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Old 8th October 2006, 09:12 PM   #1
Rick
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Blade length, hilt length ?
Could be a N. African sword .
The thing looks like a boarding cutlass to me .
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Old 9th October 2006, 02:23 AM   #2
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Sorry, I got poetic and forgot about the "academic" part
The handle is 5.5 inches long; the blade is 23" long and a tad more than 2" wide (close to the point). I do not have it's weight without scabbard, with scabbard and scabbard separately. This will surely disqualify it from ever being written up in an " academic" book
On a more serious note, it is superbly balanced and a pleasure to hold and to wield. Another thing: it is not sharpened for the first 5-7 inches, but after that .... you can shave with it!
It does have a resemblance to naval cutlasses but could just as well be used elsewhere. I thought about it being a variant of Nabur, but I have never seen one with a Nimcha handle, most of them had knuckleguards and the blade looks and feels Thai. Southern Thailand, with sizeable Muslim population? Were Thai blades exported to nearby countries?
Which brings us back to a discussion we once had: what determines the provemance or a general classificaton of a sword: the handle or the blade?
Say, we have a sword with a typical Nabur handle and a Yataghan blade. Where did it come from from the usage point of view? Shall we say it is a Borneo Parang Nabur with an Ottoman Yataghan blade or an Ottoman Yataghan with a SE Asian handle? Following Polish tradition, I would vote for the former.
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Old 9th October 2006, 02:54 PM   #3
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I see a possibly Thai or Parang Nabur type blade with what I definitely would consider a N. African style handle .

I'd like to see some S.E.A. hilts that strongly resemble this one .

I apologise deeply for inferring that you were not being Academic Dr. ; myself; I'm just a lowly collector .
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Old 9th October 2006, 03:09 PM   #4
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I cannot tell the blade shape on this but in the scabbard the short one on here looks similar

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Old 9th October 2006, 03:30 PM   #5
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Number 2?
It looks like a classic Moroccan Nimcha with 3 down-turned quillons and the fourth one forming a knuckleguard.
Some South Arabian swords had pommels resembling " Nimcha's" ( likely, an influence from Zanzibar), but I am unaware of this pattern penetrating deeper to the East.
There were large Arab colonies in S. India and Arab traders went as far as Indonesia ( Sindbad must have gone there on a weekly basis )
We know about European and Indian influences on SEA swords. Are there any examples of Arab motives ? Inscriptions do not count: they are examples of religious Islamic influence rather than ethnographic Arabian influence.
I'll start: Indonesian Jambiya and Indian Haladie
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Old 9th October 2006, 03:47 PM   #6
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My casual observation is the blade profile does resemble that of Burmese and Thai swords.

However, I think the tang and fullering differ. Dha/darb tangs are not so "beefy" or squared off, and the fullering looks odd as well.
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Old 9th October 2006, 04:34 PM   #7
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Andrew
My casual observation is the blade profile does resemble that of Burmese and Thai swords.

However, I think the tang and fullering differ. Dha/darb tangs are not so "beefy" or squared off, and the fullering looks odd as well.
So do I, the square tang and such fuller do not fit with most of Siamese Dahb.

Last edited by PUFF; 9th October 2006 at 04:54 PM.
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