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26th June 2007, 05:50 PM | #1 |
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What is the origen of Tibetan style Aceh blade forms?
In the recent post showing a lovely collection of Aceh weapons (http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=4805) there are several examples showing straight backed sabers. The blade form is identical to that of Tibetan sabers. This form was the typical East Asian blade form until the rise of the Mongols in the Yuan dynasty. The form survived relatively unchanged in Tibet. Are the blades from Aceh another example of the old style of Asian saber, or are they an example of "convergent evolution"? The blade shape is so evocative of Tibetan blades with the same tip shape and even, at least in one example I have seen, the same hairpin piled construction. I can think of no way that Tibetan blades could have influenced Aceh, but it seems quite possible that the Aceh blades are another surviving example of a very old style.
This was the blade form that was the ancestor of Japanese blades in the Tang dynasty. Josh |
26th June 2007, 06:20 PM | #2 |
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First of all a good observation, I had not noticed the resemblance until you pointed it out. I have not read of any direct Tibetan influence in Aceh but sixth century A.D. Chinese chronicles. spoke of a kingdom on the northern tip of Sumatra named Po-Li, it is believed that this was where Aceh is now. Marco Polo, on his voyage from China visited Sumatra on his way to Persia and reported that in the northern part of the island there were at least six busy trading ports including Perlak (Ferlak), Samudera and Lambri. One translation of Marco Polo's Observations of Sumatra Polo states that Pasaman on the south west coast have no law unless it be that of brute beasts." They said they were "lieges of the Great Kaan" but paid no tribute. So, Chinese trade routes there would have been well extablished for centuries by 1300 AD which if I remember was the general time frame of the Yuan Dyansty. And it is certainly a possiblility that this came from the same lineage as Tibetan swords. There is also a possible link back trough India to for many other blade and hilt forms seen in Aceh that are fit the patterns of the Turko-Mongol saber. The Panjang that you speak of were very popular weapons in the Dutch-Aceh war and certainly was around before that but I have not been able yet to find anything dating the beginning or source of this blade form. I look forward with interest to see what others might know about this.
Last edited by RhysMichael; 27th June 2007 at 04:00 AM. |
26th June 2007, 07:24 PM | #3 |
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Ok some more that may validate your idea
In the time of the Sung Dynasty ships from T'swan-chau (or Zayton) bound for Tashi, or Arabia, used to sail in forty days to a place called Lanli-poļ (probably this is also Lambri, Lambri-puri?). There they passed the winter, i.e. the south-west monsoon, just as Marco Polo's party did at Sumatra, and sailing again when the wind became fair, they reached Arabia in sixty days. (E. Bretschneider, Mediaeval Researches from Eastern Asiatic Sources 1888) |
26th June 2007, 08:49 PM | #4 |
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Thank you that is very interesting. So at least it is possible that at about the same time Chinese blade forms were making their way to Japan, they also made their way to Aceh. Then such blades largely disappeared in China, evolved into the Katana in Japan, and remained largely unchanged in Tibet and Aceh.
The Chinese blades that made it to Japan at that time often had a medial ridge, and perhaps a faceted tip. I have never seen such on any Tibetan sabers from the last 400 years or so, but there is one 14th-15th century version shown in Warriors of the Himalayas with a medial ridge. The ridge was supposedly lost in China at the time and was reintroduced from Japan at the end of the Ming. Have you ever seen one from Aceh with a ridge? It wouldn't prove anything either way, but it would be interesting. I don't think there is going to be more than circumstantial evidence either way, but some evidence for a 13th c straight backed saber in Aceh would certainly help Is there any evidence that people consider the straight-backed saber older or more traditional than the Indian influenced sabers? Josh |
27th June 2007, 12:53 AM | #5 | |||
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Hello Josh & John,
Quote:
However, in the case of Aceh (or rather northern Sumatra including Aceh, Gayo, Alas, and several Batak groups) there are no such close links and we have to acknowledge that this is pure speculation at best. To illustrate this point, I could as well speculate that these blades originated in Sumatra, got introduced to China and spread from there. We have to realize that sea trade routes connecting just about every island and coastal town from East Asia to Southeast Asia (and possibly beyond) are really old and probably predate the first sophisticated cultures with "international" influence like the Dong Son (originating from the northern Vietnam/Yunnan/Guangdong triangle - nothing to do with ethnic Han ). Thus, it would be more reasonable to assume that even bronze age cultures already had some knowledge about the main weapons of other ethnic groups rather assuming they were living in ignorance of each other until the days of any surviving chronicles. Of course, trade was not a one-way street despite any perceived superiority. Quote:
Likewise, blades with different welding types can be found but all are also known from other ethnic groups across the SEA archipelago. Quote:
The adoption of Islam may have had a pronounced effect on beliefs and values regarding "old traditions" though... Regards, Kai |
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27th June 2007, 02:57 AM | #6 | ||
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Quote:
It would also be great if Albert saw this I would love to know his take on it. Quote:
This all could be "convergent evolution", parrallel development or whatever else its called. It wouldn't be the first time similar sword forms had evolved independantly of each other. As I said a long way still from proof or anything definative, but certainly worth gathering more information if we can. Last edited by RhysMichael; 27th June 2007 at 04:36 AM. |
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27th June 2007, 04:16 AM | #7 |
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OK this got me looking for a Buddhist connection between Aceh and Tibet and I found this.
From THE MYSTICAL WORLD OF INDONESIA, Allen Sievers, the John Hopkins University Press, Baltimore and London, 1974 "Shri Vijaja on Sumatra was a centre of Buddhist learning, attracting students from China and India, exporting texts and exerting an influence on Tibet. " Shri Vijaja (Shri Vijaya) was also prominent as a trading partner with China from the 7th cent. until it was conquered by the Javanese. Still all very circumstantail and not proof of anything I know |
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