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27th December 2021, 08:50 PM | #1 |
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Join Date: Jun 2013
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Chinese, Tibetan, Indian or African Sword?
I recently picked up this sword and the tip reminded me of a Chinese or Tibetan trousse; the 22.5" blade is razor-sharp, so this is clearly a slashing weapon. It isn't a sword cane as the scabbard starts out round, but it eventually begins to flatten out as a more conventional sheath would; maybe the wire work on the scabbard is an indication of the origin. As shown the tip is broken off.
I was wondering if anyone else knew where this might have come from? |
27th December 2021, 09:40 PM | #2 |
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Location: The Aussie Bush
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I would say this blade is shorter than it started out. The tip is off center.
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27th December 2021, 09:42 PM | #3 |
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Location: Germany, Dortmund
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Hello Drac2k,
I don't have an informed answer, I can only tell you my observations and my resultant conclusions. The blade form reminds me of Chinese jian swords, and the blade seems laminated, another hint that it could be a jian blade maybe in a rural area fitted with new mountings. The wire binding I only have seen by South-East-Asian blades and the lacquer work at the handle could also be Chinese. A refitted jian blade?? Only my 2cents. Regards, Detlef |
27th December 2021, 09:43 PM | #4 |
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Hello,
a composite item ?... the hilt seems indian as we can see on indian sword canes as you said, assembled on a shortened chinese jian blade ? |
28th December 2021, 05:51 AM | #5 |
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All very good observations from all parties . Yes I believe that it is a shortened blade, but the tip configuration seemed strange and it reminded me of a Chinese trousse tip. I too am leaning towards Chinese because of the Jian-like blade configuration, the scrollwork on the scabbard which almost looks like a Dha sheath. The blade above the handle does appear to have some European sword characteristics which could be a repurposed sword or one made in imitation and as such, I certainly think that it could be a composite sword.
I thought that it could possibly be Indian because of the cane-like handle, maybe it was a Fakir's weapon, and I have a couple of Indian ax handles that reminded me of the same color scheme. Lastly, I threw in African because when all else fails, and no viable guess can be made, I attribute these items as possibly belonging to that land of mystery. |
28th December 2021, 05:01 PM | #6 |
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Interesting piece!
I would lean toward a 'refurbished' Chinese Jian in a Banjarmasin/Kalimantan dress. The Chinese were represented in large numbers due to trade in Southern Borneo. The bright red colour is often seen on edged weapons from this region and the typical knot is also largely associated with this region, however it is mostly seen in rattan. I would date it in the 19th century. Regards, Peter |
28th December 2021, 09:57 PM | #7 |
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Thanks, Peter that would certainly be great news. Just to throw a wrench into the works, the knot on the scabbard reminds me of one on a Dyak Mandau sheath; it still could have the Chinese connection as the Dyaks had a great deal of contact with the Chinese, either by trading or piracy.
Last edited by drac2k; 28th December 2021 at 10:12 PM. Reason: to add information |
4th January 2022, 02:29 AM | #8 |
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Yes, the blade almost certainly is a shortened Jian . But the handle does look Indian. I would guess that overall it is a composite Sino-Indian Gupti.
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