Brojol > lower on one side than on the other side.
Well --- it is, isn't it?
its a keris.
For me, the real question is who gives/gave a dhapur the name, the maker? the person for whom made? public opinion?
We'll never know I guess, but half a dozen dictionaries and a cold, wet winter might produce a lot of possible explanations of names.
That then opens up other possibilities:- noble explanations? what dialect? is the name found in Kawi?
This is a research project for somebody, maybe another degree in the results.
Then we have all the Little Red Herrings.
In Old Javanese we have "pasupata", & we also have "pasupati".
Pasupati is from the Sanskrit, & it means "lord of creatures" & the name actually refers to Rudra, who later developed into Siwa.
However, pasupata has a couple of meanings in Old Javanese, it can refer to a follower of Rudra/Siwa, & it was also the name (in Javanese) of the pashupatastra (astra means "weapon" so> "pashupat" weapon) that Siwa gave to Arjuna.
Now, this might be pretty inconvenient if one happens to be a philosopher, because it then causes one to consider the nature of the weapon that was in fact given to Arjuna, a weapon that probably Arjuna never used, perhaps because it was so powerful.
Cold, wet, winter.
Last edited by A. G. Maisey; 20th May 2024 at 02:06 PM.
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