Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

An Australian gentleman, who is a long time militaria dealer, has offered me three swords which he advises were acquired by Australian servicemen in Papua New Guinea during WW2.  I would really like to get opinions on each.  Age, type and authenticity please.inbound8351817543948582563.thumb.jpg.d86a7a852ce9be127cedac809955d844.jpg

 

I will upload five photos of each blade, as follows.  Signed tang.  Lengthened/joined tang. Unsigned tang.

 

Thankyou so very much

 

inbound2788862646088466371.jpg

inbound2430246188760198579.jpg

inbound6408379883882016981.jpg

inbound2171832775447163858.jpg

inbound1056381597150836000.jpg

inbound8792990662103319265.jpg

inbound7309456683217865135.jpg

inbound5748858955437460509.jpg

inbound2059083878230999542.jpg

inbound3981839820623810425.jpg

inbound1582907135130929382.jpg

inbound6695958071952106611.jpg

inbound1129522186083262538.jpg

inbound8809856307305245994.jpg

Posted
On 2/18/2024 at 10:11 PM, charlieboy said:

An Australian gentleman, who is a long time militaria dealer, has offered me three swords

Hi Charles, I'm a bit confused trying to work out which part of which sword is which.  The pics and 'flow' aren't really clear to me.

 

As a general comment I'm not liking what I see so far and I wonder if that is why you havent had a response on this. 

 

What are the terms of the "offer" ...does he want money for them? 

 

If i was new (newer than I am) to the sword collecting thing, I wouldn't start with these.

 

Don't mean to be harsh. 

  • Like 2
Posted

The source being New Guinea could explain the low quality.  These might be "island swords" made on location by locals.  The quality of their work is always quite poor.  If you are looking for legit Japanese WWII swords, you should pass on these, unless you are attracted to the island sword category and the price is right.

  • Like 2
Posted
12 hours ago, Bruce Pennington said:

The source being New Guinea could explain the low quality.  These might be "island swords" made on location by locals.  The quality of their work is always quite poor.  If you are looking for legit Japanese WWII swords, you should pass on these, unless you are attracted to the island sword category and the price is right.

Bruce, thanks for your constructive feedback.  I'm interested in the ww2 history, so am intrigued by the idea of locally made swords in the pacific theatre.  I gather they were a little like a 'last ditch' arisaka, of sorts.  Did the Japanese force PNG locals to make such 'island swords' for them?  If so, where would have they been made, and from what?  I presume, as supplies became increasingly limited, a lot of ingenuity was required from the Japanese.  Excuse my ignorance, but why would the Japanese soldier, presumably under immense battle stress, bother having a sword made by locals? I'd love to learn more about this if you have any references.

Posted
18 hours ago, PNSSHOGUN said:

Authentic, but of abysmal quality. The only reason to accept these swords, is if they were being given away for free. 

Hi John.  Thanks for your reply.  When you say they are 'authentic', do you mean that they are war time made swords, but are 'island made' swords?  I am interested in authentic weapons of the Japanese in WW2, regardless of quality and place of manufacture.  Can you assist me by enlightening me on when they could have been made and do you know roughly how many 'island made' swords were made for the Japanese in the pacific?  Any insights would be most appreciated.

Posted

Charles,

We don't have much factual data concerning swords made in occupied territories.  There is an interesting story from a POW where he tells of making many 'samurai' swords ordered by the Japanese for PETA soldiers:

POWmadeSwords.thumb.jpg.25ba0f445a53861fef4bb3190df07799.jpg

 

In his recounting, he said "Towards the end (of the war)..."

  • Like 1
  • Love 1
  • Thanks 1
This thread is quite old. Please consider starting a new thread rather than reviving this one, unless your post is really relevant and adds to the topic..

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...