18th March 2005, 01:08 AM | #61 |
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Most Excellent
Three cheers for you Wolviex , without your instigation it may never have happened .
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18th March 2005, 01:36 AM | #62 |
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WOW!!! Nice restoration. I am still curious if you ever got a more definitive I.D. on the stones. They still look far too brilliant to be rock crystal to me. Also wonder if you were ever able to determine exactly where this piece was collected from? Give your specialists a pat on the back form us, eh.
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18th March 2005, 02:29 PM | #63 |
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Hi Wolviex,
I feel happy for the keris. Could you shake the hands of the museum specialists for me? Tell them they did great. |
19th March 2005, 12:16 PM | #64 |
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Thank you for this kind words, I appreciate it. I'm happy you like it
Regards |
19th March 2005, 01:53 PM | #65 |
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Not to re-hash what we've already gone over before but I am still not at all convinced that this is a Madurese keris. There are more than a few examples that are very similar to this piece and - with the notable exception of the highly unreliable Hasrinuksmo they are attributed to Bali.
I'm not denying that the topengan may have been used in Madura though I would contend that by at least the 19th century that had ceased. We have in our museum's collection an excavated example dated to about the 15th century from East Java. I know the blade does not look like a typical Balinese keris but then again I've seen more than a few keris like that from Bali. I suspect that in most cases these are either very early examples, ie. 16th or 17th c. or perhaps even later imports or trade blades. I'd really love to hear what Empu Kumis has to say about this piece because among us he has perhaps the most keris experience on Bali. However, in general, can anyone show me a similar piece that is accurately and incontrovertibly provenanced to Madura? |
19th March 2005, 02:04 PM | #66 |
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The restoration is well done. The ones who performed it did a good job. But the credits are also to you Wolviex. You brought the attention of them to this piece.
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29th April 2005, 03:05 PM | #67 |
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The wood of this keris is called Timoho and the type of Timoho is Timaha Pelet Ceplok Banteng or Belang Sapi, meaning Timoho wood with stains like the markings on a Banteng or a Cow, although in Bali the wood is called Purnamasadha, I believe the Latin name is Kleinhovia Hospita L. The same wood is used for the sheath and also for the danganan which is in the cecekahan style. This type of Timoho is believed by some to bring prosperity.
The ganja iras is an indiction that the keris was made by a village rather than a Kraton Mpu. It might also mean that it was a very old blade as the dapur would seem to be a Java brojol ganja iras. The dapur brojol is one of the oldest shapes of keris blades. The fact that the warangka was not made for this blade indicates that an antique dealer was involved. From a purely physical point of view the warangka with all the gold is more valuable than the blade. The owner of the blade would have made a new warangka specially for his blade if he felt that he needed one. Having a warangka that fits perfectly is an important part of the symbolism of the keris. Salam keris |
29th April 2005, 04:44 PM | #68 |
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is it possible that this keris has a seperate ganga? it appears that if there was a scratch line it has been layered unto. doesn't seem to layers deterioting off as much as layers added & then deterioting? has there ever been the practice of adding layers to a old blade; for whatever purpose?
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10th March 2011, 11:02 PM | #69 |
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Up
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18th December 2017, 03:16 PM | #70 |
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Hi Wolviex,
Reading your initiated topic about these highly desirable krisses I came across a pic in the collection of the Tropen Museum in Amsterdam. Seems like a twin to me! The pic is rather of poor quality. |
18th December 2017, 03:43 PM | #71 |
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Another look-a-like from the museum.
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18th December 2017, 05:15 PM | #72 |
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I have moved this thread to the Keris Forum, which did not exist when it was first opened.
Paul, are there also images of the blades for these keris on the museum website. I think many, if not most of us, came around to the belief that the original keris posted may well be from Madura rather than Bali. What origins did the Tropen Museum attribute them to? |
18th December 2017, 07:34 PM | #73 |
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The collection of the museum can be reached thru this link:
http://collectie.tropenmuseum.nl/Default.aspx It is hard to find what you're looking for among the vast majority of pics as the they are so small. I could only trace back one of them. There was a brief description of the outer features and Bali was mentioned as a provenance. This pic of the blade shows kinatah but that's just about all you can tell about it. |
18th December 2017, 09:37 PM | #74 |
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Thanks Paul. I have surfed the Tropen Museum site a number of times.
The photo as uploaded here is a bit too small to tell much, but it certainly looks like it could be a Bali blade. If you read through this thread you will see why some of us thought that perhaps the originally posted keris may have been from Madura instead. |
19th December 2017, 10:03 AM | #75 |
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Fully agree and this 'high rank' Madura kris (?) definitely shows typical Madurese features.
