- Home
- Arms and Armour
The Swords of Continental Southeast Asia
- By Bowditch, Mark I.
- Published 30 April 2008
- Arms and Armour
- Unrated
“Dha” (or “dah”) is a generic term for a sword or knife of the various
ethnic groups that make up what was formally Burma (now Myanmar), Siam
(Thailand), Cambodia and Laos. It actually is a Burmese term that
simply means "blade." The corresponding term in Thai is "daab," or
"darb." We in the West tend to use it to refer to a variety of sword
and dagger-length weapons that are used by a variety of people in
continental Southeast Asia. Thus, what are referred to here as “dha”
are those swords used by the peoples of mainland Southeast Asia,
defined as present-day Burma, Thailand (exclusive of the Malay
peninsula), Yunnan, Laos and Cambodia, and in places like Assam and
Bengal, to the extent the foregoing peoples have settled there.
The Edged Weapon Factory at Toledo
- By Pérez, Juan José
- Published 7 April 2008
- Arms and Armour
- Unrated
From the 15th to 17th centuries, the Castillian city of Toledo in
central Spain, flourished with an exceptional blade making industry,
surpassing other Spanish cities like Valencia, some villages in Basque
Country, or even the capital, Madrid. Toledo was considered as the
standard of excellence for European blade production, and there were
only a few places, like Solingen or Passau in Germany, that surpassed
Toledo in terms of production volume. Blade production in Toledo was
the responsibility of individual smiths, associated in a guild. It was
a rather disperse and personal activity, although the guild was in
charge of keeping production quality at a high level.
Pieces of History
- By Supica, Jim
- Published 18 March 2008
- Arms and Armour
- Unrated
A gun with a known historical association is a tangible connection to
our collective past, and such connections are rare and precious things. Precious implies value, value implies price, and the question always arises for a collector – exactly how much is history worth?
FAKE!
- By Supica, Jim
- Published 18 March 2008
- Arms and Armour
- Unrated
The "faking" of firearms is not a new phenomenon. Back in the 1800’s the practice of peddling shoddy merchandise marked so as to fool the unwary into thinking he was purchasing a quality gun was not unusual. Witness the many 19th century single shot percussion pocket pistols marked "Derringer" or "Deringe" or some other variation of the famous Deringer name, or the European copies of S&W Model 3 Topbreak revolvers that even went so far as to duplicate the S&W barrel address markings.

Arms and Armour