The  reason these look like Jap swords is that they were often used by  the Japanese as machetes in the Japanese Burma campaign ww2, they were  leather covered with the single suspension ring for belt carry, likely  done by  Japanese military workers, possibly By Burmese ??, bit no Japanese  officer would ever have used his shingunto Katana for jungle work, so  they bought and used their shorter Burmese dha, often the end of the  blades of these dha were concave type and had to  be re ground to suit the Japanese user, many of these were taken by  British and other country's jungle warfare soldiers who served in the  Burma campaign, they took them from dead and captured Jap soldiers  believing them to be Japanese.  These were also used by the Burmese who fought with the Japanese,  conscripted Burmese men whos rank was no more than cannon fodder. 
   
 
  The mounts of these dha are thin sheet brass that is hammered into shape  on lacquer blocks like toffee and then soldered, they are then fitted  to the sword by filling the pomel with lacquer resin of the same type  that is used for setting all dha blades in Burma  and Thailand, Laos, Cambodia. 
  These dha always have the same filed finish on the mounts and the single middle forged fuller in the blade. 
 
 
I have a Burmese dha that i received from a Chindit, who took it off a Japanese office who didn't need it any more, because he had gone to meet his ancestors.. 
 
		 
		
		
		
			
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
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