22nd August 2013, 01:34 AM | #1 |
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little kris
hi kris people, i'd had this little kris awhile, i know nothing about it. i had a note that it was a 'dukun' kris i know that that means 'shaman' i think. what do you think........................thanks............... ....jimmy
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22nd August 2013, 07:10 AM | #2 |
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Interesting keris that looks like it might have some talismanic pamor, but i don't see anything that would specifically ascribe it to a dukun. With that long gandik i'd say this is something from the kebo family of dhapurs and it appears to be gonjo iras. Kebo keris are often thought to be good for people with agricultural pursuits.
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22nd August 2013, 09:40 AM | #3 |
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Any keris can be a dukun keris, if it once belonged to a dukun.
But there are many types of dukun, they are not always the equivalent of a shaman, but can actually fulfil the role of a midwife and assist with a birth, or be practitioners of some form of natural medicine, or can foretell the future, or do remote viewing, or stop rain from falling --- or a heap of other things. Mostly dukuns are good guys, a few are not so good, but to find a genuine black magic dukun these days is close to impossible. The ones who claim they are, are pretty much likely to be conmen. |
22nd August 2013, 03:57 PM | #4 | |
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22nd August 2013, 04:44 PM | #5 |
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i'm not sure what this means, 'kebo family of dhapurs and it appears to be gonjo iras.' .........jimmy
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22nd August 2013, 05:09 PM | #6 | |
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Regards, Detlef |
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22nd August 2013, 06:13 PM | #7 |
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Sorry Jimmy. We get used to throwing around certain keris terminology around here without thinking. "Dhapur" refers to the profile of the blade. Picture it as a silhouette. It's one way to ID or categorize a blade. To be a little more specific, some might refer to your blade as Kebo Lajer as compared to Kebo Teki or Kebo Giri, etc which would have long ganders, but slightly different features. This is why i stated this was in the Kebo "Family". Hopefully Detlef's illustration has shown you the area of the blade that is referred to as the "gandik". All Kebo blades have longer than usual gandik areas.
The "gonjo" (often written as ganja as well) is the asymmetrical piece at the base of the blade. Most often this is a separate piece from the blade. On yours it is part of the blade with only an inscribed line to mark an implied separation. This is less common and is referred to as "Gonjo Iras". Of course, all of these are Javanese terms and are not truly correct when we apply them to keris from different areas, which we tend to do all the time anyway. Generally i try to use English terms where they are clear, so i will say blade instead of "wilah", hilt instead of "ukiran" of "hulu" and sheath instead of "wrongko" or "sarong", but with a part like the gonjo i have no English word that really describes it well. |
22nd August 2013, 06:16 PM | #8 |
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Jimmy, you call this a "little" keris. How long is the blade?
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22nd August 2013, 06:42 PM | #9 |
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the blade is 83/4", thanks all............jimmy
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22nd August 2013, 07:18 PM | #10 | |
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23rd August 2013, 12:09 AM | #11 |
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Further on the subject of "dukun keris", and in fact supposedly "magic" keris of any type.
In the trade in Solo it is well known that dukuns and other con men will search the market stalls for the cheapest junk keris they can find, in order to provide the material object needed for a con job. That con might be a keris that appears magically out of the ground, a keris that flies, a keris that rattles when thieves approach, or any other sort of "magic" that the con man can dream up. Yes, keris can be "magic", but that magic is nothing at all like the idea that virtually everybody has of magic. |
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