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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Toronto, Canada
Posts: 1,242
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Greetings,
I have very little knowledge of keris, but I am able to look at it from a design point of view. The greneng seems to me like a fairly complex feature. Shaping the edge of an object in the form of letters is an involved thought process; one has to identify the possibility to shape the edge in an unconventional manner and then realize that a specific contour of that edge may be read as meaningful letters. I have worked as a graphic designer, I aspired to become an architect, and I am currently following an urban planning profession, and in all of these I have always had a design process. To get to design E I have to go through A, B, C, D first. To get to a legible ron dha on the "tail" end of the ganja, I feel that a designer had to go through a number of illegible steps. I imagine that at first there was no greneng, no ron dha. Then there arose a deformation of the edge of the "tail" area, something uncommon. It may have been a physical need to stop an opponent's blade, or it may have been something else, possibly even accidental damage. My point is that designers realized that the edge deformation was pleasing or useful and could be shaped in a meaningful way, eventually to become the contour of letters, and eventually to acquire a mystical meaning. This must have happened in time and involving considerable trial and error. I guess this is what David's initial question referred to; what was that initial deformation of the tail edge that prompted the design process that lead to a legible or meaningful greneng. These are my thoughts and I have no way to support them. Thank you all for a fascinating discourse. Emanuel |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 103
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Thank you, Manolo, for your suggestion on the 'designing' aspect. There is, actually, a 'pre-formed' greneng called 'greneng wurung'. Wurung or durung means 'belum' in Bahasa and literally means 'not yet', 'unfinished'. In this case, it could be translated as 'unperfect greneng'. But this kind of greneng has it's own problems. It is very possible that this forms were caused by the worn-out blade. This form also, very likely, to be found on the lower quality blades. Thus, incapability of the maker should be taken account. But it is quite tempting to think that the greneng wurung is the predecessor of the full-shaped greneng.
David, as you suggest that we should find the cause in Hindu cultures, why don't you consider the kukri's cho ? This notch in the lower part of kukri has similar form with greneng/ ron dha, and it also has symbolic meaning(s) and 'lack of functionality' as a tool/weapon. http://www.himalayan-imports.com/khukuri-history.html Please note while I'm suggesting some relations between cho and greneng, I keep my opinion neutral regarding this relationship ![]() |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Room 101, Glos. UK
Posts: 4,249
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i also belong to the himalayan imports forum, where the cho/kaudi debate comes up frequently. a recent thread-> Linky
the conclusion is normally 'no one knows why they have one, or why other nepali weapons do not, they just do'. they are now a religious and traditional inclusion on the kukuhri's such that it is not considered a kukuhri if it does not have one. the kami's normally bless the new kukhri's in a mass ceremony involving sacrifice, so they are serious. kukuhri cho/kaudi also come in a closed style rather than the more common notch: examples: ![]() ![]() so, the blood dripper/blade catcher theory falls a bit flat with those variants. |
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Kuala Lumpur
Posts: 369
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Just for fun, here's some results of direct "translation" of one language (or perhaps culture; in our case) to another.
![]() http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C8gnLAvA3rM http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KCRl5vlMk1I |
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 7,056
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Regarding the notch in a khukri blade.
What I might know about khuks could be written on the head of a pin, however, I do have a good friend who lives in Canada, and who, for the last 20 years or so, has been married to the daughter of a Nepalese Brahmin, who lives with them. Father in law was a professor of cultural studies at an Indian university, and my friend is a long-time student of the khukri, weapons culture in general, and Nepalese weaponry in particular. He is an intelligent man whose work involves logical investigation at a university level. He does not, to the best of my knowledge involve himself in internet forums and when I have raised this question with him he has indicated in a very forceful manner that he has no wish to use his time in this manner. I asked him for his take on the notch in the blade of khuks. Here is his response:- not one reason but a few. the principle reason , which could be carved on stone,I was told by a nepalese of experience, not just a figured out theory, is to control blood flow, when chopping up people. blood on the edge will flow along the edge to the notch then drips off the notch to the ground rather than running over the handle.. I tried it though with milk not blood and it works pretty well.. As well it forms a lock, when in scabbard bladedown and the notch helps lock it.,. as well many people have told me it represents Mt kailas in tibet, where shiva is said to rest, so its religous symbol i.e. could be prayed to. |
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 7,056
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Timely Brother Rasdan, and funny,
Djchengkis Khan is the most hilarious thing I've seen in six months or more. Thank you. |
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#7 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Kuala Lumpur
Posts: 369
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You are most welcome Alan..
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#8 | |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Singapore
Posts: 1,180
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