Ethnographic Arms & Armour

Ethnographic Arms & Armour (http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/index.php)
-   Ethnographic Weapons (http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/forumdisplay.php?f=2)
-   -   Yataghan for discussion. (http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=30882)

kronckew 31st August 2025 01:49 PM

Yataghan for discussion.
 
4 Attachment(s)
Just acquired this straight yataghan, sold at auction as a:


Good antique Turkish or Ottoman, Yataghan sword in hard scabbard, overall length approximately 29". The blade has triple impressed marking. Metals seem to be silver and brass. Lots of silver pins on the grip. The grip hasn't any ears!


Needs a good cleaning. The white goop I'm hoping is metal polish residue. The brass 'tonku' came out nice, tho. Will post better pics when it arrives.



My Research points to Istanbul 1850-1890, the marks being a guild mark or the maker's personal mark.

Any ideas on its age and area of origin welcome.



Thanks all...

TVV 31st August 2025 03:20 PM

What a great piece! The blade looks it might be repurposed from an earlier European backsword/broadsword. The straight blade yataghans seem to be more common in the Western Balkans.

serdar 31st August 2025 06:49 PM

4 Attachment(s)
Congrats on aquiring that nice pala.
My main focus in collecting are yataghan swords, especialy from balkan region, with emphasis on Dalmatian, Boka kotorska, Montenegro and Bosnia und Herzegovina region.

What you got there is a Pala big knife like it is called in this area, or Pala handžar.
Mainly and usualy pala is made from silver, and not like yours from black horn?(boka kotorska was a center of very good goldsmiths who made excuisit works in silver) and by that yours is more interesting, like for the yatagan origin, origin of first pala is unknown, but only examples i encountered and inherited from my ancestors are from on my language Primorje or Boka kotorska, and some in Albanian coast made, so it is a big chance pala originated there like their response on yatagans.

Some palas do have ottoman stamps some not, that is normal blade trade in boka at that time.

In Dubrovnik region and Dalmatia they made straight yatagans but with ears, but they never made pala type.

This kind, a Pala kind were made only in Boka kotorska and very rarely in Albania.

Your blade looks like blades from 15/16 century italian blades with triple marca de mosca, and it seems to me it had a fulers long ago that are filed, or it is patina that tricks me into thinking that.

All in all very nice and valuable piece you got ther.
Yatagans with old reused blades are very rare, and palas are even rarer.

About origin i would say maybe Bosnian? Or Albanian, i never encountered this type from turkey or other regions that were under ottomans, and handle pined construction and parazvana or blade colar is similar to one bosnian yataghan i had before, allso there were lot of italian blades in this region.

About age, palas were usualy made in the secon half of 18 century.

Il post few pictures, first of dalmatian yatagan, then of two palas from boka kotorska region, and two pictures from old books one from Croatia second from Bosnia.

serdar 31st August 2025 06:55 PM

Marks are not istanbul, those marks i encountered on few swords i got and they are proto schiavonesca types. 15/16 century, one is 14 century they got identical marks.

And age i would say dnd of 18 begining of 19 century.
But more i look at it more i would say it is made in Bosnia in Hercegovina region behind Risno, craftmanship is very very similar to one yatagan i encountered from that region.

Very nice! 😃👍🏻

serdar 31st August 2025 07:51 PM

About metal on the flag of the blade is bras, and on joint and around blade hašrma i think it is kositar or tin pewter in english some mix it is very comon on yatagans made in hercegovina region, and then it is silvered coated with thin silver layer.
I think it is chance 90% that it is tin then silvered, when it is full silver then parazvana is allso silver and it is made in diferent way.
But not 100% by photos.
Pins in the handle could also be tin.
On lots of yatagans those parts are cracked thin becomes very britle with time.
On yours it is in very good shape, if it is tin.
But it isnt important which metal it is, it is very nice and valuable piece.

serdar 31st August 2025 08:40 PM

3 Attachment(s)
This example with dark horn ears is from dalmatian back lands, it has a tin pewter alloy parazvana and hašrma on which is layered thin a very thin piece of silver sheet, it is not silvered but very thin silver sheet.
And a caracteristic of dalmatian and boka kotorska yatagans is a very short and straight parazvana piece on the flag of the blade.

gp 1st September 2025 02:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kronckew (Post 299397)
Just acquired this straight yataghan, sold at auction as a:


Good antique Turkish or Ottoman, Yataghan sword in hard scabbard, overall length approximately 29". The blade has triple impressed marking. Metals seem to be silver and brass. Lots of silver pins on the grip. The grip hasn't any ears!


