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Old 10th September 2009, 01:06 AM   #1
Nathaniel
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Default Burmese Dha/ Thai Daab...why Guardless????

Hello all,

I think this is kind of a basic question...but I was wondering if it has ever been questioned why Daab/dha do not have a guard to protect that hands?

Plus just the over all question of the functionality(I think I made my own word) of guards...some are very small...such as those on Chinese jian...others cover the whole hand.

I just thought I would pose this question to see what people think

Last edited by Nathaniel; 10th September 2009 at 01:24 AM.
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Old 10th September 2009, 01:38 AM   #2
Atlantia
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nathaniel
Hello all,

I think this is kind of a basic question...but I was wondering if it has ever been questioned why Daab/dha do not have a guard to protect that hands?

Plus just the over all question of the functionality(I think I made my own word) of guards...some are very small...such as those on Chinese jian...others cover the whole hand.

I just thought I would pose this question to see what people think
Hi Nathaniel,

Very good question.
I'd always assumed that its because the 'fencing' style of these weapons doesn't call for blocking in the 'western' sense (I use inverted commas ther because I do realise how inapropriate the term is), but blocking by allowing the opponents blade to run up the length of your own until it hits the guard allows you to deflect their lunge while aiming your own counter-attack.
Its a really classic move in western fencing, the point of their blade goes past your shoulder while you (at the same time) step/lean into their attack and land the point of your sword square in their chest/throat.

I'm going to look a prize one if I've got this totally wrong but I'd always assumed the style for the weapons you mention is a 'closer' pull-cut form, so a guard could almost be a hinderance?
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Old 10th September 2009, 02:03 AM   #3
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In some cases they were also used like machetes as much as fighting swords, and on utility blade a big guard isn't that useful. It might be a hinderance since it would catch on the vegetation. This would be especially true among many of the tribal groups. Among the Thais, Burmans, Shans etc you would have more blades functioning exclusively as weapons.
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Old 10th September 2009, 02:43 AM   #4
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UK series called Mind, Body & Kick Ass Moves on Krabi Krabong

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XSpfAg0vajY

They talk about edge to edge blocking...
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Old 10th September 2009, 03:08 AM   #5
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Hi Aiontay,

I'm not sure about the bit about a guard. I've got a woodsman's pal with a D guard, and it's sure handy around blackberries.

That said, I think Atlantia got it right in part. The Thai style for fighting is much more like stick-fighting, and they parry with the blade.

That said, let's step back a sec. Not that many blades have guards, and not all guards are guarding the hand. If you think about it, the hand-shielding guards got best developed in post-Renaissance Europe, and on Chinese daos to a lesser extent. As for the second, guards can also serve to shield the blade from rain by sealing the top of the scabbard (as with the jian), serve as finger hooks (European and Indian swords, and the sai), or serve as secondary attacking points (the long cross-guards on knightly longswords and greatswords for example). It's worth remembering that European swords started with simple cross-guards (symbolic, and good for punching when you get caught inside), and many people actually looped their fingers over cross-guards, rendering the guard essentially useless. The crossbars of later guards were added to this basic design to protect that vulnerable finger.

So, why not more guards? Part of the reason is about tuning the sword. This is about hand-shock. Swords flex when they hit things, and like any bar (or string, for that matter) there are nodes (where the vibration is zero) and anti-nodes (where the vibration maximizes). One typical node is the end of the sword, and that's where most people hold most swords. Another node is in the middle. Antinodes tend to be around the 1/4 and 3/4 points.

Dhas solve the vibration problem another way, by lengthening the hilt so that you can hold it by the base of the blade and you will be holding it at a node. That's why, in many cases, the hilt is almost as long as the blade. The 1:1 ratio makes it easy to minimize vibration at the middle. The pommel also helps with this tuning process, and that's why (I think) many of the dhas with shorter hilts have bigger pommels. They're tuning the blade so that it's comfortable to chop or slice with.

