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|  5th November 2022, 09:23 PM | #1 | 
| Member Join Date: Apr 2005 
					Posts: 3,255
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			Hello David, There are similarities but also unusual elements which might point to either Islamic influences or possibly even other islands. I can't really place this carving style with any specific group. Hopefully the Borneo specialists will chime in. Regards, Kai | 
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|  5th November 2022, 10:55 PM | #2 | 
| Member Join Date: Jun 2013 
					Posts: 1,294
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			Thanks, guys,I think were on the right path.
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|  6th November 2022, 03:50 AM | #3 | 
| Member Join Date: Sep 2005 Location: Singapore 
					Posts: 441
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			This looks similar to a nautilus.
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|  8th November 2022, 03:30 PM | #4 | 
| Member Join Date: Dec 2019 Location: Eastern Sierra 
					Posts: 511
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			Interesting configuration. It looks to me like it was designed to get the hand using it out of the way. Skinner? Or meant to slice something on a table or the ground? Is that a makara on the pommel? The band below the know work reminds me of a motif we have discussed on the keris Janggelan style hilt as a mask or vegetal/insect/arachnid feature. Below the makara(?) head is a detail that reminds me of the tree of life. On the same band there is a double spiral almost modified into a swastika. Here is a page from Van der Hoop that discusses the double spiral's spread through the archipelago. The final bit on the pommel I can't help but notice has eight petals and a bud on top. Is this a feature derived from a lotus? I am probably reaching a bit with these interpretations, but it is what I see on this interesting knife. For some reason the decoration on the whole has the feel of water. Last edited by Interested Party; 8th November 2022 at 04:17 PM. Reason: after a rethink | 
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|  12th November 2022, 01:51 AM | #5 | 
| Vikingsword Staff Join Date: Nov 2004 
					Posts: 6,376
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			I think it's a Buyo knife from the size of it. Form follows function, decoration would be regional for a tool such as this one. Dyak design elements, but with other (?) elements also. | 
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