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Old 14th June 2006, 10:06 PM   #1
Tim Simmons
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Question Origins of the term temple dha?

This question has been niggling me for some time, so much so I have to air it. There is something about the term temple dha that I find a bit, I am not looking for a fight, but I have to say a bit collector-ish. Who came up with this term? Is there recorded and photographic evidence that there is such a thing, if so I will bite my tongue. I bring this up as I have a dha knife that to me is a fighting knife without doubt. It differs from the standard "temple dha" in several ways. The blade is shorter, it has a clipped or false edge, no story picture, and very different style pommel. I would be keen to hear dha news.
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Old 14th June 2006, 11:33 PM   #2
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Mark probably has much more to offer on this but I believe the term comes from thier use in Burmese spirit rutuals.
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Old 15th June 2006, 04:12 AM   #3
PUFF
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I do not know what people in Burma do. But in Thailand, Theravadin buddhist do not use knife or alike in religious ritual. Although some knives were blessed by medic shaman or Sangha (monk), they are mainly used as a talisman to protect ones from evil. Some shaman use the a blessed knife in non-religious ceremonies such as cut off a string of newly constructed temple marks (Bhramin/Buddhist mixed ceremonies). The blessed knives mostly are drop-point, similar to Meed Morh in this thread http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=2451

The knife in the picture above could be a Burmese dressing knife, worn in social ceremonies.
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Old 15th June 2006, 05:30 AM   #4
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I am very hesitant to enter this discussion, since I have a dha of this type advertised on Swap. I'll just say a couple things.

(1) I can't honestly say where I came across the term "temple dha;" it was very early on in my collecting career, so it was a term that I accepted without much question, but not one I found myself in the literature.

(2) I recently found two photos on Corbis.com (go to www.corbis.com & search "burma sword"), QU002257 and QU002277, which show participants in the Festival of the Spirits at Taungbyuon in Myanmar. They are both holding dha of this style, and the photo captions give some information on the Festival, as will a search of "Taungbyuon festival" on Google. Other than the photos, I don't know any specifics about the particular role the dha has in Nat (spirit) worship.

(3) Some elements of this style can be seen in an older sword in my collection (http://dharesearch.bowditch.us/0074.htm) which depending on which inscribed date you read is either around 100 or 200 years old, so at the very least the style has some roots in older styles.
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Old 15th June 2006, 05:40 AM   #5
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Hi Tim,

I think "Temple Dha" is one of those imprecise self-perpetuating terms that has fallen into common use in the west. It's easier to say that than "a decorative Burmese sword with repouse'd white metal fittings and a poorly made blade with silver and/or copper wire koftgari typically depicting figures and text in Burmese". When someone says "temple dha", I immediately know what they are referring to.

Not all swords of this design are cheap tourist or decorative weapons, but I suspect most examples now on the market are newly made for sale to tourists or for decoration. It does sound like you have one of the nice examples.

Puff has my expanded my understanding of Thai ceremonial sword use (thanks, Puff!). I also understand that some ethnic groups in the region (e.g. Mien and Kachin) do use dha in various ceremonies and blessings, and dha with blessings inscribed on the blade are known.

Unfortunately, I fear that until we can develop better contacts in Myanmar, definitive answers about Burmese "temple" swords will elude us.


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Old 16th June 2006, 03:58 PM   #6
RhysMichael
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Quote:
Originally Posted by PUFF
I do not know what people in Burma do. But in Thailand, Theravadin buddhist do not use knife or alike in religious ritual. Although some knives were blessed by medic shaman or Sangha (monk), they are mainly used as a talisman to protect ones from evil. Some shaman use the a blessed knife in non-religious ceremonies such as cut off a string of newly constructed temple marks (Bhramin/Buddhist mixed ceremonies). The blessed knives mostly are drop-point, similar to Meed Morh in this thread http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=2451

The knife in the picture above could be a Burmese dressing knife, worn in social ceremonies.
Thanks again Puff, I have been told that many of the swords have buddhist stories on them do you know anything about this ? Or again is this only an often repeated fable ?

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Old 17th June 2006, 07:32 AM   #7
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Unlike Burman, story etching on blades is not a common practice for Siamese.

Most of story etched blades are imported from Burma, then, being sold in a tourist market in ChiangMai. I 've never seen any Siamese blade with an etched story.

If there are some, they must be very rare and hard to find items
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Old 17th June 2006, 06:31 PM   #8
Ian
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Thanks PUFF. It has been difficult to work out whether these dha were manufactured in Thailand or simply sold there. The N. Thailand (Chiang Mai) market for selling these swords seems to have been around for many years, but where they were made has been harder to determine. Do you know where in Burma they are made?

Ian.
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