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#1 |
Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Merseyside, UK
Posts: 222
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Nice dagger. the crossguard looks like a miniature version of a Mamluk or Ottoman crossguard, that part at least may be genuinely Damascene.
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 3
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Yes, this is part of what I found confusing. I'm a novice but even to my eye this seems to combine two or three different regional styles, particularly mixing Islamic design elements with those that are not.
It is something of an achievement that the whole manages to work pretty well together. Possibly this is made for the Arab Damascus market by Indians? I understand it to have been bought in a souk in Damascus. Thanks for your comments. I hope to learn more. Stuart |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Athens Greece
Posts: 479
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Few years ago I had post in this forum a khanjar with similar blade that was bought in Damascus. I found out that it was newly made in India.
Damascus city has a reputation of fine blades and lot of tourists look in the souk for a bargain. The sellers there know exactly what the tourists want and because they cannot serve the demand with their own blades they import from India. I have seen the same in Kabul. They import from Pakistan and India to feed with souvenirs the thousands of foreign soldiers. |
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