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#1 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Bay Area
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The museum yataghans do not seem to have their scabbards, but there are other similar yataghans with scabbards which tend to invariably be covered in black leather, sometimes with similar decorative motives as on mine, but with silver chape and mouth fittings. A friend of mine in Bulgaria has a similar one, and the interesting part is that the scabbard fittings are hallmarked, but not with tughras. The hallmarks look quite European - does anyone recognize them?
I wonder if these fittings were added in a Central European context to a yataghan that was taken as trophy during the Great Turkish War. |
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#2 |
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Join Date: May 2020
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congratulations with your yataghan!
What confuses me a little is the different bolsters (indicated as #4 in the first picture) versus all the above pictures. Any data on lenght of the blades or the age of the 4 pieces? I took the liberty to put them together and can not figure out the difference versus age....but that could be my limited knowledge The blade is very nice and in excellent condition, with a beautiful stamp. Specially if I would follow your case with regards to being an early yataghan some interesting info can be found in this publication: https://www.iaras.org/iaras/filedown...0016(2017).pdf unfortunately I could not find anything to provide more insight in publications from the museums in Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia and recent ones by Zoran Marcov, Head of Department National Museum of Banat, Maybe other forum members can assist in this most interesting topic... Last edited by gp; 8th December 2024 at 02:40 AM. |
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#3 |
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Good question on the lengths. Mine is about 62 cm overall. My friend's as the tape measure indicates is 57 cm overall. Number 140 in Karlsruher Turkenbeute is 75.5 cm.
Here are some more from Oriental Arms sold archive with a a length of 71 cm: And another one, also 71 cm: And a third one, with a similar hilt and bolster to mine, 60 cm long: The bolsters are all over the place, and the hilt also vary from tri-lobate to square to very small ears. A couple of the ones above have what looks like a heart shaped frog button on the scabbard mouth, which would be unusual for an Ottoman weapon but much more in place in an Austrian context. |
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#4 |
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thank you for the most interesting additional information!
I really do like the mark on your bolster very much ☼ My compliments, a very good "catch"☺ |
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#5 |
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My friend has another one of these potentially earlier yataghans, but it is much bigger, at about 80 cm overall. Another difference is the dark horn hilt and the blade decoration, even if the blade also has layers of Turkish Ribbon.
It is similar to this one that was sold by Sotheby's many years ago. I will also attach a picture in case the link stops working or the image is removed. https://www.sothebys.com/en/auctions...0/lot.260.html |
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#6 |
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Location: Austria
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In my oppinion, this is a recent (very recent) yataghan made in the style of older examples.
I have visited extensively museums in Turkey and haven't encountered any single example of old blade with "Turkish ribbon" pattern weld. In fact, all "Turkish ribbon" pattern welded examples I have seen were assumed from late 19th century blades... but they were most likely 20th century. |
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#7 | |
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1. Of all the yataghans I have presented so far in this thread, is mine the only one that you deem to be of recent manufacture, or does this extend to all the examples, including those sold by Oriental Arms, Sotheby's, etc? 2. A search containing the words "Turkish ribbon" produces 71 threads since the forum moved to VBulletin. The majority contain yataghans with Turkish ribbon blades, with hilts ranging from Algeria through to Balkans to Asia Minor. Are they all modern, 20th century and later creations? 3. Apart from yataghans, there are palas, bichaqs and even kindjals and quaddaras with twistcore rods in the blades. Are those also modern, or is the argument that smiths in the Ottoman Empire and surrounding areas back in the day applied twistcore to pretty much all blades they made except for yataghans? |
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