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Yatagan with (Turkish?) inscription - help needed :)
I found this yatagan last weekend but this is out of my field.
Who can help with the identification of: -region -period -translation of text Some damage but overall very nice in my personal opinion. http://i123.photobucket.com/albums/o...ps9d673e91.jpg http://i123.photobucket.com/albums/o...ps5528d544.jpg http://i123.photobucket.com/albums/o...ps5528d544.jpg http://i123.photobucket.com/albums/o...ps7713df4f.jpg http://i123.photobucket.com/albums/o...pse78102a4.jpg Many thanks in advance, Erik |
Nice piece!!
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No yatagan knowledge in the forum?
I focus on Sumatra but I love this one so hope to learn about it! All the best, Erik |
Erik,
Is there a way you can provide better pictures of the hilt from all sides: left and right, top and bottom? It would certainly allow me and the others to come up with better educated guesses on your questions. Thank you, Teodor |
Here some more detail pictures as requested:
The other side of the handle and blade have some damage - all pictures are from the good side. Stones look to be coral, handle some kind of ivory (not bone in my opinion). Metal is brass with remain of gilding? The sheath is leather covered wood, the wood is decorated which is visible in the leather and bound in the middle with brass wire - I really love the craftmanship in the sheath. http://i123.photobucket.com/albums/o...psdff4ec0d.jpg http://i123.photobucket.com/albums/o...psea9d72fc.jpg http://i123.photobucket.com/albums/o...psca1c7b4a.jpg http://i123.photobucket.com/albums/o...ps49f794f7.jpg |
Thank you Erik,
One thing is clear an that is that this is a very nice yataghan, but you already knew that. The hilt is of walrus ivory and of a shape, that is sometimes seen fitted with a shortened Western smallsword blade. I have seen suggestions that these were an Ottoman version of the dirk for naval use. The blade is of a type, which the Russian scholar Astvatsaturian attributes to coming from Western Anatolia or the Eastern Caucasus, though I personally doubt this attribution, as the vast majority of these blades that I have seen have Greek silver fittings. Identifying yataghans is always tricky, as there is not an in depth reference on them, and the existing catalogues simply describe the physical attributes of museum examples without any attempts at geographic classification. On top of that, it is not uncommon for blades forged in one area of the Ottoman Empire to be hilted in another. Regards, Teodor |
Thanks
Many thanks Teodor!
Regards, Erik |
translation
I have been going through the forum and found a very similar inscription!
I guess the text is the same and it is as described there a more common inscription! http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showth...lation+yatagan |
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