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Old 23rd January 2012, 11:06 AM   #1
colin henshaw
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Default West African ? dagger for I.D.

Hi

This is a new acquisition that perhaps someone could help out with regarding identification. Havn't seen that type of cast brass handle before.

As usual, comments are welcome.

Regards.
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Old 23rd January 2012, 11:09 AM   #2
Gavin Nugent
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Colin, no help here but the bronze work is beautiful and the blade looks very strong and not of the quality typically found in African knives. Congrats.

Gav
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Old 23rd January 2012, 01:15 PM   #3
Andy Stevens
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Hi Colin, nice dagger, looks North African, Hausa? Manding? We like!!
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Old 23rd January 2012, 01:35 PM   #4
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Scabbard has elements of Manding work in it (the thick raised bands), cast bronze reminds me of Kirdi ceremonial daggers, in terms of the quality of the casting.

A really fantastic piece Colin!
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Old 24th January 2012, 01:14 AM   #5
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Yes I would second Colin there, very nice indeed.
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Old 24th January 2012, 08:47 AM   #6
colin henshaw
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Many thanks for the input on this dagger.

The shallow diamond cross-section of the blade seems a bit unusual for African weapons...but I notice one of the Mandara short swords posted by Iain (separate thread) has a similar cross-section, also the curved profile of the blade. Do you think this is an indigenous development or the result of external influences ?

Regards.
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Old 24th January 2012, 10:13 AM   #7
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Hi Colin,

My little Chamba piece has a similar blade style you are right. I'd say native, if only for the fact that the region is fairly isolated and I haven't seen that blade profile as common in the surrounding Islamic emirates. If it came via Muslim traders I would expect it to have been found on Hausa and other arm daggers.

Cheers,

Iain
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Old 24th January 2012, 11:39 AM   #8
Gavin Nugent
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Colin,

It looks to be of very strong and bright steel unlike, if I can use the term, "Typical" African sword. How thick is it between the medial ridges?

Gav
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Old 25th January 2012, 09:36 AM   #9
colin henshaw
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Gav,

Yes, you are quite right about the blade. Max. thickness at the spine must be 3-3.5mm. In fact the blade is very similar to that on an Ottoman dagger I had some time ago (see attached image). I wonder could it be a re-used Ottoman blade, perhaps broken at the tang area ? which would explain the applied brass/bronze handle...

The handle is interesting - using the "lost wax" technique - strings of wax applied, covered with clay, melted out, then the space filled in with liquid brass. I've seen that work plus similar half-moon motifs, on Ashanti gold-weights etc. But they are located near the coast, a long way from Northern Cameroon. H'mm...

Regards
Colin


Quote:
Originally Posted by freebooter
Colin,

It looks to be of very strong and bright steel unlike, if I can use the term, "Typical" African sword. How thick is it between the medial ridges?

Gav
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Old 25th January 2012, 10:43 AM   #10
Iain
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There is a lot of lost wax casting done in the Mandara area. Here's one:

http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/attach...id=32962&stc=1 (just linking the image since it was an old sale in the swap forum that was never marked as sold).

Also not the circular motifs on that piece.

I know of a few others in the collection of friends, but I'd have to ask before posting their images.

My Chamba blade is about the same thickness at the base of the spine.
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