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			European swordmakers flooded Ethiopia  with their blades of various forms: from straight  double-edged  to copies of shotels. From Ethiopia ( or directly?) some straight blades reached Sudan and were used for " kaskaras"
 
 But the origin of those double-edged straight sword  is not likely to be related to crusaders ( a theory discredited long ago) or to 19th century trade European blades.
 
 Most likely, IMHO, Sudanese " kaskaras" are direct descendants of  Mamluk swords  the earliest of which date to 11-12 centuries.
 
 There are multiple examples in Topkapi of such swords, with different fullering systems and with iron crossguards  identical to the Sudanese ones. Mamluks invaded Sudan multiple times over centuries and even dominated it in the 19th century.
 In turn, early Mamluk swords are virtually identical to the pre,- and early Islamic swords of Aravia.
 
 Thus, Sudanese " kaskaras" may trace their identity  straight to 7-8 (??) centuries, or even  predating Muhammed.
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