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#1 |
Keris forum moderator
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I don't know if this sheath is original to the kris, but it might have more age than first appears. It looks to me as if this sheath has been aggressively refurbished. So Ben, the rattan on the stem probably is not all that old, but the sheath itself might well be. I can see where Jose sees evidence of a missing band and i think the wood has been refinished.
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#2 |
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Hi David the best off this can be see with an pic off the kris in the scabbard
and an close up from above . It is an shame to refurbished an old scabbard I see this also a lot with very old javanese krissen with scabbards that are at least 300 years old . Ben |
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#3 | |
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#4 |
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I look it at this way the kris that we are looking at is not from an person that has no money .
So the scabbard rebefurbished but was no need because he did have money, the only thing I can come up with that it has loose his scabbard and an new one has been made for it . (nothing wrong with it ) An Javanese kris with gold on it did not belong to the common people some javanese krissen had more than one scabbard . Ben |
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#5 | |
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#6 | |
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Yes this happens but not the way you discribe if we speak about javanese ones . The most nice ones that are in europe are taken away by the soldiers long time ago . Or they take a loan on the kris that they never could pay back and then it did get sold by the loanbank . There was also in the Netherlands in 1981 an big action these krissen where bring in by An Javanese prins to sell overhere and where sold for big pices but it was not that they where without money . Auction april 27th - may 4th 1981 Paul Brandt in Amsterdam name off cataloque the fascinating world of oriental art . But the story did go that some these where not old or disputable so they where brought back to the auction house Paul Brandt . Most off the common people did not have the money to get an kris and are not allowed to carry an high rank weapon this can be read in the historian books about Indonesia The are even Batiks motifs that only can be carried by high rank persons . So you are wrong if you say that these weapons are often passed down through generations. Just because someone's great, great grandpa was a member of court does not necessarily translate to present day wealth and than sell it because they poor . that this is the reason that they come on the market now . Some old time kris collectors overhere passed away and the collction did get split up I have see that happend the last few years . I have an friend that have some famous krissen in his collection that goes back to famous people of high rank and weddings gifts long time ago proven and a few out off this catalogue but the real old ones . Ben |
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#7 | |||||
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#8 |
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from what little reading i've found, moro kris and barong were meant to be used in battle, and the scabbards were generally discarded before or during battle and maybe picked up later, maybe not. they also tended to be held together by a few rattan bands such that the whole scabbarded sword could be swung at an enemy and on hitting, cutting thru the simple rattan bands, which caught many american and spanish by surprise just before they were cut in half. upshot is moro pieces might have many scabbards over a lifetime, with higher class pieces like this less likely to have their scabbard discarded and not picked up, so more likely to be repaired rather than replaced, but still more likely to be replaced than the original it was made with.
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#9 |
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The other problem is that some of these scabbards did not survive the tropical environment there or even the many changes in environment once they were brought over here to the United States.
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