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				 Shamshir with provenance 
 
			
			We have owned this shamshir for many years.  We bought it at a SanFrancisco gun show from a man who was the provost marshal for the
 Southern N.A.T.O. Command in Europe after W.W.2.  The blade is 29 inches
 in a straight line, and 35 inches overal, with a wootz blade of Kara Khorassan.
 The scabbard is made of three pieces so as to be taken apart for cleaning.
 The blade has a cartouche which sadly has lost it's gold.  The belt and
 silver buckles are 100 percent intact.
 This sword was owned by the late Martin H. Mitchell.  Here is the
 written provenance from his wife, which accompanied the sword.
 
 Statement Of Provenance.
 
 The antique silver mounted Pakistani sword and belt were presented to
 my husband the late Martin H. Mitchell, in 1960 in Karachi, Pakistan.  Mr.
 Mitchell was in charge of foreign operations in that country for the
 Tidewater Oil Co., a property of J. Paul Getty.  They conducted surface
 Petroleum surveys and exploratory drilling in Baluchistan for six years.
 During a portion of our service there Pakistan suffered a severe cholera
 epidemic in several remote areas including the Sind desert.  My husband
 volunteered the use of Getty corporate aircraft and resources.  He sent a
 quantity of shrouds down to the Sind so that they could bury their dead.
 His cultural sensitivity to this need was deeply appreciated.
 The ruler of the Makram tribe in the epidemic area was a sheikh who
 had been educated a Sandhurst.  When he presented this sword to my
 husband as a token of gratitude from his people to the distinguished
 American, He said that the silver scabbard and mounts had been made in
 Hyderabad, India, and that the blade had come from Persia, and that it
 had seen combat in the Sind where his ancestors were traditional leaders.
 This sword has been in our continuous possession for over 30 years.
 
 
 Mrs. Martin H. Mitchell
 San Ramon, California
 1993.
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