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Old 1st June 2025, 01:36 PM   #11
Mercenary
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Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Moscow, Russia
Posts: 428
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It is very possible. Usually in akhara, kalari, festivals and ceremonies any weapon made recently and even from aluminum or something else is used. So in the case of your sword, such a combination of a real (not flexible, like most modern pata) and "very ancient" blade from the point of view of its owners in the 19th-20th centuries, and a handle with the image of Garuda may not be accidental. The image of Garuda is not just a decoration, especially on a simple weapon made not for sale, but for martial arts or fests. It is a sign, a symbol. It means that there was a semantic connection between the martial traditions and the cult of Garuda in this region for hundreds of years, which in turn means that your pata also comes from a warrior culture, regardless of when it was made. The main thing is that it lived in this culture. Not every item in our collections can boast of this.

P.S. That is why we are interested in Indian culture, where nothing had disappeared without a trace. Even for 5000 years.
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