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#6 | |
Arms Historian
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Route 66
Posts: 10,196
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![]() Quote:
Actually they seem to recall early Ottoman influences, as often entwined with Central Asian traditional symbolisms which look often to Timurid origins. These quillon terminals, though in many cases seen as stylized zoomorphic figures such as Makara or dragon heads, are described by David Alexander as representing pierced and lobed palmette tips. ( " The Silver Dragon and the Golden Fish: An Imperial Ottoman Symbol", Gladius, XXIII, 2003, fig.10,11; pp238-239). It seems these might be considered equally Persian influences as filtered through Ottoman circumstances. |
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