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-   -   Information on Javanese knife (http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=2333)

Tim Simmons 5th May 2006 07:04 PM

Information on Javanese knife
 
2 Attachment(s)
I won this on ebay a couple of nights ago now. The striaght bladed one is from A G. Van Zonnevelds Traditional Weapons of the Indonesian Archipelago page 74. Mine is the curved one, it has yet to arrive so I am showing the ebay picture. Can anyone say a little more about then? I know nothing. I think they look very similar to some African, South Sudan knives. Does anyone else have one?

Lew 5th May 2006 07:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tim Simmons
I won this on ebay a couple of nights ago now. The striaght bladed one is from A G. Van Zonnevelds Traditional Weapons of the Indonesian Archipelago page 74. Mine is the curved one, it has yet to arrive so I am showing the ebay picture. Can anyone say a little more about then? I know nothing. I think they look very similar to some African, South Sudan knives. Does anyone else have one?

Tim

I think A G. Van Zonnevelds blew it on this one. These daggers look Southern Sudan to me. The scabbards are made of sheet steel or some other metal like you find on so many Syrian and Lebonese daggers. Indonesian scabbards are usually made of wood or horn. Hey everyone is entitled to one mistake :)

Lew

ariel 5th May 2006 10:15 PM

I am with Lew on this one.
Lew, could it be Mexican? :rolleyes: :rolleyes: :D :D

Lew 5th May 2006 10:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ariel
I am with Lew on this one.
Lew, could it be Mexican? :rolleyes: :rolleyes: :D :D

Ariel

Could be!
Maybe the person who owned the knife was blown way off course and ended up in Mexico ;) :D or some African swallows flew it all the way over to Mexico :p Oh my goodness migrating daggers :eek:

Lew

Tim Simmons 6th May 2006 10:27 AM

That is what I thought when I got the book on its publishing. I was not sure I had the confidence to raise the point. On finding this knife I felt emboldened :rolleyes: . Do you think the addition of these knives in the aforementioned book must have been a deliberate mistake?

Lew 6th May 2006 12:05 PM

Do you think the addition of these knives in the aforementioned book must have been a deliberate mistake?[/QUOTE]

Tim

I think it was an honest mistake and not deliberate. The author probably had tons of knives in his collection and some how this one just got mixed in.

Lew

Tim Simmons 19th May 2006 09:02 PM

2 Attachment(s)
This arrived today, nice steel blade, was quite surprised. There is some zigzag decoration on the blade but the flash has wiped it out. The handle is horn, zinc and brass.

Ian 19th May 2006 10:39 PM

There is one form of migration that has not been considered so far in this thread, and that is the Haj. Religious pilgrims to Mecca have been known to trade with other pilgrims and to bring back home many items from distant lands. I think this is the most likely explanation for an African dagger ending up in Indonesia.

Ian.

Quote:

Originally Posted by LOUIEBLADES
Tim

I think A G. Van Zonnevelds blew it on this one. These daggers look Southern Sudan to me. The scabbards are made of sheet steel or some other metal like you find on so many Syrian and Lebonese daggers. Indonesian scabbards are usually made of wood or horn. Hey everyone is entitled to one mistake :)

Lew


doecon 19th May 2006 11:51 PM

1 Attachment(s)
I have seen a very few of similar shaped old blades in Java. I'm still actually trying to get one which is probably 18th century and originating from Yogja (pamor blade). I included a pictures of a Palace guard, please take a good look and see what he is wearing.

(I dont have better pictures)

ariel 20th May 2006 12:03 AM

I initially agreed with Lew, but having seen good pics, I have my doubts.
This knife is of far higher quality and workmanship than anything Sudanese/Somali I have ever seen.

kai 20th May 2006 12:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by doecon
I included a pictures of a Palace guard, please take a good look and see what he is wearing.

Wouldn't that be a Wedung/Wedong? :o

Regards,
Kai

Rick 20th May 2006 01:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kai
Wouldn't that be a Wedung/Wedong? :o

Regards,
Kai

Most likely Kai .
Hard to tell from a picture smaller than a postage stamp .

This piece is about as Javanese as I am . :rolleyes:

kai 20th May 2006 01:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rick
Hard to tell from a picture smaller than a postage stamp .

A while back, I've seen it in color & decent size - can't remember where though and too tired to Google...

Quote:

This piece is about as Javanese as I am . :rolleyes:
Deal. :D

HartCone 20th May 2006 02:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tim Simmons
I won this on ebay a couple of nights ago now. The striaght bladed one is from A G. Van Zonnevelds Traditional Weapons of the Indonesian Archipelago page 74. Mine is the curved one, it has yet to arrive so I am showing the ebay picture. Can anyone say a little more about then? I know nothing. I think they look very similar to some African, South Sudan knives. Does anyone else have one?

hi....
can i joint this thread????

the curved knives in your attachement it's call 'jambiah' or 'jambea'
it's arabian knife, nice knife....

wedung is more simple shape...
wedung warangka/scabbard is most made from trembalo wood, no metal cover...

