28th January 2011, 10:16 PM | #1 |
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Poke in the eye?
With a burnt stick? Stuck my head above the parapet once again. Melanesian club 92cm long. The pictures were overly large and rather poor. I have tried to put them in to a more readable order, which will have to do untill I have it. The only reference I have are illustrations from {Felix Speiser, Ethnology of Vanuatu, University of Hawai} I am hoping for something between no. 5, 96cm long and no. 4, 95cm long. There is no mention of lime in the clubs of Vanuatu. Looks as if there was some sort of binding on parts of the item.
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1st February 2011, 09:40 PM | #2 |
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Wood sword
I like this, lucky for me I like this sort of thing. There is no lime on this piece, what looks white is light reflecting of old shiny black resinous substance which could be gum or Atuna nut putty. Traces can be found further from the handle. I do not have the camara ability to show more about this so I include a quick sketch. It seems to be a sword stick, a wooden epee. There is a very subtle grip area which I think you can just about see in the handle close up, best felt in the hand. Melanesian Islands or Australian? like the cover of the British Museum book. Shown with the Nuie club as some sort of guide.
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3rd February 2011, 10:14 PM | #3 |
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For those interested. After further examination I am not sure the lines are from a fibre/cordage binding. Under magnification now I am over the hill. I think the lines are whats left of a very carefull hand scoring/cutting in roughly parallel lines. Not a cord wrap.
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5th February 2011, 11:50 PM | #4 |
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Then again it could be a weavers sword. That might explain the markings. Well if you do not take a chance you will always pay top prices. Still nice to handle. Picture of Indonesian weaving swords from the net and from "African Textiles, John Picton & John Mack, British Museum Press" Learning all the time.
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7th February 2011, 12:21 AM | #5 |
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SOMETIMES ITS DIFFICULT TO BE SURE WHAT IS A CLUB AND WHAT IS A TOOL OR UTENSIL. IF THE ITEM HAS GOOD WEIGHT AND BALANCE ITS LIKELY A CLUB. I WOULD SUSPECT LIGHTER AND SOFTER WOOD WOULD BE USED FOR STICKS IN A LOOM. UNLESS IT BELONGED TO THE DEADLY LOOM WEAVERS NINJA SOCIETY.
FROM THE PICTURES AND SIZE I WOULD SAY ITS A WAR CLUB. |
7th February 2011, 10:30 AM | #6 |
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Thanks for the encouragement Barry.
It is indeed hard and heavy enough to be a weapon. Having dabbled with sword play untill the touch of arthritis in my left foot made me turn my back. I would be happy to use it against an opponent armed in a similar manner, like the chap on the book cover. However the marks do make me question this. I imagine a weaver might insert the sword/beater in the same place all the time so that parralel line marks could be worn into the surface. They are light and do not appear to have been cut. |
19th February 2011, 08:02 PM | #7 |
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Barry taking on board what you say about it sometimes being hard to differentiate between tool and weapon. I have been doing a little more research.
All this is assuming that the item is not African. I did go for it on the feeling that it was not African, more something to do with the Pacific. The line marks make it hard to deny use as a weaving tool. But if we look at weaving in the Pacific and Melanesia, we could be lookig at an item from hundreds of small islands, like off the top of my head Tikopia. Then perhaps the item may have had a dual function. If a village were to suffer a suprise raid while all busy going about daily life and concetiating on weaving. You have a weapon in your hand. Here is a link that could add weight to the idea, scroll down to " Ethnographic evidence, Back strap loom " http://horizon.documentation.ird.fr/.../010020762.pdf This "Jstor" link is interesting but they always leave you halfway home. http://www.jstor.org/pss/3628663 Also I post an extract from "Melanesia, a short ethnography by B.A.L. Cranstone, The British Museum 1961 " As I say all assuming but could shed some light on why the item is so weapon like. |
6th May 2011, 06:21 PM | #8 |
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I have been working on a new display and got this out for a second look. I might just agree with Barry that it is probably a weapon. If it was a weavers sword then to make the lines it would have to be in the same place every time the weaver used thier loom. To get the threads in the same line mark all the time just seems very unlikey. The line marks could come from tight areas of binding, perhaps soaked material drying very tight in places and since lost. We have all seen marks from old tight wire binding on Southern African stuff and natural cord marks on other items. There is considerable wear to all the marks on the blade and pommel.
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