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					Originally Posted by ariel
					
				 
				Jim, 
 Forgot to mention: 
The so-called “ Khybers” were not limited to the Khyber Pass area. The best evidence is the variability  of their handles: beak-y in the majority of cases, Karabela-like  in the rest. They penetrated both East ( India) and West ( Iran), yet another suggestion of their widespread presence 
 
They acquired the moniker  you are talking about from the Brits who fought Afghanis there. And locals never called them “Khyber knives”, for them it was “ selava”. 
			
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Thanks very much Ariel, I knew of course the odd moniker came from the Hobsen-Jobsen of the British forces in the Khyber regions (apparently these were known locally as salwar or selava?(sic). But I had no idea of these huge knives (swords) in India or Iran. 
I knew of course the 'smaller' versions in the spectrum of pesh kabz reached into those spheres, but not the huge Khyber swords.
Any chance of seeing an example of a Khyber knife (large blade) from India or Iran? Naturally I am referring to these large 'triangular' (for lack of better geometric description) blades, almost like a butcher knife.