Now, you introduce a cross-guard (or something more complex), and the vibrational situation gets that much messier, because the guard is vibrating too. It's possible to have a long hilt and a complex guard--Renaissance great swords do it--but it's not that easy. If you think about it, most European swords with complex guards have really short hilts, and part of that is to minimize the hand-shock while using the blade.

So it's a trade-off between two types of safety: guarding the hand against attacks, and guarding it across the shock (and pain) of blade vibration. AFAIK, the people who developed the dha thought it was simpler to train people to keep others' blades away from their wrists, whereas westerners learned to love punching with the hilt, and developed the guard around that function.

That's my story, and I'm sticking to it.

F

PS: I learned about hand-shock by reading, and also by trying to make a "Dha" out of a cut-down machete blade. From that experience, I can tell you that the length of the hilt does have a huge affect on how much shock your hand feels. Get that length wrong, and it hurts to cut with the blade.
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Old 10th September 2009, 03:59 AM   #6
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Fearn,
I don't doubt you're right, but part of the problem is maybe we're trying to cover too much ground with the term. If, as I said, you're talking about the more overt weapons that would be owned by upper class Burmans, Mons, Shans, Thais etc that is one thing, but a Karen of Kachin blade, or even those owned some Northern Thai farmer called up to go fight Chiang Tung?

While guards on any knife are useful, many utility blades tend not to have substantial guards. Of course, there's always something like a Woodsman's Pal. On the other hand, guards can get in the way, and not just in bushes. I remember stopping in a Lahu village on a trip with some Lahu pastor friends on a trip along the Thai/Burmese border, and the village headman peeled us a cucumber using, not a dha/daab, but a big field knife about the size and shape of a Roman gladius, but single edged. He choked up on the back of the blade and held rest of the blade and handle up along his forearm. I'd have gotten a much smaller knife, but hey, they liked big blades up there. A guard would have probably complicated the peeling procedure. I doubt Naresuan or Alaungpaya did a lot of cumcumber peeling with their blades, but some of their soldiers probably did, and more of it than cutting down enemy soldiers.

One other consideration, at least further up in the hills is that in the past metal wasn't exactly plentiful so there is an economic trade off as well. It seem a lot of backwoods blades, wherever the backwoods are, lack guards, and I suspect that might be in part due to the relative scarcity of metal, and the lack of technical expertise to get the fine tuning you talk about Fearn. It would be easier and cheaper to forgo the guard and lengthen the handle.

Finally, based on the little Krabri Krabong I did, I didn't see a whole lot of pull and cut. Yes, it is there, and the style of blade certainly facilitates it, but there was also a whole lot of straight-ahead nasty full power swings and chops, stuff that looked like you'd cut through an elephant (which they had to do back in the old days). It could have just been my instructors, but I always found it a bit too open and straight ahead for my taste. One day one of my instructors, sort of on a lark, came at me unexpectedly. I hadn't told him of my FMA background, so I think he was rather shocked when I zoned to the side and ended up behind him. Even though we were using rattan practice swords I was in position to deliver a decisive blow, but he was my teacher, so I just stood there and we went back to what we were training. However, if I were outside the walls of Chiang Mai with a few thousand other guys fighting for our Thai or Burmese overlord (depending on the time period) against a few thousand invaders with hundreds of elephants, a style that pretty much cuts through anything in front of it would definitely be my choice.

Like I said, I didn't do that much training in Thai or Karen sword fighting, so someone with more experience would be great to hear from on how the blades should be used.
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Old 10th September 2009, 04:19 AM   #7
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Hi Aiontay,

We pretty much agree. I'd note that, for chopping, hand shock really, really matters, and it's easier to make a new wooden handle than a new metal blade. I'm guessing for the hill tribes (who like the long hilts), on a simple, wooden-hilt dha, they'd probably start with too long a hilt and cut it shorter until they got it right.

As you noted, a simple, guardless design is more versatile than (most) guarded blades.

Finally, it's not hard to tune a simple, straight blade. All you have to do is find the sweet spot and tap it on something, and move your hand up and down the hilt until you're comfortable.

With something that's curved or odd-shaped, it's going to take more work to get everything right.

Best,

F
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