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Old 4th April 2005, 11:09 PM   #1
tom hyle
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I don't have it, but thanks for the info. The Nias shields are round?
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Old 5th April 2005, 02:23 AM   #2
Battara
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Zamboanga, what is a sangkil-sulayang spear?
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Old 5th April 2005, 03:51 AM   #3
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Battara
Zamboanga, what is a sangkil-sulayang spear?
A sangkil is the rarer spear compared to the budiak. It comes in two versions, the ordinary sangkil which has one side barbed (thanks for the term, tom) and the sangkil-sulayang which comes with both sides barbed.

To the tausugs and samals the sangkil can be both a fishing tool (both tribes lived off the sea) and a weapon. To the yakans, who were land-based, the sangkil is said to be the favored weapon for ambush because of the barbs.

I posted this picture of samal sangkils (the two at the bottom) in another thread:
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Old 5th April 2005, 04:11 AM   #4
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part of the digitized narratives:
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Old 5th April 2005, 06:17 PM   #5
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Hi Tom,

Nias shields are leaf shaped (literally), with a long stem on the bottom and a wooden boss for punching out their opponents. From the pictures, they reach roughly from shoulder to ground and are several feet across.

Hi Zamboanga,

From your picture, it looks like the Sangkil-sulayang is a harpoon, meaning that the head is detachable from the shaft and attached to a line that is attached to the shaft. Is this correct?

Fearn
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Old 5th April 2005, 09:58 PM   #6
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this will likely open a can of worms, not sure article about "Moro" is quite right. Not comfortable with the lable "Moro", but I guess Cato made it a term acceptable in referance to certain swords. from as much as i have found, most of the PI was controled by Brunei especially the Tausug untill 1578(?) when the Spanish attacked Brunei. After that is when it seems the Tausug alligned with the Sultans of Ternate & Makassar against the Spanish.
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Old 13th April 2005, 10:41 AM   #7
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fearn,

you are right about the sangkil head (at least the ones being used for fishing) being detachable.

bill,

I think the writer of the article, given the circumstances at that time, was not able to verify or double check the information passed on to him.

but, here's a comprehensive link on the history of the Sulu Sultanate: http://www.seasite.niu.edu/Tagalog/M..._the_royal.htm

lutao, by the way is part of the local dialect which means "to float" - in reference to the sea-going ways of the tausugs, samals, badjaos, etc.
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