Needs a good cleaning. The white goop I'm hoping is metal polish residue. The brass 'tonku' came out nice, tho. Will post better pics when it arrives.



My Research points to Istanbul 1850-1890, the marks being a guild mark or the maker's personal mark.

Any ideas on its age and area of origin welcome.



Thanks all...

I can't say much about the origin at this moment, except that I have seen most "straight" blade ones made in the Bay of Kotor but also being re-used at their time ( 1800-1900).
The scabbard's end on first sight doesn't look like Montenegrin....but I could be mistaken by the only picture;
if possible could you post a closer one of its end..? :) as I am most curious to learn more

Looking very much forward seeing it cleaned but in general I'ld say
"lovely jubbly"

a very nice good looking one and specially the handle's decoration is more than nice ! My compliments an excellent catch !!!

serdar 1st September 2025 07:31 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by gp (Post 299418)
The scabbard's end on first sight doesn't look like Montenegrin.


There is no Montenegrin type of scabards end, in montenegreo they used what ever they bought or in most cases captured from turks.

But there is a Kotor type end and it is in silver a rounded ball at the end always.

His i think has a bud end but it isnt clear from photos.

Il post s picture of Bokeljski jatagan or boka kotorska yatagan and there above it is seen a part of the scabbard with ball end that is Boka kotorska type.

gp 1st September 2025 11:38 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by serdar (Post 299422)
There is no Montenegrin type of scabards end, in montenegreo they used what ever they bought or in most cases captured from turks.

But there is a Kotor type end and it is in silver a rounded ball at the end always.

His i think has a bud end but it isnt clear from photos.

Il post s picture of Bokeljski jatagan or boka kotorska yatagan and there above it is seen a part of the scabbard with ball end that is Boka kotorska type.

For convenience sake, my friend... I referred to Montenegro as there is where the Bay of Kotor ( Boka Kotorska) can be found today.
This is eassier for most folks ;)
you don't refer to Belgrade in the Ottoman times as Pashaluk or Sanjak of Smederovo...

One can't expect each forum member to have that detailed knowledge.

My comment was based upon the lack of bud on the foto and request for a more detail as otherwise it would be an assumption, and assumptions are the mother of all....:) The bud could also have been broken off, that is another possibility.

Neverhtelss it is and remains a beautiful yataghan that would be a excellent piece in any collection !

gp 1st September 2025 12:03 PM

5 Attachment(s)
as comparison the only "straight"yataghan I a have,
although to compare it is incorrect, due to the fact that

- mine has ears...
- and sadly no scabbard.

Total lenght is 60 cm (so actually rather short / small....)
The grip made out some kind of bone, which I would not dare to say

and 2 more pics of a straight one

gp 1st September 2025 12:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kronckew (Post 299397)
Any ideas on its age and area of origin welcome.



Thanks all...

wanted to send you a PM but couldn't,
Just FYI, root cause :

"kronckew has exceeded their stored private messages quota and cannot accept further messages until they clear some space."

kronckew 1st September 2025 05:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gp (Post 299426)
wanted to send you a PM but couldn't,
Just FYI, root cause :

"kronckew has exceeded their stored private messages quota and cannot accept further messages until they clear some space."



Oops. Emptied out now.


Thanks again, y'all, for all the info. Very informative. I'll clean the Pala and post some new photos when it arrives. I paid an unbelieveably LOW price for it. A 19c sheffield hunting knife i was initially interested in, a few lots before it went for an unbelieveably HIGH price, so i was surprised the yat (pala) didn't even have a reserve and only one other bidder before me. Win some, lose some. I won this time :D

serdar 3rd September 2025 08:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kronckew (Post 299432)
Oops. Emptied out now.


