19th September 2018, 05:22 PM | #1 |
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Newbie in need of ID help...
Please just disregard my initial post. I wasn't able to get my pictures to upload so I used a third party host. My bad! I'll try it again...
Hello All, This is my first post but I think it won't be my last. I have recently acquired and edged weapon that I have no clue about. I've been able to find similar looking weapons online and on auction sites but apparently here in The States there are few if any experts. I got this "knife" or "Dagger" because of the steel used in making it. I understand it is Wootz Steel which is very intriguing to me. I'll try to add the pictures I have in the hope that someone can enlighten me on where and when this weapon may have been made and any other pearls of wisdom. Thanks in advance! |
20th September 2018, 10:05 PM | #2 |
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Welcome OOK and thank you for following forum rules about posting links to externally hosted pictures. There are several people here who can give you an opinion on your knife.
Ian. |
21st September 2018, 03:15 AM | #3 |
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Hi OOK,
Welcome to the Forum. What you have here appears to be a Balkan KARD. Yours is likely Ottoman Turkish, but the style is found throughout the Balkans, Persia(Iran) and even India. I am sure that others will reply here and clarify where it comes from. There are many blade collectors in the States who regularly post here, so I am sure that ongoing you will develop contacts with similar minded collectors. Stu |
21st September 2018, 03:30 AM | #4 |
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Modern Indian work made in the last decade.
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21st September 2018, 03:46 AM | #5 |
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Do I see "tears" in the hilt. Was that ever a traditional feature?
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21st September 2018, 04:48 AM | #6 |
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Welcome to our little forum!
The scabbard mounts look modern Indian to me (better pictures would help) as well as the velvet condition. I have not quite seen these from the Balkans, but I do agree with Khanjar 1 on them being from the Ottoman, Mughal, and Persian empires. Again more pictures would be helpful. |
21st September 2018, 10:58 AM | #7 | |
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21st September 2018, 01:44 PM | #8 | |
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Thank you! |
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21st September 2018, 02:02 PM | #9 | |
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If it was made that recently, would it be considered a trinket made for the tourist trade or is it something of some quality? Other than the flaws in the steel itself it seems to be well made. And what of the "Tears" in the grip spine? Is that common in these? |
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21st September 2018, 05:37 PM | #10 | |
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21st September 2018, 08:00 PM | #11 |
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Oliver raises a very good point. There are recently made Indian knives flooding the market, many coming from Rajastan, that are hard to distinguish from older knives with wootz blades. These copies are getting better and the appearance of the blades is getting closer to traditional wootz.
I would agree with those who point to a recent hilt and scabbard, and recent gold work on the blade. The question then becomes, Is this an old blade? As I look at the blade, I see inconsistencies in the pattern that could indicate the blade is not traditional wootz. In particular, towards the tip, there are "blank areas" in the pattern. This suggests to me that Oliver is indeed correct, and the ensemble is recently made, most likely from northern India. Ian. |
13th October 2018, 07:43 AM | #12 |
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Recent production from India.
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13th October 2018, 10:12 AM | #13 |
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Nothing "balkan" in this kard.
100% Indian, of recent production. Albeit of high quality showing crystalline wootz pattern. |
13th October 2018, 02:15 PM | #14 |
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I join: modern Indian work thru and thru.
They make wootz ingots in quantities and would have no problem forging one into a blade. But the devil is in the details: they do not know how to forge it right and that is the reason for a pitiful and patchy pattern. The rest is obviously virginally fresh. It is obviously well above their mass-produced daggers, but it ain’t no antique. |
13th October 2018, 02:36 PM | #15 |
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[QUOTE=They make wootz ingots in quantities and would have no problem forging one into a blade.[/QUOTE]
Ariel, I do not think this is the case nor real wootz ingots are being made The subject blade is likely antique wootz blade, heavily grinded from larger blade, likely tulwar, into smaller one, which resulted in discoloration and losses of pattern. The modern "wootz" daggers made in India that look like wootz are not real wootz, just like "wootz" ingots they sell on eBay. |
14th October 2018, 11:06 AM | #16 | |
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Antique wootz, reworked, will retain the watering pattern, or loose it but will not transform into crystalline wootz. And from what I can discern in the photos, the blade displays some crystalline wootz patterns. After looking more at the photos, I believe I can discern some watering pattern... If this is the case, then it is a blade reworked and the partial loss of pattern may be due to reheating locally the blade. |
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