Knowledge

Pichangatti

Source 📝

188:. Much of this was originally a combination of copy-paste plagiarism from the Atkinson source and awkward "paraphrase" not directly supported by the Atkinson source. It was tagged as copyvio, then the tag was removed following a rewrite that actually made the latter problem worse. "Coorgi" is not in Atkinson, from which the content of the first paragraph was clearly taken (it's not clear what the Ganapathy citation is doing here in this light), nor are several of the factual claims such as "it was recorded" or "high-quality examples can still be seen". Additionally, while not technically OR, it contains an unattributed quotation cited to Atkinson that actually comes from a mysterious source Atkinson refers to as "Elgood 1995". These problems need to be addressed. 31: 286:
heavily-decorated in precious metal carvings e.g. brass, silver, gold, or a combination of these; in a very sophisticated design. Probably one of the distinctive features of the pichangatti is the carving of a parrot-head carved on the bulging base of the hilt. An uncut ruby is placed for the parrot's eyes. The hilt is usually inlaid with silver, but they can also be made entirely out of light-colored ivory. A brass or silver chain is attached to the scabbard; the chain carries various utensils e.g. tweezers, nail and ear cleaners, etc.
231: 174: 273:. As a result of this incident, the British punished the Kodavas by seizing their weapons, including the pichangatti. It was recorded that "17,295 weapons of which 7,503 were guns" were confiscated by the British colonial administration. Most of these seized weapons were dumped into the sea, while the high-quality examples can still be seen in what is now the 289:
The scabbard of the pichangatti is made of wood (e.g. ebony) decorated with rich carvings of silver or brass. A silver or brass chain is attached to the scabbard. Attached to the chain are up to five implements used for cleaning and maintenance e.g. a toothpick, tweezers, ear-pick, a piercer, and a
285:
Pichangatti has a broad and heavy blade of about 7 inches (18 cm) to 12 inches (30 cm) long. The blade is single-edged, while the hilt ends up in a round bulging base. Pichangatti is heavily decorated, especially on the hilt and on the scabbard. These parts of the pichangatti are usually
160:. The characteristic of the pichangatti is its silver hilt with bulbous-shaped pommel in the shape of a parrot's head. The pichangatti features in the traditional male dress of the Kodavas. 265:
The Kodavas were known as tough warriors, establishing many wars against the neighboring nations to protect the sovereignty of their land. When the
405: 496: 455: 436: 217: 199: 297:
Pichangatti is worn by the Kodavas in front of their waist. They are slipped into the waist-belt together with the
269:
intervened the region in 1834, a war broke up between the Kodavas and the British. In 1884, a riot broke out near
290:
nail cleaner. The multi-function of the pichangatti and its small articles made them similar with modern day's
262:
word "kodaga" or "kodagu" meaning "hilly, steep". The word refers to the geographical condition of the region.
184: 526: 30: 521: 488:
A Glossary of the Construction, Decoration and Use of Arms and Armor: in All Countries and in All Times
274: 195: 516: 246:
are indigenous to the southwestern region of India, which corresponds with the modern state of
238:
Pichangatti is derived from a Tamil word for "hand knife". Pichangatti was invented by the
8: 492: 451: 432: 191: 531: 486: 466: 426: 266: 251: 510: 243: 239: 149: 67: 310: 298: 291: 230: 255: 270: 247: 153: 202:. Statements consisting only of original research should be removed. 126: 122: 259: 234:
The Kodavas with the pichangatti slipped behind the waist band.
