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#1 |
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(deceased)
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Portugal
Posts: 9,694
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#2 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Europe
Posts: 2,718
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Fernando/Ariel, very well done, and thank you very much for the translation.
It seems to me, that keeping the hilts and the blades apart, was a question, which Rainer Daehnhardt should have been digging a bit more into - a pity he didn't. This 'habit' of keeping hilts and blade seperat, could be due to, how much the Maharaja trusted his employees, and the people he was ruling over. I feel sure, that had it been general, people like Egerton, Hendley, Kipling and others, living there and commenting on armouries would have mentioned it, as the habit, as far as I know, is very far form the European way to do it - and so, such a habit, must have been very strange to them. |
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#3 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Ann Arbor, MI
Posts: 5,503
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I am with you .
These missives were not intended to be a final, unassailable "truth". The issue was raised as to the origin of this information, and here it is. Nothing more. Each one here is free to accept the idea or to reject it. If additional sources become available, they should be presented here. Going back, we may find potential explanations for the plethora of handles and the paucity of blades. The absence of dish pommels is still a mystery. |
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#4 |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2017
Location: Kansas City, USA
Posts: 1
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Hello to all,
This is my first post and I would like to introduce myself and throw my hat into this conversation. Although my current knowledge is quite limited in regards to South Asian arms, my favorite swords are tulwars. I can thank Matt Easton for planting this seed and ebay for letting me get my hands on some of these swords with my rather meager budget. As far as why are all these hilts without blades on ebay, I just assumed it is because of the old tradition in India of hilts and blades being easily interchangeable. While an old sword blade could be made into something useful quickly, an old hilt would just get tossed aside. In regards to this "epidemic" of tulwar hilts on ebay as Ariel refers to it; I think folks just realized rather than just let these old things rust away in the shed, some westerner will pay thirty bucks for it. I am referring to all these real antique, but junky (often broken) tulwar hilts on ebay. They don't seem to be doing the fake old stuff racket the way the Chinese do so often on ebay. These cheap hilts often have a missing disk and/or a broken langet. In regards to all the missing disks on many of the hilts, it is simply because they are worn out old junk. I just bought a tulwar from an American seller with the disk missing from the hilt because I like the stout old blade that came with it. It definitely had a disk at one point (long ago), but these parts do seem to be the first part that breaks. I plan on replacing the hilt with a different one purchased on ebay from India. A really nice one which I will attach using a traditional Laksha based cutler's resin. Another tulwar I have is completely solid except for a wiggle in the disk. I think this is just a common problem with these mass produced "munitions" level hilts. In the future I plan to post pictures of my tulwars and the re-hilting process to share and request knowledge and opinions. Cheers! |
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#5 | |||
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(deceased)
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Portugal
Posts: 9,694
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Quote:
In fact, when i pasted my post reflecting Mr. Daehnhardt's narration on this subject, i saw no need to transcribe in the text a paragraph with my own comment on it, which was: Naturaly this is a facultative situation, nobody has to beleive in it. http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showpo...5&postcount=19 Quote:
Quote:
But again ... we are all free to digest it or not .
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#6 | |
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Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Moscow, Russia
Posts: 430
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Quote:
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#7 | |
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Arms Historian
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Route 66
Posts: 10,799
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Quote:
HUH???? "...while in India Lord Egerton collected, studied and observed with the inspired interest of a student collector. The odd arms of India were fast becoming obsolete and he seized the opportunity to record all be could.." from the foreward in his 1880 book. Are you suggesting he was not? |
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#8 |
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Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Moscow, Russia
Posts: 430
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"there was none available, nor any information about Indian weapons and their manufacture, except that which was to be found in books of travel, or in the noticed scattered through Oriental magazines" - in India in 1855?
Where was Lord Egerton? How long? Was he doing any research except through "books of travel" and "Oriental magazines"? I can not find anything about his life in India. I will try more...
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#9 |
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Arms Historian
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Route 66
Posts: 10,799
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Actually it is good to question our resources, and I like the notion of pursuing it together. So while you check further so will I, and it would be great if others out there might add their views and findings if they choose to join. I don't think anyone I know has the exposure to resources on Indian history that Jens has thoroughly perused through the many years Ive known him.
Meanwhile, might I know the source of the quote you cite on the paucity of material on Indian weapons c. 1855? I do not doubt that being the case, as in Great Britain's conquest and occupation of Indian regions with the advent of the East India Co., it seems the weapons were perceived more as curiosities and not seriously studied nor catalogued prior to Egerton's work. Apparantly, according to the reference from Egerton's book, this was intended to be a catalog for collections at the museum at South Kensington. It seems that some of the other subsequent references like Hendley, the items were observed at durbars and other major events in India. |
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#10 | |
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Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Moscow, Russia
Posts: 430
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Quote:
In India in 1855 there was a lot of opportunities to collect not only collections of arms but a plenty very adequate information about it. I think he was not travelling across India for years ... to put it mildly. |
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