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28th July 2005, 10:07 PM | #1 |
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another kris ( Lanti ) for comment
Hi
All the attention in recent treads on kris made me want to post some better pictures of the one I have to get comments from those here who know far more about it than I do |
28th July 2005, 11:00 PM | #2 |
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Very nice kris you have there. I think it is an older blade and the baca baca seems to a later add on but I am not 100 percent sure.
Lew |
29th July 2005, 02:17 AM | #3 |
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Hi Michael,
Nice one - I like the hilt! Any intentions to polish up the silver work? Could you please post a pic of the pommel? Maranao. About turn of century? (Just guessing to get the experts going... ) Regards, Kai |
29th July 2005, 07:31 AM | #4 |
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I agree that at least according to the Bob Cato trunk theory, this blade would be Maranao (has the Maranao bulge). Though after handling some strange pieces lately, I am starting to wonder how well that Maranao/Maguindanao disctinction can really hold.
As for dating, everytime I say pre-1930 many people assume that Im saying the piece is 1930, when in fact I am just saying all I know is that since it has a separate gangya, then it at least was made be 1930, how far before I have no idea. For all I know it could have been made in 1801. In his book Moro swords, he has some more dating info on Maguindanaoan pieces between 1900-20 and 1920-40, but well that only applies to Maguindanaoan pieces. Anyways, there is always the idea as time went by the swords got bigger, so the longer/thicker one could try assuming that means newer (I know a number of people who are dead certain of this). But then there is always that guy in 1801 who wanted a huge sword. My own gut feeling on this piece is that Kai is right, and it is early American period eg. 1900-1920, but that is just a gut feeling, and not something I would put money on. Oh well just the .0002 cents of another hobbiest |
29th July 2005, 03:01 PM | #5 |
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...of course hilts are not surefire indicator, but the artwork has a strong maranao flavor. the crud cake in the handle looks like it's saying, " let's get down and dirty!". would like to do an CSI type analysis test on that baby...
btw, what are the measurements??? |
30th July 2005, 01:48 PM | #6 |
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Nice puppy (woof! ). I like the silver work. I don't think the baca-baca is a later add on, though I do think it is of either white metal or a very low grade silver as opposed to the rest of the silver hilt.
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31st July 2005, 10:09 PM | #7 | |
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Quote:
BTW, the greenish copper oxides should clean easily (without removing the patina). Regards, Kai |
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5th August 2005, 01:45 AM | #8 | |
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Quote:
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5th August 2005, 02:21 AM | #9 |
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sorry for the delay and thanks for all the info
I will post the measurements this weekend |
6th August 2005, 12:54 AM | #10 |
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I would have to say that this is one good looking family of Kris'.
Kai, my example does have a separate guard. Closeup of the blade. |
6th August 2005, 01:12 AM | #11 |
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...cool family reunion. the filework on the gangya reminds me of the mosque's roof sillouette.
that's some wicked lamination... |
6th August 2005, 02:31 AM | #12 |
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Re: the sword I posted, there is sort of a small "Y" etched off center & very close to the blade tip (both sides). I have another sword that is a few inches shorter, well made, nice file work & also heavy; that has the same "Y". I suspect the same smith made both swords. Mackers mark or talisman? Anyone else have that mark?
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7th August 2005, 08:38 PM | #13 |
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To the uninformed ( read me ) those do look much like my sword
here are the measurements OAL 27 3/8 inches blade length 23 5/8 inches with at widest part of gangya 5 3/8 inches width at the base of the blade 1 3/4 inches withs 1 inche from tip 1 1/2 inch |
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