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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Chania Crete Greece
Posts: 511
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It is ivory, with inserts of small corall pieces and brass nails. Also the green "ring" near the blade in stained green ivory. I bought it under the description "arab dagger", but it is true that the brass dots remid me bosnia. Not the scabbard thought.
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#2 |
EAAF Staff
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Louisville, KY
Posts: 7,272
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Yeah, I'm thinking Bosnian as well. Shame I can't read Arabic.
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Posts: 100
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Gentlemen,
After looking through the inscription, I've ruled out Arabic. I've attempted a reading but since the Arabic alphabet makes do with very little vowels, the actual pronunciation might be distorted. Hope someone with a knowledge of Turkish or Balkan languages can take it from here: 'Aqladan harsako yardawud foce Mustafa lataik sanat 1299' At least we've identified the name Mustafa (who could either be the craftsman responsible or the owner) and the hegira year of 1299. Someone will have to check the corresponding gregorian year. best wishes ![]() |
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Istanbul
Posts: 452
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knife is Bosnian, but the scabbard most probably not original.not style of that knife. old but a replacement. perhaps by a bayonet leather? the tip mounting of the scabbard is a bad later repair too. but koftgari on the blade is very beautiful sample. Inscription can be Turkish or one of Bosnian and Albanian languages which has Turkish words in them. One thing is clear . Assuming the wowels are not proper, it writes "Hersek" , Herzegovina was called "Hersek" in Ottoman period. and, "yardavud" could be instead "arnavud" , which means "Albanian". Can be roughly something like "Albanian Mustafa from Herzegovina made(sanat) in 1299".
Raja Muda, did you put the vowels according to the translation or just guessing so? Last edited by erlikhan; 7th March 2005 at 11:14 AM. |
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Clearwater, Florida
Posts: 371
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Perhaps a dumb question, but what does the "end" of the hilt look like?
From the first time I looked at this something about the blade shape, scabbard and "chappe"(?) end piece has been nagging at me.......I think it's a straight bladed variant of a yatagan, which would be entirely appropriate for the area. Mike |
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#6 | |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Athens Greece
Posts: 479
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I have not seen it closely, but I am almost sure that it is not a split pommel if this you mean. I think hilt has this “bird head” end, that is also very common in the area. We dont call it yataghan. |
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#7 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Poland, Warsaw
Posts: 33
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Hi,
I was off-line for a quite long time (and even now I can't lurk here as frequently as I'd like to do it). Nevermind. I agree with Raja Muda that the inscription seems Turkish, but I propose another reading of its initial part: Akaldan (q=k in Turkish graphy) hersekwind awad (or: od) foche (where "ch" as in "cheese") Mustafa etc. But, of course, the vowels can be only guessed. Greetings |
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#8 | |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Poland, Warsaw
Posts: 33
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Just some thoughts: there are some problems with this reading: 1. "Sanat" (lit. "sana"), when written under the date, is definitely an Arabic word and means "year"; it cannot be understood as "made"; What about the first word? It can be also "akildan", "aklidan" etc. (ak-l-d-n) 3. the relevant part of the text cannot be "yardavud"; there is written: h-r-s-k-w-i-n-d-a-w-d-f-w-ch-e(?) where "w" can be Turkish "o", "u" or "v"; of course this phrase can contain several words, eg: h-r-s-k-w-i-n-d a-w-d-f-w-ch-e(?) h-r-s-k-w i-n-d-a-w-d-f-w-ch-e(?) i-n-d a-w-d f-w ch-e(?) etc. maybe it can be Hersekvinde? But I don't know, how the ending -de/-da was written in the Ottoman times and if the name Hersekvin was also used, or Hersek only? Greetings Kamil |
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