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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Russia
Posts: 1,042
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This is not the Afghan stamp. Turkey - possible. I think it's made from a broken saber blade.
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Bay Area
Posts: 1,666
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Thank you very much for the quick responses. I had not considered the possibility of tughras used outside of the Ottoman context.
Teodor |
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#3 |
Arms Historian
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Route 66
Posts: 10,458
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In my post #2 , I mentioned this brass disc feature with some type of design or letters within, and found on the distinct horned hilt sword with dramatic recurved blade known often as the 'Black Sea yataghan' which I had.
This was eventually classified as a Laz bichagi, but in earlier works (Triikman& Jacobsen, 1941) had been termed a Kurdish-Armenian yataghan (Seifert, 1962). Research revealed these curious swords as being from Erzerum, Trebizond and other areas of the Transcaucusus, and found even in Georgia. I hope I can find photos of the disc in the sword I mention, but I do recall it seemed unusual to see this kind of brass disc in the blade. I think that since most of the areas mentioned in research on these swords over the past 15 years here have shown them mostly from regions in Turkey, or under Ottoman control. While I am not sure that this device is properly considered a tughra, it seems that they are known in the blades of these regions at least incidentally. As Mahratt notes, this disc has no connection in my opinion with Afghan markings, but most likely with Transcaucasian origin, and may indeed be from an apparently dramatically re-profiled sword blade. It is most interesting to see it matched to a clearly Afghan type choora hilt . |
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