18th March 2020, 11:26 AM | #31 | |
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I couldn't agree more that not all the weapons in Elgood's book are Greek or from the Balkans! Most of his geographical attribution is purely anecdotal. If the owner or dealer of the weapon said it is Greek, he listed it as Greek... Absolutely no stylistical analysis. Then... many collectors take his assertions as the absolute truth, and so we end up with absolute falacies that in time became the universally accepted truth. |
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18th March 2020, 12:11 PM | #32 | |
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Waittttt a minute! I didn't say that, and I think it's another misunderstanding! To me Elgood is extremely reliable, probably one of the best scholar in the field. He is very honest too when he doesn't know he says nothing. The problem is the people who are reading his books. I don't even think that they read carefully and as you said if they see any photo in a book on Greek weapons it must be Greek... |
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18th March 2020, 01:10 PM | #33 | |
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However, to me Elgood is not very reliable when it comes to the arms of the Balkans. As I said, no stylistical or ethnographical analysis at all. He is much more accurate and reliable when it comes to Indian arms as I have the impression he put up much, much more systematic research in his books on Indian arms and armour. But of course this is my oppinion and not the "absolute truth"... |
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18th March 2020, 03:17 PM | #34 |
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I've been thinking about this picture in Yurij A. Miller's "Caucasian Arms" since this thread started. Very similar blade and hilt designs. I don't have the expertise to evaluate the koftgari of the two. Beautiful piece by the way!
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18th March 2020, 05:05 PM | #35 | |
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Thanks IP, now this thread starts to be extremely interesting. I have this wonderfull book and I have several comments: If you look at page 73, you have an Ottoman Turkish kama with a very typical Turkish blade, then again the scabbard is decorated with a row of turquoises. The same page 81 the scabbard is decorated with a row of turquoises and rubies. The author said traditional "Georgian manner with turquoises"... So Motan my friend I think that you have to reconsider the idea to link turquoise to Iraki/ Kurdish/ Arab march daggers... You have turquoises decorations in Georgia and also in Uzbekistan... Second the author said that these daggers are Georgian from Tiflis. But he also admits that they are made "in Turkish style" with Turkish blades, he wrote "first class Turkish bulat steel". And here I think Marius you are right, the author assumes that these daggers are Caucasian because of the niello silver work of the scabbard (and silver stamp) and because these daggers are from the Hermitage Museum... To me these daggers are Ottoman Turkish then maybe they went to Tiflis and got a new scabbard or a guy from Tiflis brought some Caucasian silver and worked in Istanbul... Exciting discussion... |
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18th March 2020, 07:03 PM | #36 | |
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It is precisely this kind of absolutely unfounded but published assertions that give rise to fallacies that end up being held as the ultimate truth... Dubito, ergo cogito! |
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18th March 2020, 07:33 PM | #37 |
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It is difficult to compare India and Balkans.
In India there was a major divide between North and South with a transitional state in Deccan. At the North, there were, in addition, significant decorative differences between Rajputs and Moghuls. But on top of it, Indian Rajahs did their best to develop their own styles: Elgood lists multiple styles of Talwar handles. At the Balkans, the major divide was between the Ottoman-occupied areas that adopted the Ottoman style and the ( current) Croatia and Slovenia, firmly attached to the Western European style. Within the “Ottoman” areas the differences were minute: for example round and smooth corals in Foca. Christian enclaves ( Serbia,Greece, Bulgaria) had major limitations on weapon production and complete bans on carrying. I know of no specifically “Christian” weapons except Epirotic sabers, Cretan Yataghans and Bulgarian Karakulaks. Thus, the greatest majority of Balkan weapons were of Ottoman style and practically indistinguishable from each other, whereas Indian ones had multiple hints of their origin. As a paradoxical result, it was much easier for Elgood to attribute and pinpoint Indian weapons than the Balkan ones. As to Marius’ jambiya/ khanjar it may be of Albanian fashion but spread outside of its original areal, generic Turkish with wide adoption, some personal custom preference etc. Owner’s or master’s name do not tell us much because by that time they became generic Ottoman. |
18th March 2020, 08:33 PM | #38 | |
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19th March 2020, 01:12 AM | #39 |
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Thanks for that gentleman! Life for me is getting very boring as the world goes into hiding and all the companies I work for shut down. It is not a good time to be in the tourism industry.
Kubur, as far as the turquoises go wasn't the Tiflis market dominated by Armenians at that period (pre1840)? Could that help explain the stones? Marius, I don't read Danish but there do seem to be some inconsistences in the English version. I assumed they were translation errors or difficulties with expressions and terminology. Can you expound on "this kind of absolutely unfounded but published assertions that give rise to fallacies"? I'm not sure I know enough to doubt much less think critically... I assumed that the koftgari on the Hermitage example was Turkish. For those who have the book is this a correct assumption? Sorry for my poor picture of a picture with already bad resolution. |
19th March 2020, 04:29 AM | #40 |
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Marius,
I did not intend to offer anything new and provocative. My post was just an attempt to explain your dissatisfaction with Elgood’s hesitant attribution of Balkan weapons. You are correct: very often we wish him to be more definitive, ”this is unquestionably Albanian, “ this is a typical Sarajevo item despite lack of inscriptions” etc. I think he was just limited by the lack of localizing features. With few exceptions Balkan arms are just, well, Balkan in general. Ain’t no Mysore vs. Delhi or Mopla vs. Kathmandu:-) |
19th March 2020, 01:10 PM | #41 | |
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I'll do my best to keep you entertained! First, I don't know about Tfilis being the centre of turqoise market. However, I know that almost all the turquoises in the Middle East and Europe were at that time sourced from the Khorassan province of Iran... but as they gained huge popularity in Turkey and they were brought to Europe from Turkey they were called TURQoise. So the turqoise were popular and traded by Turkey to such extent that their TURKish connection became part of their name. "this kind of absolutely unfounded but published assertions that give rise to fallacies" - - assuming that a dagger is made in Tfilis only because it has a scabbard made in Tfilis is an UNFOUNDED ASSERTION in the sense that is based on an incorrect assumption (that the dagger and the scabbard were made at the same time and in the same place). Futhermore, such an unfounded assertion being published can become embraced by some as being the absolute truth and become a fallacy. Last edited by mariusgmioc; 19th March 2020 at 07:31 PM. |
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19th March 2020, 04:17 PM | #42 |
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There are imprecisions in the translation of Russian into English.
See, for example, item 22: Be slow to insult, quick to avenge. "To insult" is to offend another person. In Russian this phrase is: Be slow to anger, etc. With "to anger" as getting offended, becoming angry. The phrase gets totally different meaning. And I agree: silver fittings of the scabbard do not necessarily indicate Tiflis production of the dagger as such. In the absence of old provenance I would hesitate to claim its Georgian origin. |
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