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Old 12th October 2010, 12:10 AM   #21
kai
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Join Date: Apr 2005
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Hello Alan,

Quote:
In the interpretations of both Guwaya and Richardus/Rogers there is a clear separation between two groups of hilt forms:-

group 1 is the human + animal + corn + flower motifs, and all these motifs are known as the "gana" form
This is definitely wrong (based on German grammar):
The human and animal forms cannot be associated with the name gana.

BTW, corn cob or flower are alternative descriptions for something perceived by Groneman as a single hilt type (he utilized "or" rather than "and"). I assume flowers refer to the more florally carved examples of this "corn cob" hilt type.


Quote:
As for corn-cob = gunungan, that might be another good question for investigation. When and where did this association first get aired?
Ok, well after the 15th century, for sure.

I'll let someone else start a seperate thread on this topic though...

Regards,
Kai

Last edited by kai; 12th October 2010 at 12:40 AM.
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