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			 Member 
			
			
			
				
			
			Join Date: Oct 2007 
				
				
				
					Posts: 1,646
				 
				
				
				
				
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			Hi, 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	I'm wondering if this knife has been made from some type of socket bayonet. Lots of late 18thC and 19thC European bayonets were of triangular form and some, if I remember correctly, had hollow ground and flat sides. Regards, Norman.  | 
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		#2 | 
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			 Arms Historian 
			
			
			
				
			
			Join Date: Dec 2004 
				Location: Route 66 
				
				
					Posts: 10,670
				 
				
				
				
				
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			Hi Wolf, and thank you for sharing this interesting dagger. Actually, as Norman has observed, many edged weapons in North Africa were fashioned from bayonet blades. In this case, this seems to be to possibly be a Martini Henry socket bayonet, probably of 1853/71 pattern. The British had equipped much of the Egyptian army with these rifles during the campaigns with the Mahdists, and many of these weapons were captured in several of the early battles by the Mahdist forces.  
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	Apparantly many of these early Martini Henry rifles remained with the Egyptian Camel Corps and Infantry even into the 20th century, so these bayonets certainly may have become used by tribesmen for use in daggers even beyond the Mahdist campaigns. The hilt is covered with the skin of a waran lizard it appears.  | 
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		#3 | 
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			 Member 
			
			
			
				
			
			Join Date: Apr 2006 
				Location: Germany 
				
				
					Posts: 75
				 
				
				
				
				
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			thanks to all, I did't know that older bayonets had such blades. But for me it's still a riddle. If fashioned from a bayonet blade, why create the Mahdists such a handle in this shape and with a crossguard....it's total unnormal.
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
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