12th April 2015, 03:24 AM | #1 |
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Spear Heads: Whatizthey?
Picked these up at the show today. Whatever they are? The single blades are 13" long, the doubles, 12". Didn't measure the width. The owner thought they were African. To me the doubles look Indian, and the singles look Filipino? Are they spear heads with the sockets cut off, or are they made as these "things". They both lock together, in the perpendicular position. Any ideas?
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12th April 2015, 07:33 AM | #2 |
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Great looking spear heads, especially the double pronged ones which I also would have guessed to be Indo-Persian and the other 2 to be Indonesian until I saw that they could be screwed into a lance.I once had a Mogul hunting spear that took interchangeable heads, with the same screw post configuration.
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13th April 2015, 04:45 AM | #3 |
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Thanks drak. Guess nobody else has any ideas, or opinions?
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13th April 2015, 05:55 AM | #4 |
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Just really neat items ;did you pick them up at a militaria show, an antique show, a gun show, etc ? Was there a story attached; what did the seller think?
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13th April 2015, 06:32 AM | #5 |
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Gun show. No story, seller thought they were African. The guy has been in the gun, antique, and military surplus business for 50 years. No telling when, or where he got them. They are certainly different.
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13th April 2015, 12:23 PM | #6 |
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Indian. The bidents look very Indian, and the only threaded spears I've seen have been Indian or modern Western. The singles don't look non-Indian.
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13th April 2015, 12:31 PM | #7 |
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There does not look like a good place to hold as a hand weapon and the male/female screw looks as though they belong together and not interchangeable spear heads for same shaft.
Could they be a hunting/ambush/trap weapon - the double prong goes in the ground with the spear pointed up? |
13th April 2015, 12:47 PM | #8 |
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i would suspect the threaded part is a short threaded rod stud that could also be unscrewed from the double spear & used on the single and visa versa. it may take some wd-40 if the stud is rusted in. the stud looks short for combat use. how deep is the threaded hole? possibly meant as parade spears?
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13th April 2015, 04:14 PM | #9 | |
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how about african sword money ? These spear heads are never intended for fighting. The screw thread is too short and can get loose during usage. Kind regards Roland |
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13th April 2015, 07:19 PM | #10 |
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Hadn't thought about the currency aspect. Many regions of the world have, or have had weapon designed money.
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14th April 2015, 05:22 AM | #11 |
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I think the currency theory is a little far fetched, as the currency "weapons" that I've examined are basically roughed out shapes, with any mounting hardware or fine fitting being non-existent.
Currency weapons are made by blacksmiths for use in a defined area. The drilling and tapping tools require tools for their manufacture that are not just found or made easily. They are fairly technical, with measurements and shaping needing more precision tooling. If you've ever done any amount of threading (male or female) you know the difficulty, with chipped and broken taps and dies being commonplace. Replacement for a primitive shop would be next to impossible! I think they are either parade/ceremonial weapons coming from a fairly technical society. Also, the bright red rust tells me that they are probably recent. |
14th April 2015, 06:58 AM | #12 | |
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14th April 2015, 10:30 AM | #13 |
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the last half of 19c india had railroads, maintenance shops for the RR would have had the tools and machinery to service the locomotives, including lathes, milling machines, casting equipment etc. and trained local labour to use them. the first railroad was in 1853, by 1895 they were making their own rr locomotives and cars, and exporting them to the brits in africa.
even today the craftsmen of northern pakistan make precise working copies of modern (and older) firearms arms requiring precision components, as well as the ammunition to feed them, using quite primitive equipment. i wouldn't want to fire one myself, not trusting their heat treating skills that much, but their use against our own troops seems to indicate they work satisfactoraly. |
14th April 2015, 03:44 PM | #14 | |
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Right. But we were talking about currency weapons. By the time the railroads, workshops with capabilities to make enfield barrels out of rebar, etc. came along, coinage was in fashion, and, not too much later, paper money. The point being that a society using a barter system involving metal objects rather than coinage is a bit further toward the "primitive" end of the development scale than one using coins as a medium of trade. But, were deviating from the real discussion of the blades Trenchwarfare has presented. Modern threads for screws were developed by a group of engineers, different groups emerging in different countries. Go to Wikipedia, search "screw threads" and scroll down to something like "the history of standardization" or some such and you'll get a timeline of thread development. Also remember that the time between the adoption of a thread standard and actual implementation in far away locations could take years. The earliest threads that evolved in blacksmith's work over centuries are easily distinguished from modern threads. Earliest taps were just filed by eye and are uneven and imprecise. But, back again to the spear points. As interesting as they appear to be, the fasteners place them into the immediate pre-modern or modern era. *Please don't make me find examples of primitive threads and do a side by side comparison! |
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14th April 2015, 04:21 PM | #15 |
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Go ahead and show us examples ;you know you want to! I would find it very informative.
I also don't think that they are African currency pieces or African, even though one could make an argument that they look like some of the Sudanese Mahdist weapons.Is the double pronged blade thickened at the end for armor piercing? They could be Qajar Dynasty parade pieces ;in either case, be they Mahdist or Qajar items, they would fall in Shakethetrees's time line for machine made screws(I think). |
14th April 2015, 04:22 PM | #16 |
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no, shake the trees, i agree. if they are all essentially interchangeable, it's modern. which standard tho?
even those pashtun i mentioned in no. pakistan use modern taps and dies. they buy them on ebay! if indian, they'd be late 19c if not 20th at the oldest, too detailed for currency, too impractical for heavy combat use, or hunting. i still think parade items. possibly religious, that could be disassembled for easy transport & reassembled for the festival. a macro closeup of the stud & the thread profile, as measurement of the tpi pitch/diameters would be a good discussion item. different thread profiles were popular at different times and places, so might help date it if it's not a run of the mill V thread. even there, if it is a complete or incomplete, or spaced may be interesting. is it a 60 degree american/euro metric or a 55 degree british whitworth? fascinating for an engineer, not so much for a spear collector. it would be fascinating if it were a double helix thread. took me a while to be able to cut one on a lathe. or maybe a triple? the mind bogles. |
14th April 2015, 08:03 PM | #17 |
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I checked the threads, not standard SAE. I was wondering, if these could be the creation of Bannerman's and Sons, or some other old dealer in weapons? They made all sorts of "trophies", and wall hanging apparatus out of weapons, and accouterments. Also, candle holders, fireplace sets, etc... Back then, these weren't precious collector's items. They were just another pile of rusty junk, from overseas.
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15th April 2015, 06:59 AM | #18 | |
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Gimme a few days to get through some real world things. A recent close family member's passing has put a big hiccup in my life that I need to get through. I will attempt to gather several examples side by side. This would be an excellent topic of its own. Do we continue in Ethno, or European? Both are equally valid. |
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22nd April 2015, 05:48 PM | #19 |
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Well, here they are again, all cleaned up. Any ideas as to what they are?
Last edited by trenchwarfare; 23rd April 2015 at 03:15 PM. |
22nd April 2015, 06:15 PM | #20 |
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Fakir / Faqir fighting weapon?
PS. They look great ! |
22nd April 2015, 06:17 PM | #21 |
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Shakethetrees, I'm sorry for your loss ; only time can begin the healing process.
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23rd April 2015, 06:05 AM | #22 |
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Thank you for your concern. It's never easy, but something we all have to face.
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23rd April 2015, 08:09 AM | #23 |
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Trenchwarfare, You have been here long enough to know that asking for an evaluation of any item goes against forum policy. I suggest that you might want to re-read the forum rules to help from making this kind of mistake again in the future.
Robert |
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