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Old 10th September 2007, 05:58 AM   #1
ariel
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Odevan
Thanks for the link, it's really a nice find. However, for the 9th-10th century, it is not unusual at all; V.V. Arendt's work "Türkische Säbel aus den VIII. - IX. Jahrhunderten" (1935) focuses on this type, examines many survived examples in different museums, and concludes with a clear decision of Turkic origin.

And for the karaçori;

1. Having "multiple mentions of it but no actual evidence" doesn't always mean being mythical or fabled like "unicorn" and "Excalibur". However, if you think that the Royal Library of Alexandria is the unicorn of libraries, then I can understand that there is a conceptual difference between you and me.

2. We all may have a mistake when assuming that the karaçori is the name of a certain type of kılıç; instead, it may well be the generic name of Turkic swords in its time. Although literally means black, "kara" is an adjective which addresses to anything that is ordinary or common, or that belongs to common people. "Çori" is not used in the modern Turkish language, except it means knife in the slang of Istanbul streets..! Therefore, I always ask myself; can it have a generic meaning, just like what we mean when talking of a "European military sabre" today? (With reference to your earlier post; there is no sword engraved "European military sabre" on it, but we still classify them as such.) If this is the case, then the abovementioned work of Arendt has many examples of karaçori from the 8th century.
Here is another potential explanation: in the book " Weapons of the Islamic World" ( p.19), there ia a paragraph mentioning ...
" ... the treasure found inside the Kaaba which consisted of.... five swords imported from Kala, a small Bengali sea-port and sword manufacturing center in India"
That brings the mysterious Kalachoori back where it allegedly came from.
Is it possible that the word Cori ( sorry for the wrong C, couldn't find the correct font) comes from a proto-Turkic language?
The best that comes to my mind is the Afghani Choora.

Last edited by ariel; 10th September 2007 at 06:41 AM.
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Old 10th September 2007, 03:34 PM   #2
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I asked that to Dr. Oztopcu, who is a lecturer at UCLA as a respected authority on Turkic languages. He says he doesn't know any Turkic word similiar to "çori". Instead, he connects the term "Karaçori" to the other menitoned sword type in the same context, "Bilgatekini". Just like the "Tekin" of the latter, he suggest that it may come from "Çor", which is a high social rank amongst the middle-Asian Turkic tribes.

As you might have known, Bilge Tekin is a Gaznavid Emperor. The suffix "-i" gives a relation, so, the word "Bilgatekini" means "of Bilge Tekin". Dr. Oztopcu suggests the same explanation for the word "Karaçori"; "Kara Çor" may be the name (or nickname, just like "the Dark Knight") of a once-famous person, and the word "Karaçori" then means "of Kara Çor", that is, "Kara Çor style" for our subject-matter.

This is Dr. Oztopcu's approach. Unfortunately it just confuses me some more, because there is no mention of a person named "Kara Çor" in the known Turkic history. It seems like the whole area needs a lot deeper research.
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Old 13th September 2007, 12:04 PM   #3
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Another possibility is an almost homophonic word " ghoracharra" ( sp.). They were irregular Afghani/Sikh/N.Indian cavalry.
According to Khorasani's book, Kalachurri ( or qalachurri) was also alternatively spelled " Garachurri"
Rings the bell?

Last edited by ariel; 14th September 2007 at 11:31 AM.
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