Balinese/Lombok pedang
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Yesterday I received my latest find!
It's a very interesting pedang, as you can see for yourself on the images.... It has great patina and a very attractive blade, full of Quran verses and other decorations, inlaid in silver at both sides and the spine. If someone would dare trying to translate the text on the blade, I will upload some close ups... Maurice |
:eek: ooh! them fullers are gorgeous!
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Left side of the blade is orientated correctly (sequence right to left, i.e. base of blade to tip). The right side is upside down - just flip it over (after doing the left side pics) and again go from the base of the blade towards the tip... |
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:D |
Left side of the blade.
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Left:
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Right side of the blade
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Right:
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Backside of the blade
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Spine:
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Superb find!!!
Could you take a picture of the hilt from the side facing down (along the edge)? It might be the rarer Garuda-variation, instead of the regular makara/flower bud. Michael |
Congrats, Maurice, nice score!
Got the blade "washed" recently? It looks very dark while the inlay is shiny; I'd give the silver on the hilt and scabbard a gentle polish, too. These pedang come from all over the archipelago - mostly along the arc from Sumatra to Sumbawa with a bit of Banjar/etc. thrown in. Given the Islamic script, I guess we can exclude Bali as the origin of this piece. Hopefully the inscription will give us some clues... From what I can glean from the pics, the inlay looks a bit crude though. And the inlay is very intact. I'd posit that the inlay got added later but you get a much better idea from handling it up and close - what can you read from the blade, workmanship, patina, etc.? Regards, Kai |
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Just made it with my cellphone.... Maurice |
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I recently cleaned a Javanese sword with brass inlay. You could hardly see the brass inlay before. But after giving it a good rub with some dishsoap, the brass inlay looks like new, but the blade is still very black. No matter how hard I rub, it will stay black! If you mean this with "washed" I think that's what happened. The inlay is far from crude, but probably you think so because of the close ups. I never have seen a better inlay on these kind of swords. It looks like it was done with a finewriter, but it isn't. When looking at the images of the whole blade you can see how smooth it looks, and not crude as done recently. The inlay like this, is done the way it was occurring on other 19th century blades. Also when you look on the last image of #5, you can see a part which isn't rubbed as good as the other part of the blade. Ofcourse I agree the inlay could be recenter as the sword, but it's very good craftmanship and also done a long, long time ago.. About the silver, I leave it as it is. Love the patina more as the shiny silverwork.. :0 Sometimes you've got to have it in hands. This one is such piece you can't show it on images. You have to see and feel it. The blade is very smoothly forged, high quality. Also the inlay is very good work, and therefore it's all there and not (partly) gone allready (as seen on quality inlay of old blades). This in combination with an enormous patina on the handle (which I've not seen often on these pedangs, probably because people cleaning the silverwork and decide to clean the whole handle instead?), tells me I need to keep this one in my own collection, though it isn't Borneo and I'm not attracted to these kind of pedangs normally! Maurice |
Excellent craftsmanship on this sort of pedang, with a gorgeous blade. The dark looks more to be patina than 'a wash', though as Kai suggested, I have seen these washed to highlight the inlay.
If I were a betting man I would say the inlay was done within the last 50 years and far younger then the sword. The Arabic makes it somehow seem Sumatran to me, but of course it could have originated in so many places as these styles were supremely popular. Congrats on a truly nice pick up! Please see: http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showth...umatran+swords |
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Beneath the surface you can see a very nice pattern in the blade, but it's hard to get it on camera. And I decided to leave the piece as it is, without any cleaning whatsoever. Why do you think it's 50 years ago done? (just curious). I think it would be done much rougher if it was only 50 years ago. But who knows, maybe we get an translation with a date or maybe it says "made in Taiwan" :-) Till than I believe it's much more older, though not as old as the blade. I'm allowed to post next image. It's from a sikin panjang. Look at the craftmanship. Definately 19th century, but it looks "rough" also. But this is because it's done as thin and delicately as the inlay in my pedang. I would like to see the inlay craftmanship in other blades which should be 19th century or older, just to see the difference (but than I want examples with as delicately inlay as the pedang). Ofcourse I knew your thread: Very nice pieces Charles: I specially like pedang 2 and 6. Maurice |
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Michael PS It's from Lombok, not Sumatra. |
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Again with my celphone. Thank you for noticing it's Lombok. Maurice |
VVV,
I am curious what about this piece assures its origin is from Lombok? Are there characteristics of it that make that a definite? |
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If indeed these inlays are Islamic text i would agree that Bali is unlikely while Lombok is still a possibility. Thought ethnically diverse it does seem that a small majority of the inhabitants are indeed Muslim. In any case a very nice sword. :) |
I am with Charles in thinking this may be from Sumatra due to the Arabic. Several times "Allah" is present, perhaps in some bismallah or in Qur'anic verse. It would be better that an Arabic reader try to render some type of translation. I don't think it is jawi (though I could be wrong).
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Nice item Maurice!
My opinion, Sumatra. For sure. The inlay can be done later, but seems to be old. (Islamic text) John |
Most important, the original collection tag said Lombok on it. ;-)
Otherwise, the hilt is more square than the ones usually seen from Sumatra (but often seen on Lombok) and the blade has fullers. On Lombok the Sasak are Muslim. If you look at the lower part of the hilt there is a beak and a bird face (Garuda). I suspect that this also is a Lombok-feature. Maybe Maurice can bring it out better with new pictures? Michael |
Do we know when it was originally collected in Lombok?
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Perhaps the text-inlay done after the Dutch intervention in 1894. |
I am not necessarily saying it's Sumatran, I just didn't understand why it had to be Lombok, and I must have missed anything about a tag.
Good observations. |
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I will make some decent pictures within the next few days of the handle. It has floral leaf motifs all over, but looking at the shape there's indeed some kind of mouth visible and it looks like I can see some kind of nose? (just like a macara, only instead of the upper jaw it's tog an elobarated lower jaw). But maybe it's just my imagination and I see the wrong presentation in it. Also I looks that there's a bit in the front missing. But if so very long time ago as it has the same patina. But it might be that it's all intact and it meant carved like this... Maurice |
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Thanks for your approval of depicting the inlay of the sikin panjang! Let's hope we find somebody who can tell us more about the text.... Maurice |
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There was a tag saying Lombok on it, but it was a recent one so I detached it. Maurice |
yowza!!! heck of pedang, bro! nice catch!!! would be interested at the translation on this pedang
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Still waiting if here's somebody who would like to translate it for us... Maurice |
Maurice,
Just for clarity because forums and emails carry no connotation and can be easily misinterpreted...like I did not understand that MM was joking about the tag!...I have no problem with anything that has been said about the sword, but if there are specific characteristics that make this a "for sure" Lombok made piece, of course I want to learn about them. I think I see what VVV is getting at about a more "squared" appearance, but I think we would need more complete pics and perhaps side-by-side examples. |
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