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| Member Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: The Netherlands 
					Posts: 2,237
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 Maybe this post can be censorred too       | |
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| Member Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: The Netherlands 
					Posts: 2,237
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			Michael, I am pretty impressed by all the theories and citations from old books and publications that you can produce on this item. Hopefully we can see the pictures of the steller seacow bone hilts in this thread. As seeing and recognizing that material will be quite interesting. I have one hilt in my collection that has a distinctively different colour. Maybe your relation can take a look at the pictures of that hilt ? Best regards, Willem | 
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| Member Join Date: Nov 2006 
					Posts: 400
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 Arjan | |
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| Member Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: Sweden 
					Posts: 1,637
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			Isn't the Dugong ID center in Rotterdam known to be one of the best in Europe?     Michael PS Btw, yours doesn't look like dugong (based on your pictures anyway). But it is a very nice example of one of the rare dragon hilts! | 
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| Member Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: The Netherlands 
					Posts: 2,237
				 | Quote: 
 They probably have a dugong skeleton in their collection, but the conservator Mr Moeliker is on holidays. Anyway, these skeletons can be found on the WWWeb, and personally if I check the bones, I can not find any bone (yet) that would be suitable to carve a hilt in te shape of mandau hilts. So if anyone has a serious suggestion which bone is suitable to carve a mandauhilt, I would be much obliged. Best regards, Willem | |
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| Member Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: Houston, TX, USA 
					Posts: 1,254
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			BTW, there has been quite a trade in arctic ivory (etc.) since at least the 18th and aparently somewhat world wide.  I have an Indonesian statue of a rhinoceros made from what is clearly walrus tooth, for instance.  So geography is no barrier to a material being used, or even popular, especially in seagoing cultures. I find the sea/land division idea fascinating. Somehow seems to link to the tradition of not carrying kris across water? | 
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| Member Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: Houston, TX, USA 
					Posts: 1,254
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			BTW, I would be very careful taking any antique to any official person of any kind for identification or any other reason, especially curators or academics you don't personally know.  To some of them we private collectors are all dirty looters, and there is a host of reasons they could decide to take your antique, or even charge you with criminal charges; not just CITEs but national treasure type laws, weapon laws, who knows....but then I'm autistic, so moving thru human culture is quite a dark and risky journey for me, and being turned down is clearly not the worst that can happen when asking for help.
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| (deceased) Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: OKLAHOMA, USA 
					Posts: 3,138
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			THE UPPER END OF RIB BONES WHERE IT CONNECTS TO THE SPINE IS A LIKELY SHAPE FOR MANDAU HANDLES. THE RIB IS MORE ROUND THERE NOT FLAT AND THE END IS LARGER AND HAS A LARGE KNOB TO CONNECT TO THE SPINE. AS THERE ARE QUITE A LOT OF RIBS IN EACH SKELETON YOU WOULD HAVE SEVERAL SIZES AND SHAPES TO WORK WITH AS WELL AS A GOOD SUPPLY OF MATERIAL IN A SHAPE READY TO BE WORKED MORE EASILY. SORT OF LIKE THE FORK IN AN ANTLER.
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|  | #9 | |
| Member Join Date: Nov 2006 
					Posts: 400
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 The bones are looking to me as very spongeous ( more than the ribs) , so don't know if that material should be usefull. In Japan they seem only to make carvings from the ribs. There are enough ribs for sale online but I never see the bones...... see also that the structure ( rib bone)has some enclosements what you can see the best in the first pic. There's also another thing and that's the reputation of the Dugong. It seems that in the Philippines people believe they are bringing bad luck,while in parts of Indonesia they are considered reincarnations of women. Last edited by mandaukudi; 7th July 2011 at 10:12 PM. | |
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