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#1 |
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Join Date: Mar 2016
Location: Germany
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The big cartouche I can partially read, but I do not get the meaning:
it starts حق نظز (haq nadhar), both are words which I know, but not their meaning in this context. After that I am less sure, I would transliterate the next word as حیباچی (h[e?]ibachi?), but except for a Japanese stove I came up empty for that so I am probably wrong. The second line starts with ملا, Mullah which makes me think it is followed by the name, where it again becomes difficult for me. I would guess جمحم قلی بن (Djamham Ghali Ben???), but I am less than sure. |
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#2 |
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The first maker's cartouche I read as امل احمد خان, work of Ahmad Khan.
The secend maker's cartouche I can not make out at all, there seems to be an unusual flourish in the calligraphy that I have never seen before. |
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#3 |
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Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Austria
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Very beautiful knife! Congratulations for this exceptional acquisition!
As you said, the blade is typical Persian 18th to early 19th century. Both the hilt and and the scabbard may be later replacements and don't look very Persian to my eyes. The scabbard looks more from the Caucasus area (which was a part of Persian empire throughout the history). I have seen exactly the same style of silver engraved decorations with niello panels and wire wrapped tips on kindjal scabbards. The hilt is very similar to some I have seen on North Indian knives. Let's hope for a translation! ![]() Last edited by mariusgmioc; 11th October 2020 at 08:21 AM. |
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#4 | |
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I agree that caucasian scabbards have similarly decorated fittings, and I am sure that is where the attribution by the auctioneer comes from, but I have never seen a peshkabz from that area before. The decoration also strongly reminds me of kard scabbards like this one though, and these are usually attributed to central asia. As for the silver hilt scales, there was also this peshkabz on sale in the same auction featuring a definitely central asian scabbards with typical turcoise cloisonne. |
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#5 |
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Inscriptions are typical of the Caucasus. The poetic inscription is in one of the numerous difficult languages of the region, many of them language isolates, with Arabic loanwords. The first signature I read as you do عمل احمد خان “work of Ahmad Khan”, the second might be عمل خضر "work of Khizr”, with the last letter written disjointed and below on account of lack of space
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#6 |
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This is from Robert Hales Islamic and oriental arms and armour, page 85:
"Caucasian silver work was popular over a wide area of Asia and sheaths made there were used for kards from Iran to Turkestan" |
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#7 | ||
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#8 | |
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And, of course, there were no workshops in the Caucasus where masters would make scabbards for Central Asia. The logistics would have been too complicated for that time) Caucasian craftsmen lived in Bukhara and Khiva and carried out orders for silver for the local population on the spot. |
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#9 | |
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#10 |
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I think Mahratt is right, these daggers are Central Asian, with silver craftmen from Caucasus and Persian blades.
http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=26621 |
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