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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 637
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there is a evolution to weapons. I doubt that every one in 1901 said I must make a choora today. If you were preparing a research paper on this I would expect more than the opinion of one expert. I would like to see possible paintings and museum acquisitions checked. I am always a little leary about some museums claims. They do not always know what they are doing. I would probably also look for early examples of what the knife evolved from. I agree the experts field is slightly off from what is being studied and the ageing of the items may vary from books. However I can not think of a similar expert it could be brought to that could do better. Also what was said was that the scabbard was studied by the expert and their opinion given of it. I guess that you could take a sample of the horn taken and tested for age. I am not sure how accurate or expensive that would be. I think that mahratt would be better served if he showed documented pieces of why his dating is correct and show the widespread use of the knife that this replaced. I do not say that ariel is absolutely right, but using Occam's razor it leads to him being more correct.
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#2 | ||
Member
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Russia
Posts: 1,042
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Dear participants of the forum.
Before talking about the possibility of chooras in the 19th century: 1) Can somebody of you give the image an Afghan (Waziri or someone else) with choor before 1900? 2) Does anyone of you knowledge of chooras in museum collections, which became a museum exhibit before 1900? All other considerations, including the subjective opinions of experts - it is almost child's play "believe, do not believe," in which there is no serious evidence. For example. I ask an expert on the tree at the State Historical Museum in Moscow (Russia). I ask him, he can visually (without complex analyzes) to determine the age of a tree, exposed to the environment? He said that no one can do it for sure. Quote:
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![]() The subject, which is shown in Egerton - not Afghan choora (see image). I've said many times this Ariel ![]() Last edited by mahratt; 7th June 2015 at 08:08 PM. |
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