8th May 2024, 04:47 PM | #1 |
(deceased)
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Portugal
Posts: 9,694
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A ROYAL GIFT ... AND ITS STORY
Here is a set of photos of a musket offered by Queen Dona Maria 1st of Portugal to the Sultan of Gujarat, in 1795, in gratitude for his help in the Maratha Wars (which, for three times, invaded us in the North of our territories), in Hindustan. The Sultan risked a lot by ostensibly placing himself and his army on our side! During the absence of the Portuguese Royal House, retired in Brazil, the Governance of Portugal fell to Marshal Beresford. The latter, coming from English India and the government of Madeira Island, saw fit to send Anglo-Indian forces to occupy Goa, Daman and Diu. He transformed these Portuguese territories into export ports for opium, cultivated in the lands of northern English India. Then there was the strange “phantom war”, which should not be talked about. Apart from some meager protests from the inhabitants of these Portuguese territories from local residents, no one showed a willingness to put an end to this situation, which was getting worse and, clearly, we were going to lose these territories unless someone intervened with force. It was the Sultan of Gujarat who sent his forces to Goa, Daman and Diu. With this cover, the locals took up arms to defend their lands against the Anglo-Indian armies. The British gave in and there was no further talk of the matter. The EAST INDIA COMPANY began to use ports on the Coromandel Coast to export opium to China, which caused several Opium Wars between the British and China. The consequences of these wars still shake the world today.
It is difficult to define what weight the offer of this royal musket had on these issues, but it cannot have been small! Observing this weapon, we noticed something unprecedented: there is a small door in the butt plate to store something. The door opens using a hidden mechanism. Once opened, it shows a second door, which can only be opened with the respective key, which has been lost. The family that owned it (Casa Imperial Brasileira) never worried about it. It was necessary to make a custom-made screwdriver to dismantle the cover plate and a hiding place was discovered for a miniature book, with the edge of each leaf in gold! The musket was intended for the Sultan of Gujarat, a Muslim. These received, when they came of age, a phrase chosen from the Al-Koran, offered by their religious leader. This phrase was written on gold, silver or tin foil, rolled up and closed once and for all, inside a tube, which the recipient had to wear on a necklace around his neck throughout his life. It was forbidden to tell anyone what the phrase in the sacred book dedicated to him had been. As the Queen of Portugal logically did not know what the phrase intended for this monarch was, it was decided to have a complete Al-Koran book made in miniature! Attached is a group of the first photos of this rifle, where you can see in detail the two ports and the “stripped” stock with the butt plate unscrewed. In the middle of the hollow of the stock (made of partridge root, one of the most difficult woods to discover), you can see the small book. The musket is the work of the MASTER OF THE ROYAL ARSENAL OF THE ARMY OF LISBON, JACINTO XAVIER and dated “LISBOA 1795”. The trigger guard shows the Royal Portuguese Arms. On the pan cover is the indication “JACINTO XAVIER”. In platinum too. The lock is one of the best ever made. The main spring, entirely removed from a steel block, has a large wheel that sits on a small roller in the dog's heel. The friar sits on the knee of the dog's foot. The caixeta grabs the dog's toenail. Everything in maximum perfection and inlaid with gold! The barrel is a spectacle in itself. Everything in impeccable condition. It originates from the TOP-KAPI OTTOMAN palace, in Constantinople. Engraved, chiseled and inlaid with red corals and semi-precious stones. In the midst of all this it has the hallmark of the workshop master who created it. This has the abbreviation of its name, in Turkish, headed by the Celtic Knot. Precisely the same Celtic knot that appears in the designs of the armor used by Dom Sebastião 1º of Portugal in the battle of Alcácer-Quibir (1578). This knot does not usually appear on Ottoman weapons but on Portuguese, Italian, German and Austrian ones. As we had great masters from these origins working in our arsenals, it is highly likely that the Ottoman sovereigns also had them. It was military custom, in war, to arrest riflemen and swordsmiths to force them to work. PS In case the quality of the pictures doesn't allow for a good viewing of the mini Koran, i had the privilege to see it life. (Translated) Text courtesy Professor Rainer Daehnhardt and weapon from his collection. . |
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