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#1 |
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(deceased)
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: OKLAHOMA, USA
Posts: 3,138
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ITS GOOD TO HAVE A MEMBER FROM SIRI LANKA/CEYLON AS EXPERTESE IN THE AREA HAS BEEN LACKING. WELCOME
THE DESIGN HAS BEEN BORROWED BY OTHER COUNTRYS AND NO DOUBT THERE ARE SOUTHERN INDIAN VERSIONS AS WELL AS GERMAN AND DUTCH, ECT. I WILL THROW A FEW PICTURES INTO THE MIX FOR REFRENCE. 1&2 GOOD OLD EXAMPLES 3 & 4 ODD ONE EITHER EUROPEANIZED VERSION OR PERHAPS THAILAND 5 & 6. GERMAN SWORD SHOWING INFLUENCE 7 & 8 SILVER WITH GOLD AND A COMPLETE SCABBARD, LIKELY MADE DURING THE EUROPEAN RULE. ANY COMENTS OR OBSERVATIONS MOST WELCOME.
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#2 |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Sri Lanka
Posts: 52
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Thanks all
Nice collection Vandoo thanks again. The first two with wooden hilts seem to have been put to some use compared to the last which would more likely been a ceremonial / rank weapon. Including a few images of an interesting kasthane, this weapon was gifted by king Keerthi Sri Rajasinghe to a chieftain of the Mukkara clan; the Mukkara was a clan of silversmiths but the sword was gifted in honor of guarding a water supply during the war with the Dutch East India company. The sword is well crafted and contain several interesting additions. there is a leopard tooth set in place of a crest between the ears of the lion head. and a peacock motif below the Makara head on the guard is possibly a clan sign as one of the three flags gifted along with the sword is also a Peacock flag. The third interesting and unusual embellishment to the sword is that it contains a figure of a goddess at the base of the guard. |
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