52: 327: 325: 157: 100: 111: 322: 383: 381: 379: 366: 364: 337: 376: 361: 349: 508: 446:Gahir, Sunita; Spencer, Sharon, eds. (2006). 445: 331: 468:Kodavas (Coorgs), their customs and culture 448:Weapon - A Visual History of Arms and Armor 29: 464: 343: 218:Learn how and when to remove this message 35:19th century pichangatti with its sheath. 425:Egerton, Earl Wilbraham Egerton (2002). 403: 355: 229: 424: 387: 509: 254:period, the British named the region " 484: 370: 167: 428:Indian and Oriental Arms and Armour 13: 14: 543: 450:. New York City: DK Publishing. 172: 148:is a broad-bladed knife of the 491:. Dover: Courier Corporation. 485:Stone, George Cameron (2013). 431:. Dover: Courier Corporation. 396: 1: 316: 82:0.28 kilograms (0.62 lb) 471:. copies available at Kodagu 7: 404:Atkinson, David J. (2016). 304: 198:the claims made and adding 10: 548: 465:Ganapathy, B. D. (1967). 163: 135: 121: 110: 99: 94: 86: 78: 73: 63: 58: 49:Place of origin 48: 40: 28: 21: 332:Gahir & Spencer 2006 280: 258:", a corruption of the 235: 90:12 inches (30 cm) 233: 527:Single-edged swords 522:South Asian swords 236: 183:possibly contains 412:. Atkinson Swords 228: 227: 220: 185:original research 143: 142: 539: 502: 480: 478: 476: 461: 442: 421: 419: 417: 406:"War Ayda Katti" 391: 385: 374: 368: 359: 353: 347: 341: 335: 329: 223: 216: 212: 209: 203: 200:inline citations 176: 175: 168: 33: 24: 19: 18: 547: 546: 542: 541: 540: 538: 537: 536: 507: 506: 505: 499: 474: 472: 458: 439: 415: 413: 410:Atkinson Swords 399: 394: 386: 377: 369: 362: 354: 350: 342: 338: 330: 323: 319: 307: 283: 224: 213: 207: 204: 189: 177: 173: 166: 95: 59:Service history 36: 22: 17: 12: 11: 5: 545: 535: 534: 529: 524: 519: 504: 503: 497: 482: 462: 456: 443: 437: 422: 400: 398: 395: 393: 392: 375: 373:, p. 497. 360: 348: 344:Ganapathy 1967 336: 334:, p. 193. 320: 318: 315: 314: 313: 306: 303: 282: 279: 267:British Empire 226: 225: 180: 178: 171: 165: 162: 141: 140: 137: 136:Head type 133: 132: 129: 119: 118: 115: 108: 107: 104: 97: 96: 92: 91: 88: 84: 83: 80: 76: 75: 74:Specifications 71: 70: 65: 61: 60: 56: 55: 50: 46: 45: 42: 38: 37: 34: 26: 25: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 544: 533: 530: 528: 525: 523: 520: 518: 517:Indian swords 515: 514: 512: 500: 498:9780486131290 494: 490: 489: 483: 470: 469: 463: 459: 457:9780756622107 453: 449: 444: 440: 438:9780486422299 434: 430: 429: 423: 411: 407: 402: 401: 390:, p. 82. 389: 384: 382: 380: 372: 367: 365: 357: 356:Atkinson 2016 352: 346:, p. 28. 345: 340: 333: 328: 326: 321: 312: 309: 308: 302: 300: 295: 293: 287: 278: 276: 275:Madras Museum 272: 268: 263: 261: 257: 253: 250:. During the 249: 245: 244:Kodava people 241: 232: 222: 219: 211: 208:December 2017 201: 197: 193: 187: 186: 181:This section 179: 170: 169: 161: 159: 155: 151: 147: 138: 134: 130: 128: 124: 120: 116: 113: 109: 105: 102: 98: 93: 89: 85: 81: 77: 72: 69: 68:Kodava people 66: 62: 57: 54: 51: 47: 43: 39: 32: 27: 20: 487: 481:</ref> 473:. Retrieved 467: 447: 427: 416:November 18, 414:. Retrieved 409: 388:Egerton 2002 351: 339: 311:Ayudha katti 299:ayudha katti 296: 292:pocket knife 288: 284: 264: 237: 214: 205: 182: 145: 144: 131:wood, silver 106:single-edged 64:Used by 23:Pichangatti 397:Cited works 146:Pichangatti 511:Categories 371:Stone 2013 317:References 271:Malappuram 192:improve it 114: type 103: type 475:23 August 248:Karnataka 196:verifying 154:Karnataka 305:See also 252:colonial 123:Scabbard 260:Kannada 240:Kodavas 190:Please 150:Kodavas 532:Swords 495:  454:  435:  256:Coorgi 242:. The 164:Origin 127:sheath 117:silver 87:Length 53:Kodagu 158:India 139:steel 101:Blade 44:Knife 16:Knife 493:ISBN 477:2011 452:ISBN 433:ISBN 418:2017 281:Form 112:Hilt 79:Mass 41:Type 194:by 152:of 513:: 408:. 378:^ 363:^ 324:^ 301:. 294:. 277:. 156:, 501:. 479:. 460:. 441:. 420:. 358:. 221:) 215:( 210:) 206:( 125:/

Index


Kodagu
Kodava people
Blade
Hilt
Scabbard
sheath
Kodavas
Karnataka
India
original research
improve it
verifying
inline citations
Learn how and when to remove this message

Kodavas
Kodava people
Karnataka
colonial
Coorgi
Kannada
British Empire
Malappuram
Madras Museum
pocket knife
ayudha katti
Ayudha katti

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.