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21st May 2006, 05:19 PM | #1 |
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Location: Athens Greece
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Three in one
This is a vintage knife that combines 3 known (?) areas. Let me describe it.
The blade looks like the Trabzon knifes. But it has lot of fullers, some in strange directions and it is heavy engraved both sides and inlaid with silver. Also there is a date 1201 on it. 1787 in Georgian calendar. If the date is true, the scabbard with the Caucasian style niello must be later. But there is also niello in the hilt. And the hilt has the shape of a Montenegro knife! To make the puzzle more interesting there is the engraving of a man holding a kilij and a flintlock rifle. My first thought is that of a Pontic knife. I knew that Pontians used to wear Trabzon knifes and kindjals in early 20th century but I have never seen anything like this before. Any idea is welcome. |
21st May 2006, 08:30 PM | #2 |
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And, on the top of it, the configuration of the scabbard, with it's swollen middle part, is just what is seen with Laz Bicags.
I am certain this example is from the Trabzon area. Good one. A keeper. |
22nd May 2006, 12:44 PM | #3 |
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Location: Chania Crete Greece
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Date is not true!
Hallo Yiannis,
Very beautiful knife. For me, there is no doubt that the knife is from Montenegro, i attach photos of a similar knife with exactly the same hilt, very characteristic of this area. The blade has much better work than my example, but looks very similar, therefore i think is also made in Montenegro. However i believe is 19th century, and the proof is very obvious. The little guy on the design does handle a kilij, BUT NOT a flintlock! If you see carefully the mechanism is clearly a percusion one, which does not existed in 1787. The percusion was invented after 1820s, i am not sure when, and it took some decades to arrive in the balkans. Therefore i would date this after 1850. Regarding the scabbard there is no doubt that is from trabzon area. Not only the configuration as Ariel says, but also the style of the niello work and most of all the shape of the scabbard which starts narrow get wider and has a long thin finish, is like a micrography of the laz yataghan scabbard! Regards, Eftihis |
22nd May 2006, 02:11 PM | #4 |
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Location: Athens Greece
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Eftihis, possibly you are right about percussion and date. I am not sure about the rest
I think the key here are these fullers. Please notice the crazy directions of them. I found nothing in books and sites. I wonder if anyone here has seen similar fullers anywhere. |
22nd May 2006, 11:05 PM | #5 |
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One of the keys here is niello - very typical caucasian work; indeed, niello of this type has been made in Trabzon; I doubt its production spread as far as Montenegro.
Concerning pontic greek affiliation - I don't know about Trabzon, but in Abchazia the policy of local ottoman leadership was to kill or seriously main every greek who spoke or wrote in greek (see "The Reports of the Edinburgh "Missionary Society in 1817-1818 with the supplement of the geographical and historical description of missions in Asian Russia"). For reasons I don't exactly understand ottoman policies in western georgia were more anti-greek than probably anywhere else, while the same logic did not apply to other languages. Therefore I would not expect anything from this area to bear any signature or writing in greek. |
23rd May 2006, 12:45 AM | #6 |
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Rivkin, for me the signature is already there. I didn’t mention it before. In the area I know only Greeks to engrave warriors with their weapons on blades. Like the Hungarians more north. Still, I am possibly wrong.
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23rd May 2006, 02:49 AM | #7 |
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Yannis , I seem to remember similar fullering in a knife presented here for discussion some time back . Let me have a look through the archives ...
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