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#1 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Sweden
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Hi Willem,
I also believe that some of the Dohong are remounted spearheads. And then there seems to be another version which is more like a sword blade (maybe ancestor of the Bayu?). Probably Dohong is several, actually different, versions of old (pre 20th C) double-edged Dayak blades grouped together as one classification? Michael |
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#2 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 951
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Hi Michael and Willem this is not an Dohun Michael you see also an very big
spearhead in Kopenhagen the Dayaks have very big spear heads but don t make them dohun s Ben |
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#3 | |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Sweden
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No I don't think that Willem's example is a Dohong. But I suspect that some of the Dohongs were made of old spear heads. Like f.i. the version below that are both found as spear heads and mounted as a Dohong. Or maybe it's the Dohong blades that are mounted as spears as well? Michael |
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#4 |
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Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: The Netherlands
Posts: 202
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Hello Michael,
Interesting photo! From which publication is it? Albert |
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#5 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
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Hi Michael I think you are right when you say that dohuns are made from spearheads .
They where only used at funurals as ceremonium knife s never as weapons and we see a lot off spearheads in the Indonesian archipalo mounted as knife s . Ben |
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#6 |
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Albert,
It's just one of the pictures I found on the Internet. I saved it because it's the only picture I have seen with that kind of early 19th C spearhead otherwise only seen on old drawings. Please join the discussion and let us know your view on the Dohong? Ben, Please note that I don't think all(!) Dohong were made from spearheads. I suspect that there are several variations where some are remounted spearheads. I don't think that f.i. the larger and more swordlike version, that usually has big ivory handles, originally were spearheads. Michael |
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#7 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
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Hi Michael I am talking about the one in the picture this one is also pictured in Hornbill and dragon from Bernard sellato .
and the dohun you mean with the Ivory handle could be from an spearhead I see a few but never so big like an bayu or mandau . That could be why they use them for ceromonies and not for fighting because never intended to be an sword . And you now how big and very old spearhead could be I never see an dohun so big as that spearhead from the one in Kopenhagen. Ben |
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