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12th September 2007, 09:53 PM | #1 |
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Christian amulet?
hi. This is -said to be- from western black sea region of Turkey.
Moderators; yes this is an edged weapons forum but this item can certainly be considered as an edged weapon as well Is there some kind of a common religious application using wild boar teeth like this ? Metal is nielloed silver. Any age or ethnicity information? regards |
12th September 2007, 10:04 PM | #2 |
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13th September 2007, 02:52 AM | #3 |
Arms Historian
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I'm not sure that this interesting item would be considered a weapon, despite the fact that animal horns, teeth etc. are often employed in certain weapon forms.
The center piece seems like a shashka ring mount from a scabbard. The boars teeth are joined in the center piece to form a crescent. This would probably suggest the moon, and there does seem to be some association between the moon and the Virgin Mary in some Christian symbolism, but exact meaning seems somewhat elusive. There are symbols with her standing on a moon sickle upright, but the purpose of the dangling crucifix within an inverted crescent in this case seems puzzling. As far as the boar itself, medieval Christian art with Germanic speaking peoples considered the wild boar a Christ symbol ( probably because of erroneous derivation of 'eber' the German name for wild boar, and the Hebrew 'ibri' the ancestor of the Hebrews. (ref: The Herder Symbol Dictionary" 1986, p.190). I'd like to know if there might be certain provenance or information about where this was found. Best regards, Jim |
13th September 2007, 03:36 AM | #4 |
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That is a good call with the crescent moon symbolism and Mary. I would not have thought of that, but it is indeed a common associacion. A common Christian millenialist symbol was a circle with a crescent moon along one side, a cross at the bottom and an interlocking AM that could easily be mistaken for a geometric design. The AM stood for Ave Maria, or more secretly, Ave Milleniarum.
Josh |
13th September 2007, 04:07 AM | #5 |
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Boars Tusk
Hey Erlikhan,
Am fairly certain have seen similar boars tusk amulets mounted on Ottoman 17-18th C. horsetrappings, something about a talisman for a warrior. The Christian cross could indiacte the possiblity of Armenian, or Georgian cavalry which the Ottomans used often. The Armenians in particular were known for high quality cavalry regiments. The Persians also used the Armenian cavalry when they controled Armenia. rand |
13th September 2007, 05:50 PM | #6 |
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thank you all for your interesting contributions . However wild boar,or any kind pig is taboo in Islam. They are accepted as the dirtiest animal,forbidden to eat its meat,to use any part of its body etc.. A Moslem soldier would hope good luck and victory from a boar tusk talisman?? Unbelievable. So "boar tusked amulet carrying Turkish sipahis" theory is inconvincing for me. Perhaps not only the cross, but the whole item itself might be accepted as a mounted Christian soldier amulets or accessory tradition once in Ottoman army. The crescent form of the item could tell something like a Turkish origin, but Jim says there is a moon-Virgin Mary association in Christian symbolism as well . The nielloed silver also can point some possible Caucassian Christian origins,right?
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