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|  1st December 2011, 11:07 PM | #1 | 
| Member Join Date: Sep 2011 Location: Nederland 
					Posts: 83
				 |  Wilah from? 
			
			Hello everyone, I am new on this forum, but it feels like I been here for months, there is so much to read and to learn. But I have a question, and I hope you can help me with it. I recently bought a keris, with a Sumatra sheat, de keris fits like a glove, en there are no sins of recent adjustment to it, there was a Bali hilt on it, I think Ganesha, de keris itself looks like it’s been polish, just what I have seen on Bali wliah’s , the peksi is about 8 mm thick and 8 cm long, so no small hilt on this one, the wilah without the peksi is 38 cm. The pendok looks like it’s home made, and not a very good job. The only thing I now about it is that came to Nederland between the two WW, the person that brought it here was a teacher in Indonesia. So the question is, is this a Bali wilah or Sumatra or ......? I hope you guys can help me out, and sorry for my bad writing. kind regards, Ben | 
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|  2nd December 2011, 10:40 AM | #2 | 
| Member Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: Germany, Dortmund 
					Posts: 9,409
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			Hello Ben, first welcome to the forum!   The sheath isn't from Sumatra but from Bali/Lombok and called sesrengantan but not a very well carved one and I think that the blade is as well from Bali/Lombok not only because it is polished. Do you have opened the pendok which have a East Java/Madura style? Maybe it was attached because the gandar is damaged?   Regards, Detlef | 
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|  2nd December 2011, 11:49 AM | #3 | 
| Member Join Date: Sep 2011 Location: Nederland 
					Posts: 83
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			Thanks Detlef, I was convinced that it was Sumatra, but i am glad to hear that is is from Bali, then things come together. I have removed the pendok, and i don't no if you mean the lower part of the warangka(gandar)?, if so it was not in good condition, and definitely was made for a pendok, the bottom was straight cut, and open. But that is no problem, i could replace that part. regards Ben | 
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|  2nd December 2011, 04:53 PM | #4 | 
| Member Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: Germany, Dortmund 
					Posts: 9,409
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			Hello Ben, yes, the part down from the sampir/warangka or wrongko is called by javanese keris gandar; by keris from Bali penyejer. The pendok from your keris isn't a balinese one so my assumption that it was placed to cover a demaged gandar/penyejer. A gandar isn't never original cut in down or open. Regards, Detlef | 
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|  2nd December 2011, 05:07 PM | #5 | 
| Keris forum moderator Join Date: Aug 2006 Location: Nova Scotia 
					Posts: 7,250
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			There is also a chance that this is a Bali/Madura piece, that is, a keris from Madura that is for a member of cultural Balinese living there. This type of pendok with the open window down the center is not something i have seen on Bali or Lombak keris and is more common to Madura/East Jawa wrongko. I would also like to see a closer view of the hilt because i an not convinced from the present photos that this hilt is truly Balinese. There appears to be a missing "selut" of some sort and it does not look like the kind that i would expect on a Balinese hilt. At 15 inches this could well be a Bali/Lombok blade, but they often tend to be even longer than that. The state of polish alone is not necessarily an indicator of place of origin.
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|  2nd December 2011, 06:19 PM | #6 | 
| Member Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: Germany, Dortmund 
					Posts: 9,409
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			When I look again to your sheath I understand why you have thought that it is a sheath from Sumatra/Palembang. The sheath look like the carver hasn't known how to look a sesrengentan sheath from Bali and have created a mixture from this both sheaths.  For better understanding I have attached pictures from your sheath beside from both sheath forms. The sesrengentan pictures are taken from the book "Keris Bali Bersejarah". | 
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