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Old 11th April 2010, 05:15 PM   #1
Nathaniel
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Default Continental SEA...More than just swords & knives??

I was just thinking...I've never seen any other Burmese weapon other than swords and knives....I've seen Thai pole arms......but never Burmese...you don't see much in the way of Lao either..

I've seen Naga Spears & shields...Thai shields...but not Burmese...Lao, etc

I know a lot of the SEA pole arms are greatly influenced by Chinese pole arms....but there are some pole arms that are more distinctly Thai...I wonder if there are any distinct Burmese pole arms????

I would think the British would have brought back more than just swords and daggers...

On the same note you don't see much in the way of firearms with local flare/ decoration...I've seen Japanese, Vietnamese, etc...but not Thai, Burmese, etc..

Any thoughts??? or better yet examples???
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Old 11th April 2010, 05:25 PM   #2
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nathaniel
I was just thinking...I've never seen any other Burmese weapon other than swords and knives....I've seen Thai pole arms......but never Burmese...you don't see much in the way of Lao either..

I've seen Naga Spears & shields...Thai shields...but not Burmese...Lao, etc

I know a lot of the SEA pole arms are greatly influenced by Chinese pole arms....but there are some pole arms that are more distinctly Thai...I wonder if there are any distinct Burmese pole arms????

I would think the British would have brought back more than just swords and daggers...

On the same note you don't see much in the way of firearms with local flare/ decoration...I've seen Japanese, Vietnamese, etc...but not Thai, Burmese, etc..

Any thoughts??? or better yet examples???
Thats a really good point mate, Burmese especially.
They made so much varied and astonishing metalwork, as evidenced in my avatar. There must be lots of wonderful weapon types lurking under our radar!
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Old 11th April 2010, 06:37 PM   #3
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Atlantia
Thats a really good point mate, Burmese especially.
They made so much varied and astonishing metalwork, as evidenced in my avatar. There must be lots of wonderful weapon types lurking under our radar!

Oh, wow, I didn't realize your avatar is Burmese...I've seen some nice Burmese statues...some with even Dha in hand.

I'm surprized we don't see more variety in Burmese weapons from the UK...people have brought back polearms, muskets, shields and other things from everywhere else in the region.
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Old 13th April 2010, 04:09 PM   #4
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nathaniel
Oh, wow, I didn't realize your avatar is Burmese...I've seen some nice Burmese statues...some with even Dha in hand.

I'm surprized we don't see more variety in Burmese weapons from the UK...people have brought back polearms, muskets, shields and other things from everywhere else in the region.
She is Sita. There is a very similar one about a third of the way down the page in this link: Splenours of Asian Art Calcutta Museum.

Here is my statue.





there must be tons of stuff from that area in the UK, I completely agree.

Last edited by Atlantia; 13th April 2010 at 04:44 PM.
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Old 14th April 2010, 01:21 PM   #5
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Beautiful! Fantastic craftsmanship! Thanks for sharing!
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Old 20th April 2010, 04:07 AM   #6
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Atlantia,

A friend who saw your statue commented that your statue is from the 1930 to 1950s and is a traditional Burmese Pwe dancer wearing the clothing of the Bagan style. "Pwe" Burmese word for a spectacular feast (theater, dance, music, marionette, etc.) He didn't think it was Sita, as she is the Indian Hindu deity, Rama's wife.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sita

He also said there is also a similar lady statue in Burma known as the lady of Pagan/ Bagan...but he was unsure of the history behind this person.
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Old 11th April 2010, 05:26 PM   #7
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Hi Nathaniel, there are a few threads in the archives on this subject .

Have you seen the movieThe Legend of Suriyothai ?

Lots of pole arms, elephant fighting, etc,etc.
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Old 11th April 2010, 06:02 PM   #8
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Originally Posted by Rick
Hi Nathaniel, there are a few threads in the archives on this subject .

Have you seen the movieThe Legend of Suriyothai ?

Lots of pole arms, elephant fighting, etc,etc.

Hey Rick...Threads on pole arms other than Thai? I've seen the Legend of Suriyothai....and I also suggested to others too to see the Thai movie: King Naruesuan..that one is even better...it's a trilogy...no subtitles so far...but maybe after the 3rd part is released in theaters this spring the English subtitle DVD will follow...that is what happen with the Chinese two part movie Red Cliff was cut down to one...and Suriyothai in it's original form is 5 hours long...and cut down to 114 minutes for the international version.
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Old 11th April 2010, 10:50 PM   #9
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There is a coffee table photo book, "The People of Burma", or something like that. I forget the author, but the afterward is by Martin Smith(!). It has some photo from the early 20th Century showing a Kachin, Rawang or Maru as I remember, armed with a shield and spear. I loaned the book to a friend who moved and didn't get it back. Zoran Rebac, in his book "Traditional Burmese Boxing" notes that the banshay (weapons) aspect of Thaing, the traditional Burmese martial art, includes fighting with sword, lance, stick and knife.
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Old 11th April 2010, 11:46 PM   #10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aiontay
There is a coffee table photo book, "The People of Burma", or something like that. I forget the author, but the afterward is by Martin Smith(!). It has some photo from the early 20th Century showing a Kachin, Rawang or Maru as I remember, armed with a shield and spear. I loaned the book to a friend who moved and didn't get it back. Zoran Rebac, in his book "Traditional Burmese Boxing" notes that the banshay (weapons) aspect of Thaing, the traditional Burmese martial art, includes fighting with sword, lance, stick and knife.
Thanks for the info Ainotay. I have not seen the book you mention, but I've heard of it. I've seen some photos of the northern tribes: Kachen, Shan, Naga with weapons. But few pictures of the more Burman/ Central Burmese towards Yangoon.

These are all Shan:









Burmese smiths:




Banshay seems similar to Thai Krabi Krabong...like Chinese Wushu...modern...set demo routines. I know in Bando they like using the Kukri.
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Old 12th April 2010, 12:01 AM   #11
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Although I never saw it, I did meet a couple of Thiang practioners, and I'm not entirely sure it is all set demos.

The first picture is of the Shan sawbaws (chao fa) in their court costumes at a durbar held in India in the 1930s. I suspect the other photos are as well.
Neat photos.
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Old 12th April 2010, 12:12 AM   #12
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aiontay
Although I never saw it, I did meet a couple of Thiang practioners, and I'm not entirely sure it is all set demos.

The first picture is of the Shan sawbaws (chao fa) in their court costumes at a durbar held in India in the 1930s. I suspect the other photos are as well.
Neat photos.
True...not quite like Chinese Wushu sets...and in all fairness this is one component. Burmese martial arts look formidable. You definitely see the Chinese influence in the northern states styles...

Thanks for the reference for the picture of the Shans at Dunbar. Do you know what book or source these pictures are from? I've only seem them in a post.
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Old 12th April 2010, 03:51 AM   #13
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Sorry, I don't know the original source of the picture. It appears in the book "The Trouser People", which I have, but I can't seem to lay my hands on right now.

It should be noted that there is a pretty long history of private armies (tat) in Burma, which continued well in to the 20th Century, so a lot of traditional Burmese weapons were replaced pretty quickly with firearms. Swords and knives obviously hung around longer since they could serve utilitarian functions as well as function as weapons, but traditional weapons arts were replaced pretty quickly. I did study a bit of the Karen sword art in Thailand.
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