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29th March 2024, 10:48 PM | #1 |
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Another Bali Keris
Hi I wanted to share my latest Keris that I won in an auction. I think it’s an nice 19th century one and only had some minor issues like a loose gandar and a little bit of rust to the blade. I glued the gandar with fish glue and used a bronze bristle to remove the surface rust. Most of the washing with Warangan is still there. I wrapped the blade in tissue that I soaked with WD40 wrapped it in clingfoil and put it away for a few days. Then with a bronze bristle and some dentist picks I was able to remove the rust. Then with break cleaner I cleaned it of the penetrating oil and applied Keris oil cendana on the blade.
The sewer I cleaned in a bath of vinegar it has real stones in it and is of an nice old quality. Can someone explain how the groves in the hilt at the back of the top are called? It has an nice contrast pamor blade dapur lurid and hilt cecekahan. Regards Martin. |
30th March 2024, 12:56 AM | #2 |
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That's a very nice Bali keris.
I can't really comment too much on your cleaning job s you photo quality isn't really showing the details very well, but they are good enough to show you acquired a good keris. Here is a thread that might give you more understanding of your hilt form. http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?p=87972 |
30th March 2024, 01:46 AM | #3 |
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Hi David,
thank you for the link it gives more understanding of the hilt, and yes i could not wait to post some pictures so artificial light is not always the best and also my phone takes less good pictures compared to my canon camera. Regards, Martin |
30th March 2024, 02:38 AM | #4 |
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A nice keris, in fact a very nice keris.
I think you will find the "stones" in the uwer are pastes. |
30th March 2024, 10:27 AM | #5 |
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Hello Mr. Maisey,
what you mean with pastes?, that they are made from glass? At least they are not plastic and the red stone has a spot that looks like agate. And I am happy i was able to buy it in the auction together with the Keris in the first picture that somehow looks like a Frankenstein. Regards, Martin |
30th March 2024, 01:34 PM | #6 |
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Yes, glass, but that's being a bit simple.
Paste glass is leaded glass & in antique jewellery it is quite collectable. The little imitation stones that we find in Bali & Jawa keris dress are seldom true pastes, they're usually glass. In Balinese art & ornamentation the end effect is important, the way that effect is achieved is not important. I have a royal quality Balinese keris hilt, 22K gold, exquisite workmanship, some of the stones are natural some are paste, one is glass, then there is one diamond also. The uwer on this keris is of a type that virtually always has glass enhancements. Whether the stones are natural or imitation has absolutely no effect on value at all, unless those stones are of jewel quality, which is something rarely encountered. The keris in the first photo is pretty OK too, wrongko looks like Tegal, looks like it needs a pendok. |
2nd April 2024, 07:38 PM | #7 | |
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Quote:
i got the message from a member of the Dutch Keris that the scabbard with bands is most likely from Lombok and he gave the following description for the Keris: Dapur Jalak Ngore. Pamor Aiq Nglek. Pelet Mbelang Sapi (cow spot) now i have a question, where Keris from Lombok also polished like they did in Bali in the 19th Century? Regards, Martin |
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2nd April 2024, 10:16 PM | #8 | |
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Quote:
I also have a keris that has one rattan band. I have never considered that made it a Lombok blade, but i'm not counting that out as a possible indicator. Does anyone else have knowledge of this. As for blade polish, i have seen blades identified as Lombok both with and without a polished surface. So i think it can go either way. I can't really tell for sure, but it looks like your blade was probably polished at some point. |
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2nd April 2024, 10:21 PM | #9 |
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Martin, the names used for keris dhapurs & pamors & everything else change from place to place & from time to time, nothing is graven in stone.
In the keris group that your Dutch friend associates with, this description might very well be accepted as correct, however, it is not correct in Bali, and probably can never be given a "correct" Balinese description for the simple reason that keris culture in Bali is not as structured as it is in Jawa, and as I have already commented, names change. This description is given in Javanese, but even then, it is only approximate, jalak ngore is a Javanese dhapur, but it does not have ron dha nunut, I do not know the name of this dhapur in Balinese, I doubt if anybody does. The pelet motif in Balinese could be taken as Mbelang Sampi (not sapi), but to my mind that's stretching things a bit, still, if we must give it a name this will fit. The word belang in Javanese means white spots or white speckling, in Balinese the spots of speckling do not need to be white, in Balinese, the prefix "m" is virtually inaudible in speech & it turns the root into a transitive verb. I do not know pamor "aiq nglek", in fact, I do not know these two words in either Javanese or Balinese & cannot find either in any of my language resources. However, this pamor is a wos wutah type, & in Bali most people would give it as "ilining warih" = "flowing water". "aiq" might be a typo for "air" = water; the root of "nglek" could be "klek" or "lek", klek I do not know, cannot find; "lek" has a number of meanings, the one I know relates to a visible moon. The use of rotan bands to hold two parts of a scabbard together is pretty general throughout Maritime SE Asia, in Jawa/Bali it usually indicates that the scabbard has been made in a rural area. There was a Balinese colony on Lombok up until about 1894, keris made or used in this colony are usually indistinguishable from keris made on the mainland. Yes, Balinese keris blades in Lombok were treated as Balinese blades on Bali itself. Martin, a lot of things that out-of-society collectors believe about keris are not necessarily what people in the originating society believe, however, if these somewhat variant understandings permit people within a particular group to communicate with one another, it is really no big deal if there is some variation in understandings. Its all part of the Name Game. EDIT Just now speaking with a native speaker of Javanese & I have been told that the word "klek" means for something to break with a snap, Javanese is a strongly onomatopoeic language, so words often sound like the thing that they refer to. But I still cannot make any sense of this pamor name you've been given. Last edited by A. G. Maisey; 2nd April 2024 at 11:13 PM. |
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