the handle in the correct manner. Now it's a good peudeung, not a first class peudeung but a fairly nice example IMVHO. What do you think? All comments are welcome.
It's 91 cm long, blade 75 cm and 6,5 mm thick at the spine behind the handle.
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Old Today, 03:33 AM   #2
Rick
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There seems to be a pretty amazing similarity with most of the examples of this sword that I have seen; almost like they came from the same shop or manufacturer. The example I bought from Artzi has the original pad still installed. The only differences that I have seen are in the richness of the embellishments added
Do any of our members have an idea when this sword form was introduced into the Acehnese panoply of sword forms?
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Old Today, 03:44 AM   #3
werecow
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rick View Post
There seems to be a pretty amazing similarity with most of the examples of this sword that I have seen; almost like they came from the same shop or manufacturer. The example I bought from Artzi has the original pad still installed. The only differences that I have seen are in the richness of the embellishments added
I would say the steel parts of the grip and guard (including langets) are highly standardized but not the rest of it (blade, pommel cap, cushion, decorative elements, scabbard).

I have two of them atm; one has a very nice, light, nimble blade with a triple fuller running into a single wide fuller that is otherwise quite similar to the one Detlef showed here, and a silver wire grip. The other has a bare steel grip and a fairly standard triple fullered saber blade like those found on 19th c nimchas and other swords. They look superficially similar, but they handle quite differently and they have quite different distal taper.
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Old Today, 09:28 AM   #4
Pertinax
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Good job Detlef!
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