Thanks again, y'all, for all the info. Very informative. I'll clean the Pala and post some new photos when it arrives. I paid an unbelieveably LOW price for it. A 19c sheffield hunting knife i was initially interested in, a few lots before it went for an unbelieveably HIGH price, so i was surprised the yat (pala) didn't even have a reserve and only one other bidder before me. Win some, lose some. I won this time :D


Yes, it is a specific item that has a very tight and narow collectors circle but in that circle it is worth very much!
You scored very good!

serdar 3rd September 2025 08:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gp (Post 299424)
For convenience sake, my friend... I referred to Montenegro as there is where the Bay of Kotor ( Boka Kotorska) can be found today.
This is eassier for most folks ;)
you don't refer to Belgrade in the Ottoman times as Pashaluk or Sanjak of Smederovo...

One can't expect each forum member to have that detailed knowledge.

My comment was based upon the lack of bud on the foto and request for a more detail as otherwise it would be an assumption, and assumptions are the mother of all....:) The bud could also have been broken off, that is another possibility.

Neverhtelss it is and remains a beautiful yataghan that would be a excellent piece in any collection !


Boka and montenegro are hot very hot topic in politics even today 😁 😁

Rick 3rd September 2025 09:20 PM

Please Pardon
 
1 Attachment(s)
May I inquire about my Yatagan; please excuse if I am interrupting the thread.

The pattern in the steel has me quite confused. Serdar, have you ever seen a Yat blade with this type of forging?
Parts of the surface seem almost crystallized.

I have never seen a blade like this; then again, I don't get out much. :o

Any input by anyone would be much appreciated.

gp 4th September 2025 09:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by serdar (Post 299465)
Boka and montenegro are hot very hot topic in politics even today 😁 😁

I refrain from commenting on politics but the Bay of Kotor has a most interesting history

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bay_of_Kotor

FYI: I used to stay at friends in Dobrota ( next to Kotor ) the mid to end 80ies.

Recommended next to Kotor are a visit to Risan and Perast where quite some wellknown seafaring captains came from in the past centuries

On history:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kotor
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perast
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Risan
https://www.letrevenezie.net/pubblic...o/sommario.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalmatia

kronckew 6th September 2025 03:22 PM

2 Attachment(s)
Arrived yesterday, turns out the photos from the auction were very bad. I did some cleaning with a damp rag, dried it and Ballistoled it, and the scabbard. Still not sure if the grip is wood or light horn. There is s a bit of discolouration around a couple rivets that may have been from oil seeping into the grip (?).


There are a few pins missing. The grip does have some rudimentary ears. The Bolster and the wrap over the grip scales joint to the tang is silvered and darker than elsewhere, and it and the bolster is decorated. there is broken half ring i'm guessing held suspension ring for left side wear.


The double fullered 'trade' blade has a bit of shallow corrosion, but no active rust. The scabbard has a tin ribbed throat area with a few bumps and wrinkles, once decorated, but is intact, the upper bras/silvered panels have ghosts of past decor. The leather is a bit shrunken where it meets the metal covers, but is intact With just a bit of the ladder seam missing.


The lower brass section has decorated grooves, the central area appears to have a lot of shallow dents and wrinkles from normal wear and tear. The lower panels are silvered, has a few cracks and one sort of circular area about 1.5 cm. in diameter missing the lower brass and silver sections have a wide - about 2 cm. grooved reinforcing band running along the spine and the edge areas of the scabbard, joining in a cross-hatched 'acorn' finial that's a bit worn and corroded black, but reminds me of a pine cone. it has a slightly upturned 'nose', so I don't think there was any further protrusion that snapped off.


The blade markings: I tried to get a macro shot, but it looks like the one already posted. can't see any more detail. I can, however, see a ghost of a shield shape with a crown in its centre, which is essentially worn away and may be my imagination. Can't get a photo of it.


Edge is sharp, a few nicks, and a slightly rounded tip.


All in all I am a hap,hap, happy guy. :D:D:D


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:24 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Posts are regarded as being copyrighted by their authors and the act of posting material is deemed to be a granting of an irrevocable nonexclusive license for display here.