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17-1800s Highly Rare Antique Hand Made Indonesia Kris Keris Dagger, No Sword For Sale


17-1800s Highly Rare Antique Hand Made Indonesia Kris Keris Dagger, No Sword
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17-1800s Highly Rare Antique Hand Made Indonesia Kris Keris Dagger, No Sword:
$2498.00

17-1800s Highly Rare Antique Hand Made Indonesia Kris Keris Dagger…


These blades are made of Meteor and hand crafted by Japanese sword makers brought to Indonesia.


History:


The oldest known iron dagger in the world was the one found wrapped up with Pharaoh Tutankhamun’s mummy in 1925, three years after his nearly intact tomb was opened. For several decades, scientists were flummoxed by the blade because at the time iron smelting was not thought to have become fully developed until two or three centuries after the young pharaoh’s death.


They assumed that it was meteoritic iron not smelted from ore but forged into shape with hammer and anvil. When X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy was used in 2016 to confirm for certain that blade was made with meteoritic iron, there was a surprise. The iron came from more than one meteorite. This implied “significant mastery of ironworking in Tutankhamun’s time,” according to the results published in famous scientific journals.


The most beautiful blades were forged on the island of Java since the year 800 CE., when bladesmiths crafting royal krisses created the inlaid patterns known as pamor (meaning aura) using nickel iron ores from a large meteorite that had fallen near the Prambanan Temple complex near Borobudur.


Keris have a long history, with some evidence that the first of these blades made their appearance around 800 CE. The types known today emerged in the 1300s. Most have sinuous blades, the waves, called luk, meant to imitate a serpent—naga—in motion.


Although they’ve always had ceremonial uses, and many were and are quite delicate, not so long ago some keris were actual weapons, particularly those forged in Bali, which were effectively short swords. Today, they are almost exclusively ceremonial, magical guardians and talismans of households, protective heirlooms passed along generation to generation, some simple and even crude, some breathtakingly beautiful, artistic masterpieces.


You’ll see scores of keris stuck through sarong sashes at the small of the back or sometimes over a shoulder by people attending weddings and funerals and other ritual events that happen frequently on the islands. Security guards at many public events wear them as a symbol of authority. Mostly, it's men who carry them. But at a typical event of a few hundred people, you may also see a dozen or so women with a keris tucked into a sash.


The best of these blades are gorgeous creations, each with a pattern called a pamor. Hundreds of such patterns exist. They traditionally are designed to match the individual’s personality and other factors. This includes the number of waves in the blade, which is always an odd number and never more than 13. On the best keris, hilts and exotic wood sheaths are decorated with semi-precious stones, gold and intricate carvings.


I have many of these authentic rare daggers that value over $100,000 USD shown in famous books dating back 30+ years.



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17-1800s Highly Rare Antique Hand Made Indonesia Kris Keris Dagger, No Sword picture

17-1800s Highly Rare Antique Hand Made Indonesia Kris Keris Dagger, No Sword

$2498.00



Images © photo12.com-Pierre-Jean Chalençon
A Traveling Exhibition from Russell Etling Company (c) 2011