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#1 | |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Sweden
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Thanks for the description on the use of the Land Dayak swords. I don't get the resemblence with an Anak Wali however? Please develop this idea when you find time. Michael |
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#2 |
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: The Netherlands
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ca. 1875 picture/drawing. studio made
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#3 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Houston, TX, USA
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OMG what a cool sword!!!!! I have so much to say I'm liable to forget 1/2 of it plus I'm in a room with friends to distract me.
OMG OMG OMG OK OK calm down, Tom! Beautiful swords! I find a resemblance to the wierd big Naga sword with the iron handle and integral crossguard; no? Are these super-rare and perhaps ceremonial, like those? What relation of Nagas and Dyaks, ethno-historically? Other than the handle, seems to be a pretty straitforward parang latok in concept, and so in use? But note how it's dangling "backwards" from the man's hand; is this a method of use or is this how it's carried? Are the crossguards used for control like the "finger" on a pinegas? OMG!!!!!!! When cutting with parang latok/parang lading, as with other swords that curve, bend, or lean back (kilij is particularly similar, while this is often spoken/written of in N America in reference to Japanese swords) the back-wards angle to the blade causes it to pull thru the target with a slashlike action, even when the hand action is a simple "hack". Last edited by tom hyle; 9th March 2011 at 02:50 PM. |
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#4 |
EAAF Staff
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Louisville, KY
Posts: 7,270
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Wonderful pieces!
![]() STill don't understand how they were used however. ![]() |
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#5 | |
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#6 |
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In both cases there is a certain resemblance to swords from the same nations with more ordinary hilts (ie. Parang latok/lading and Naga Dao). In both cases, not only is the handle made of iron/steel, and integral to the blade, but there is the addition of the crossguard, and also in both cases there is an altered step-down or offset to the transition from blade to grip.
I think something is going on here; are these all high status/ritual swords? They seem it?....... Coming in from the side, appropos of nothin; the sharply rectangular cross-section of the grip is reminiscent of that on "machete Phillipiana" (spelling?) But is the grip on the Naga one rectangular, too? It looks more comfortably rounded? |
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#7 | |
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 400
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In overall shape there's seems to be a relation between the Naga sword and the Borneo pandat. In use the Nagasword is for me,( I just exercised with it) the most ergonomic type. It wouldn't suprise me if the bone or antler top at the pandat handle was actually once of iron( for both hand use) but developped later to smaller proportions. There seems relation between the Naga and Indonesian tribes and there are comparables in their culture like headhunting, feast of merit,megaliths,Y-posts,tattooing etc Arjan |
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#8 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Houston, TX, USA
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I found out that pandit is a Hindoo priest or religious instructor of some kind.
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#9 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Sweden
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Here is another pandat I have found.
It has resembling motifs on the scabbard as the others but the end piece on this is ivory, which I haven't seen before. Michael |
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#10 | |
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Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: The Netherlands
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Thank you for sharing images of this wonderfull piece! So rare and you have so many of them. Besides the ones I've seen in museumcollections, I've only held three in my hands.....and the best one of those three is in your collection for a while now (the one with hair). Regards, Maurice |
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