Pangeran Datu 20th May 2006 05:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by doecon
I have seen a very few of similar shaped old blades in Java. I'm still actually trying to get one which is probably 18th century and originating from Yogja (pamor blade). I included a pictures of a Palace guard, please take a good look and see what he is wearing.

(I dont have better pictures)

G'day all,
Just to clarify things:
The image attached is originally from the book:'The History of Java' by Sir T.S. Raffles (1817). As far as I can tell, there is nothing to indicate that he is a palace guard. However, he IS a member of the Javanese nobility. He is sporting a keris ladrang and a wedung.

Regards.

doecon 20th May 2006 01:03 PM

G'day too,

There is indeed only the subscript with the picture mentioning he is a palace guard. But of course nobility sounds fine. And for sure he is not carying a Wedung.

Just to clarify things;

Jambea's are around in Indonesia, old ones as well. But as mentioned I rarely see one, the one I mentioned came from Yogja.In some drawings and paintings I noticed them as well (unfortunatly I had only the "stamp" above to show).

Middle eastern traders have frequent the islands for century's so it isnt so strange to find some. The trip to mekka was also made by locals, for century's. So maybe they brought them as souvenirs. During the 1800's those that had made their mekka trip were seen as a seperate nobility class, they even dressed as arabs. It can well be that Jambea's were part of their new "fashion".

Since the one I mentioned is old and has a damascus (localmade) blade, I would even leave the posibility open that they were produced locally.

I hope to show you the item within a week or so.

Tim Simmons 20th May 2006 02:00 PM

1 Attachment(s)
What interesting replies. I think you are right about the middle east, Arabia. The engraving is common to metalwork all over the middle east including Turkey, where I have seen the same style of zigzag engraving on coffee grinders. The similarity of knife hands in the horn of Africa is not uncommon. I was surprised at the steel, not that all African steel is crude in any way, some is of the finest razor quality. Thanks for the information and I am very pleased to have another Arabian piece, something I am rather short on.

Flavio 20th May 2006 02:05 PM

2 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by doecon
I have seen a very few of similar shaped old blades in Java. I'm still actually trying to get one which is probably 18th century and originating from Yogja (pamor blade). I included a pictures of a Palace guard, please take a good look and see what he is wearing.

(I dont have better pictures)


The same picture is on Van Zonnevald's book. The way the knife is carried seems like the one of a wedung with a hook for the belt.

kai 20th May 2006 11:07 PM

Quote:

The same picture is on Van Zonnevald's book.
Thanks, Flavio! I believed I had seen that pic several times online but didn't thought of AVZ... :o

Quote:

The way the knife is carried seems like the one of a wedung with a hook for the belt.
Also the hilt configuration doesn't show any similarity to the usual Jambea hilts. Especially the hilt being confluent with the metok (enlarged base of the blade) seems to me to suggest a Wedung. Any other blades with a metok(-like) hilt design being acceptable for the dress code of a Jawa court?

Regards,
Kai

kai 20th May 2006 11:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by doecon
And for sure he is not carying a Wedung.

Well, that's just an assertion. You may want to give some reasons why you think that the blade on the pic *surely* is a Jambea rather than a Wedung...

I've seen a few imported as well as some locally made varieties belonging to the diverse Jambiya blade family - none of these looked anything close to the piece shown on Raffles' pic though.

Regards,
Kai

doecon 21st May 2006 01:45 AM

1 Attachment(s)
On the first picture the sheath didnt look as a wedung type at all. Better pictures probably showed my wrong :)

Attatched picture of Wedung from around that time (1850's). Hilt is indeed the same, scabbard still looks a bit off.

Tim Simmons 21st May 2006 07:45 PM

Rather an extravagant shoe horn. Pretty pretty.

Mick 21st May 2006 08:34 PM

doecon

If you own that piece you have gotten a hold of one of the highest ranking wedungs that I have ever seen.

Naga Sasra 21st May 2006 10:06 PM

I fully concur with Mick, an extraordinary piece, and should you want you let it go :) ;)

RobT 21st May 2006 11:43 PM

Rhino Hilt Parts?
 
3 Attachment(s)
Hi all,
This is my straight blade version of the knife that started this thread. The two long cylinders that comprise the bulk of the grip of the hilt appear to be rhino. The spacers, as well as the baselard style crossguard and pommel, appear to be cowhorn. The washers between the horn are steel. The washer that separated the two rhino horn cylinders is missing. The blade and sheath decoration are identical to those on the curved blade version. Frankly, I would be surprised to find that these pieces were not northern African. I collect both African and Indonesian knives and swords and I don't see anything Indonesian in my piece.
Sincerely,
RobT

doecon 22nd May 2006 12:16 AM

RobT: Nice piece, clearly the same features as the one Zonneveld mentioned in his book?

Wedung posted above is not mine, sorry if I created any wrong impression.
Its in the Volkenkundig Museum in Leiden.


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