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Old 5th March 2006, 03:20 AM   #1
Michael Blalock
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I would wager that this picture is upside down and the writting is arabic.
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Old 5th March 2006, 04:16 AM   #2
ham
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The dealer that I am looking at buying this from usually has many things that make reference to The Indo-Persian Wars

What wars are those?

Jim McD has identified the sword accurately, it has simply had a private purchase grip put on it. The Dutch and Germans also used a "karabela" form grip quite a bit on a variety of sidearms-- this is clearly a Western European piece.

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Old 5th March 2006, 05:10 AM   #3
ariel
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Isn't that an "E" and another letter on the blade?
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Old 5th March 2006, 02:54 PM   #4
Alan62
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Ham "What wars are those?"
Sorry
I got confused ,I mean to say a lot of what he (the dealer ) has is "Indo Persian" according to him and much of it during times when appearantly the British were in control of India and I just asumed that some of the paintings depicting battle scenes and letters home and ship manifests and weapons and other stuff he has for sale meant there was a war of some kind.You are correct Jim did describe it very accuratley.

My Bad



Ariel
I am not sure what it is

Last edited by Alan62; 5th March 2006 at 03:31 PM.
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Old 5th March 2006, 07:36 PM   #5
Jim McDougall
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Ham and Alan, thank you very much

I am inclined to agree with Michael, the character that appears numeric 2 may very well be Arabic (I'm definitely not a linguist!) and seems to correspond in degree the the Arabic letter 'ayn'. Possibly the singular letter may be an inventory mark which may support the idea that this was furbished in the Arabian Aden region from British sword components. The diagonal lines at the forte on the blade as well as the cross section seem to correspond to British military blades of the 1790's.

Best regards,
Jim
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