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#1 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Europe
Posts: 2,718
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Here is how they did it in the old days.
Arms and Jewellery of the Indian Mughuls, Lahor 1947, written by Abdul Aziz. In the book he tells about Shah Jahangir, and about a falling meteor. The meteor fell around 10 April 1621 close to a village called Jalandhar. The meteor was dug up and presented to Shah Jahangir: I ordered Master (Ustad) Daud to make a sword, a dagger and a knife out of it, and bring them to me. He represented that it would not stand below the hammer, and fell too pieces. I told him in that case to mix it with other iron and make use of it. As I had told him, he mixed three parts of lightening-iron and one of other iron, and having made two swords, one dagger, and one knife, brought them to me. From the mixing of other iron he had brought out its quality (watering). According to the manner of the excellent swords of Yaman and [the swords of] the South, it could be bent, and became straight again. I ordered him to test it in my presence. It cut very well, equal to true swords. I called one the Shamshir-I-qati (keen sword) and the other Barq-sirisht (lightening-natured). |
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#2 |
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Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 341
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Sounds very interesting but the idea of a meteorite blade with nothing added to it but a pinch of carbon appeals to me more
![]() Lightning steel...hmm..you are talking about a steel lightning rod which has been struck with lightning several times? I like that idea too ![]() Maybe we can make the meteorite blade and then fix it to the top of a lightning rod and then we will have Lightning Meteorite steel, this is getting better by the second ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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#3 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Cincinnati, OH
Posts: 940
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As much as i hate to get on to this same ol' bend, it was hardly "common" to make keris out of meteoric iron. It was more the exception, reserved for important keris of the day. Meteorite in itself is a rare commodity and the proper nickelous iron that was used on these special keris is even rarer.
Don't know how i could help you on your quest Pusaka, but when you finish i would love to see it posted here. ![]() I can tell you that you will have an extremely hard time finding a keris smith who could actually pull this off and the cost to you will be quite extravagant. But by all means, have at it, mate! ![]() |
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#4 |
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Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 341
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Who wants to hold the ladder while I go up with a hacksaw to remove my bit of Lightning steel from the local Church, Its old and I bet it been struck several times
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#5 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Cincinnati, OH
Posts: 940
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Hey Pusaka, before you get busted stealing the local church's lightning rod, i think the reference to "lightning iron" in Jens quote is to the meteorite itself, not iron struck by lightning.
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#6 |
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Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 341
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Its ok I don’t like heights anyway so I changed my mind about going up there LOL
All this joking has reminded me of something though. Tibetan phurba daggers were made from meteorite iron and then fixed to a lightning conductor at the temple so they would get struck by lightning, so the idea is not new after all ![]() |
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#7 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Cincinnati, OH
Posts: 940
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Sorry to be such a stickler on these subjects, but it is the rare and most powerful of phurbas that would be made of meteorite. Certainly not all or even most. I only make this comment because someone with no knowledge of these might take your comment and pass it on as a general fact. This is why so many people think all keris were made with meteoric metals as well.
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#8 |
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Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 341
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Apart from the Indonesians and the Tibetans which other cultures used Meteorite to make blades?
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