When reading Albert van Zonneveld's excellent encyclopedia of Indonesian arms, I ran across a particular statement that the hilt of the 
parang latok is "always made of wood."
  
  I have had the example shown here for 20+ years and have thought it was a rather refined example of the 
parang latok, with its brass ferrule and carved stag hilt.  Certainly, the blade seemed above average in quality and finish: peaked spine between the hilt and bend, gradually tapering heavy blade, a fuller adjacent to the spine on each side, and a hardened edge. Now I'm not so sure it is a 
parang latok from the Sea Dayak, but perhaps a similar sword from another Borneo group.
 
 Overall length = 25 inches
 Length of blade (to bend) = 18 inches
 Thickness of blade in front of hilt is just under 0.5 inches
  
  Can one of our Borneo experts tell me what I have. Is this indeed a 
parang latok or something else? 
 
  
  Ian.
  
  .