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mariusgmioc 27th July 2017 08:18 AM

Dha knife for comments
 
1 Attachment(s)
Among the blades I have recently acquired, is the Dha knife in the photo below.

The total length of the unsheathed knife is 34 cm and the blade alone is 21 cm.

Any comments are welcomed.

Gonzalo G 27th July 2017 08:38 AM

Apart from beign beautiful?

What metal is made from the ferrule and the metallic parts of the scabbard? Is it silver, german silver or steel?

Regards

mariusgmioc 27th July 2017 09:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gonzalo G
Apart from beign beautiful?

What metal is made from the ferrule and the metallic parts of the scabbard? Is it silver, german silver or steel?

Regards

The ferrule and metalic parts of the scabbard are silver. The hilt is elephant ivory.

The blade is strong and nicely grooved on the spine (not visible in the photo).

Regards,

Marius

PS: Around 20-50 years old Burmese/Kachin?!

Sajen 27th July 2017 10:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mariusgmioc

PS: Around 20-50 years old Burmese/Kachin?!

1850 until 1900 would be my guess. Can you post a picture of the blade spine?
Burmese Shan made.

Regards,
Detlef

Gonzalo G 27th July 2017 10:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mariusgmioc
The ferrule and metalic parts of the scabbard are silver. The hilt is elephant ivory.

The blade is strong and nicely grooved on the spine (not visible in the photo).


Thank you for you response, Mariusgmioc. I would like to second Sajen to see the spine. What is the measure of thickness at the base of the spine, if my petiton does not give you much trouble?

Regards

mariusgmioc 28th July 2017 08:31 AM

1 Attachment(s)
That was a difficult photo to take, but here it is.

The spine is about 4.5 mm thick at the base and the whole blade is strong.

Both faces of the blade are hollow (concave) ground with increasing thickness closer to the edge.

Gonzalo G 28th July 2017 10:21 AM

Thank you for your information, Mariusgmioc. Your photos are valuable for a better knowledge of the Dha knife, and the measures are also valuable and usually infrequent. The holllow grounded blade is also a common feature of the kukuri, to lighten it, as a kind of fuller, but with a strong spine and a thick part previous to the edge. A great combination. The decoration of the spine is very interesting. Beautiful piece.

Regards

Battara 29th July 2017 12:53 AM

Mariusgmioc, you have a nice piece there. The scabbard mounts and the groove on the top of the blade are a little above the average for these dha daggers.

kai 29th July 2017 08:48 AM

Hello Marius,

I especially like the broader fuller on the back of the knife going for about half length and then continuing alone both sides of the false edge; also the narrow fullers nicely complete the decorative work of the blade smith.

That's some nice knife!

Regards,
Kai


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