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#1 |
(deceased)
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Portugal
Posts: 9,694
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Yes, obviously a new topic indeed. This one has hardly something to do with it
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: May 2020
Posts: 823
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#3 |
(deceased)
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Portugal
Posts: 9,694
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C'mon gp. This is the one only topic dedicated to period people with Ethno weapons. As if you had no chance to post those arrowheads in a more adequate thread ... even in a new topic. I will skip over the puristic part !
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2022
Posts: 36
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Armenian warrior from Zeytun
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: May 2020
Posts: 823
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Kalmuk from a most interesting geographic book from 1618
Last edited by gp; 30th March 2024 at 11:08 PM. |
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: Sep 2014
Posts: 905
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Authentic pics more than this kind of ''warrior'' pictures where men seems just dressed like that for a souvenir picture mardi gras ...
( I did the same at the Alhambra in Granada , for few buckets, dressed with arabo-andalous clothes and holding a large khanjar.. maybe one time I'll post it 😁 |
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#7 |
Member
Join Date: Sep 2014
Posts: 905
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Other briganti / bandits from Bisaccia /Irpinia
Around same period: 1862 |
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#8 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2023
Location: City by the Black Sea
Posts: 219
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Bedouin warrior, Saudi Arabia, 1906
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#9 | |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2022
Posts: 36
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"In front of and behind the mules or at their sides, walked robust young men; they had light and narrow clogs at their feet; woolen breeches wrapped around their legs; a reddish belt tightened their waist, contained first pistols and carried the leather powder magazines; from the belt hung the half-meter long sabers, next to small powder boxes and bags which contained bullets: their busts were covered with jackets of variegated wool, the sleeves rolled up to the elbows; and the very long sleeves of their shirts, tied at their ends, passed behind their necks; at their backs, on the right side, stood the rifles, having barrels a meter long, and flat triangular stocks; they wore the Tunisian fez, wrapped in large red silk kefié, rolled up several times, giving a terrible appearance to their faces; They were all tall with blond moustaches curled up on their alert and young faces : they were the brave men of Zeïtoun." -Zeïtoun: Depuis les origines jusqu'à l'insurrection de 1895 |
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#10 | |
Keris forum moderator
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Nova Scotia
Posts: 7,211
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#11 | |
Member
Join Date: May 2020
Posts: 823
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Don’t forget, those times where dangerous with bandits, brigands, local militia, unpaid soldiers from armies wandering around at the border of great empires…it was not that safe and one had to protect oneself…. I never forget the first time I arrived in Sarajevo and Kotor on motorbike in 1985, I was asked where I came from. On my reply “ Maastricht”, they asked where that was. When I said “Limburg” a big long laughter followed. Asking what was so funny, they told me that Limburg was synonym for BS, nonsense, nothing…. Root cause was simple : since Medieval times when all were part of the Holy Roman Empire ( Emperor Sygismund) and also later when the Ottoman and Habsburg successors took over, if a guy would travel from Sarajevo to Cologne , Maastricht (Limburg)or Brussels, chances he arrived or worse returned were a minimum . Also found in Crnojanski’ semi historical book “ the Pandurs” AKA “ migration”. Hence Limburg became quite understandable a “ funny ” laughable name, implying either a suicidal mission or one of no return caused by danger on the road….so not to be compaied with Jack Kerouac’s “ on the road”…. Just a simple indication or justification one had to arm himself very well. A matter which continued through the Balkan wars of the 1912ies to the tragic events in the former Yu during the 1990ies Made sense to me and if you look which borders one had to cross from the Balkans and which dangers to face, one had to be carefully and good armed as there was no 2nd amendment on the Bill of Rights in the Balkans…:-) Last edited by gp; 13th December 2024 at 07:35 PM. |
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