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#1 |
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While enjoying a brewed elixir, I was rather stupidly perusing ebay and ended up with this. This sort of behaviour is out of character, the ebay part is anyway. It does have some damage but not unexceptable for the money or too my surprise its age. The tip is fine and purposely fashioned. It handles beautifully what practitioners would call a fast weapon. I like the ivory grip but I do not really know a lot about it. Can I join the dhamented, please
![]() Last edited by Tim Simmons; 10th October 2005 at 05:20 PM. |
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#2 |
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Marks I have just found, has anybody seen the same ones?
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#3 |
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Hi Tim
That is a rather nice dha you picked up ![]() Lew Last edited by LOUIEBLADES; 10th October 2005 at 06:05 PM. |
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#4 |
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Hi Tim,
I think I will get drunk too tonight ![]() That brewed elixer gave you a sharp view on the pleasures of live ![]() |
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#5 |
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Nice sword, Tim. Congratulations!
![]() I've never seen that blade marking before, so I can't help you there. As for the origin, I believe this is in the Thai style (we're revisiting the rough typology we started a few years ago, and the tribal nomenclature is less helpful.). The handle/blade proportions and the stylized lotus-bud pommel make me think this, although these features do appear on swords from other areas in the region (long handles often apear on Laotian swords, and variations of the pommel appear on Burmese swords as well). I'll let Mark address this more definitively, as he's really doing the heavy lifting in our research. Age is a tough one, particularly from photos. This thing looks pretty old, but in nice condition. I'd say late 19th/early 20th century. It may be older. The blade is nice, and that broad central fuller is not rare on Thai swords. The blade tip is interesting, and it looks like the fuller extends all the way to the end? Any chance you could post a close-up of that feature? Best, Andrew |
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#6 |
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I hope these help. The seller said it was from Malay. The pictures show where the sword ends inside the scabbard, just short of the peg in the scabbard, pegs have been discussed before. Thanks for the help, I was very worried I had bought a pig and a poke while waiting for it to arrive. Tim
Last edited by Tim Simmons; 10th October 2005 at 07:50 PM. |
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#7 | |
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![]() Quote:
you may have seen this but some evidence from Wat Prakaew in Thailand. It gives a good view of the lotus bud design as a Thai motif,though I am not sure if these are supposed to be swords ![]() |
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#8 |
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I have just seen another dha with a peg and chape scabbard, I will not be able to show the pictures for a couple of hours. Tim
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#9 |
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Hi Tim,
I'm not inclined to place too much significance on the peg at this time. Those other weapons you show are of recent manufacture, and typical of the type. Your ivory-handled sword is much older, and much finer. It is, frankly, a special sword. ![]() I'm certainly not suggesting the peg has no significance at all, but it fades into the background for me at this point when considering the other characteristics. Andrew |
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#10 |
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Gosh thank you, the devil looks after his own
![]() ![]() Last edited by Tim Simmons; 12th October 2005 at 07:58 PM. |
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#11 |
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In a very informative but not too scholarly book "The Vanishing Tribes of Burma" Richard K Diran, available from amazon, some nice pictures of Burmese young ladies
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#12 | |
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#13 | |
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I forgot the add the icing on the cake -- according to Leach, "Political Systems of Highland Burma," Kachin and Shan tribes inhabit the same regions (Kachin up in the mountains, and Shan down in the upland river valleys), and individuals can become sort of indentured to members of the other tribe and end up adopting the identy of that tribe. So an ethnic Kachin will call himself "Shan" if he/she is indentured to a Shan and living among the Shan, and vice versa!
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#14 |
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Thank you fellows, not too scholarly in English English means coffee table book
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#15 | |
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![]() What do you mean by "catalogue type books"? There's a bibliography thread around here somewhere that I've been meaning to update and make a "Sticky" for some time. However, the references for dha are sparse, and we tend to get excited about a single photo or passing reference in much larger works. ![]() Incidentally. this dearth of information is exactly what fomented my obsession with dha. |
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#16 | |
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Stay tuned. ![]() |
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