|  13th June 2021, 03:25 PM | #10 | 
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					Originally Posted by ariel  I  do not know much about Korean sword; thus, I have to rely fully on the chapter by  Park Je Gwang, a curator of the War Memorial of Korea. This was published in a book titled "History of steel in Eastern Asia", a catalogue of the   Macao exhibition. Two of our colleagues, Ian and Jose ( Battara) coauthored a chapter on Sandata, Philippines bladed weapons.
 Back to the Korean swords. The main cultural difference between them and the Japanese swords was a very different attitude. The was nothing of a " Sword is the soul of the samurai". Swords were just implements, no more.  The main physical difference was the attachment of the handle to the tang: in Japan the mekugi was easily removable, in Korea they had a true rivet, that prevented any disassembly.
 
 Look at yours and see which method was used in your sword.
 |  Hi Ariel, 
          The hilt is secured by a peg and not a rivet so I guess from your research that rules out a Korean attribution. 
My Regards, 
Norman.
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