The kinatah is 18 or maybe 22 carat gold? Additional kinatah makes it a precious piece. There is red 'dust' in the gilt pendok, just for decoration purpose or is there a relation with a Keraton? |
19th December 2017, 10:58 AM | #76 |
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Hello Paul,
The kinatah of your kris looks recently made or refurbished from the pics, and the blade may be Javanese? I attach the pic of a Javanese kris with an old blade but a recently made (about 1990) silver pendok with topengan. Regards |
19th December 2017, 11:55 AM | #77 |
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Kinatah not very old I agree nor superbly made but blade has the perfect fit into a typical ladrang capu slot opening so why Javanese? NG pamor is a wellknown Madurese pamor.
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19th December 2017, 12:11 PM | #78 |
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Additional pic of slot.
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19th December 2017, 12:51 PM | #79 |
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Checked the blade and it measures from tip to ganja: 37 cm and showing a wide base and clotchy pamor so doubtfree a Madurese blade.
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19th December 2017, 04:12 PM | #80 | |
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Quote:
I also don't see why you site the blade length as evidence of Madurese origin. 37 cm is well within the expected lengths of Javanese blades as well. I am having a hard time seeing this kinatah as "superbly made", but maybe we just need to see closer, sharper images to understand what you see with the blade in hand. BTW, we are here in this thread already so we should continue here, but the only similarity this keris has to the ones under discussion is the topengan. This keris probably would have been better suited to its own separate thread. Just something to think about for future postings. Last edited by David; 20th December 2017 at 06:56 AM. |
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19th December 2017, 07:37 PM | #81 |
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Let us look at this keris as it is supposed to seen.
Now, just exactly what classification are we looking at here? Is it Madura, or is it one of the Javanese classifications? Bear this in mind:- when we classify a keris, that is to say, when we propose a tangguh, we do not say "Jawa" first and then decide upon the tangguh, no, we firstly try to align the blade features with the classification indicators, we decide our tangguh opinion, and only then can we say:- "Jawa". So, if this is a Javanese blade, what classification might it fit? |
19th December 2017, 09:12 PM | #82 | |
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Quote:
Ladrang Capu is a Central Javanese type of warangka (see book KJ page 306) but yours is clearly an East Javansese type (also found in Madura). Regards |
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19th December 2017, 09:34 PM | #83 | |
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Quote:
I would not venture to assign a tangguh to this blade from the pics and just envisaged that it could be Javanese from its overall proportions and ricikan (kembang kacang, greneng) which look more Javanese than Madurese to me. I attach a pic of what I understand as a more typical wavy madurese blade. Regards |
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19th December 2017, 09:49 PM | #84 |
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Back to square one.
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19th December 2017, 10:28 PM | #85 |
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Yes Jean, that keris in post 83 is close to text-book Madura, however, all tangguh comes down to opinion, and in my opinion I cannot fit Pauls keris into a Jawa classification. I might be able to with much better photos, but what I believe I can see in Paul's keris at the moment simply rules out Jawa and ticks Madura.
Look at the blumbangan, look at the greneng, look at the pawakan, look at the penitis, the kembang kacang might just barely scrape in as Jawa, but it also fits nicely into Madura. Look at your Madura and Paul's keris together, in the same orientation. Consider this:- if we want to give Paul's keris as Jawa, what do we have available as possibilities? It appears to have a boto adeg blumbangan, how many Javanese classifications have boto adeg blumbangan? Could it be Pajajaran? Majapahit? Banten? Surakarta? It doesn't fit any of those, does it? Where do you go from there? But agreed, the photos do need a lot of improvement before you'd bet your house on it. |
20th December 2017, 12:49 PM | #86 | |
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Quote:
Thank you and I won't argue anymore as we are deviating from the original subject, but would you say that every old Javanese blade (including the village and trade pieces) should be aligned to a specific tangguh? Paul, could you please post a clear picture of the sorsoran of the blade? Regards |
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20th December 2017, 01:30 PM | #87 |
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Absolutely not Jean --- from the classic point of view.
But it seems to be obvious to me that the current crop of collectors, the bulk of whom are from outside the society and the social level for whom the tangguh system was relevant, now have decided that a tangguh can be stuck onto every keris ever made. That's just the way it is at the moment, and I doubt that it will ever go back to the classic form. After all, it is only an opinion, and opinions in the strictest sense are not really open to debate, but they can be discussed, which makes tangguh a wonderful method of generating conversation and social interaction. |
23rd January 2018, 10:45 PM | #88 |
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The Dutch Rijksmuseum also has similar topengan pieces in its collection. Both are attributed to Madura.
For photo one, the description reads: J.C. Baud, Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies, was presented with this kris by Mangkoe Adie Ningrat, ruler of Pamekasan, during his inspection tour on Java and Madura in 1834. The exchange of gifts between native rulers and Dutch officials was important in maintaining good diplomatic relations. A kris, as a symbol of power that protected its wearer against evil, was a highly appropriate gift. For photo 2: This kris was presented to King William I by the Sultan of Madura, Cakra Adinigrat VIII, in 1835. In an accompanying letter, the sultan expressed a thousand thanks for his appointment as a Commander in the Order of the Dutch Lion. His gift to the king was a kris ‘made at my kraton [= palace]’. Two of the 117 diamonds decorating the scabbard are missing. |
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