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16th October 2009, 04:47 AM | #1 | |
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Afridi Dagger ?
I just finished Death in the Silent Places by the late big-game hunter, Peter Hathaway Capstick. In Chapter 6, he wrote about Colonel Edward James Corbett, who killed an infamous leopard, dubbed "The Maneater of Rudrapayag". An excerpt on page 223 caught my eye:
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16th October 2009, 12:31 PM | #2 |
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Does anyone have any idea what one of these looks like? I'm coming up short on google image searches.[/QUOTE]
Afri (singular, Afer) was the Latin name for an ancient people located on the shores of the southern Mediterranean Sea near the city of Carthage, nowadays Tunisia. A generic term for a North African knife I think? |
16th October 2009, 02:29 PM | #3 |
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Queequeg, Afridi is a comman term for Pathan tribsman of Afghanistan.
Rudrapayag is in Northen India therfore the standerd Pesh kabz or choora knife is the typicle Afridi stabbing knife {or dagger although strictly of course not double sided.} Heres an old one of yours Louie. Spiral |
20th October 2009, 06:30 AM | #4 |
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Spiral,
At first, I thought maybe you misunderstood me. However, after rereading your post, I think you're probably right. I assumed that the author knew the difference between a knife and a dagger, so I was stuck looking for a double-edged blade. I now think it's most likely that he makes no difference between them and the picture you linked is what I was looking for. Thanks! |
20th October 2009, 03:12 PM | #5 | |
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20th October 2009, 05:01 PM | #6 |
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Thanks Queequeg, it seemed the logical choice to me given the Indian subcontenant rather than African location & use of the term Afridi in that case meaning Pathan & that the often interchageability of both descriptive knife/dagger terms in common usage. [As i thought!}
Great stuff David! Thank you! I live & learn, I was always brought up to belive a knife was single edged for cutting & a dagger double edged for stabbing{although obviously knives can still stab etc.} & must admit I have never actualy researched into it. Those lessons mostly came from my father & other WW2 mostly Burma & Chindit or Royal marine veterans. I wonder if that was how the British army/Navy used to name them? or perhaps just commen usage in the area I grew up? {Thames Valley, England.] It would be fascinating to know! Interesting that Queequeg had the same understanding too. spiral |
20th October 2009, 09:15 PM | #7 |
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Hi,
Dagger V's Knife, I have always differentiated these two by the following. A knife always has at least one cutting edge and is primarily designed as a 'tool' a dagger need not have any cutting edges and is primarily designed as an implement for stabbing. Obviously these capabilities can be adaptive e.g. stabbing with a knife and cutting with an edged dagger but this can be true of many things e.g. a wooden mallet and a steel hammer, both designed for different purposes but can be interchangeable and used for purposes other than those for which they were originally designed. Regards, Norman. |
20th October 2009, 10:27 PM | #8 |
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This is getting silly dagger,knife,shiv we are getting off subject it really does not matter what you call it if you are on the receiving end of it.
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20th October 2009, 11:20 PM | #9 |
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Stephen,
Yep. Do you want to start talking about whether a cutlass is a type of sword or knife, based on the fact that machetes are termed cutlasses ? --- Ah, but Louie, Remember, we're all about words here, not getting shivved. If I wanted to know what kind of dagger the Marine Raiders used during WWII, how would I go about searching for it? This is the problem with the "everybody knows that a knife is X while a dagger is Y" discussion without a well-known definition. You can label a weapon as a knife or dagger (or whatever) based on what you think it is, but someone else who uses your term won't be able to figure out what you're talking about, without additional knowledge or asking more questions. As an example, is a cutlass a sword, saber, or knife, given that a machete is termed a cutlass in part of its native range? NOT that I'm saying we should have our own definitions on this site. Maybe we should start talking about these as "machete debates," or something similar. Best, F |
20th October 2009, 11:28 PM | #10 |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_...aider_Stiletto
If I wanted to know what kind of dagger the Marine Raiders used during WWII, how would I go about searching for it? Here you go |
20th October 2009, 11:30 PM | #11 |
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Hi Lou,
I'll take the guy with the Swiss Army pocket dagger and you take the guy with the large Khyber 'thingummybob'. My Regards, Norman. |
20th October 2009, 11:53 PM | #12 |
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Lets just call them sharp nasty pointy things that should cover it
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21st October 2009, 01:48 AM | #13 |
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Lou, don't be a party pooper :-)
I think it is rather interesting. I think the distinction is not in construction per se, but in purpose: daggers always have some military tinge. Knives, on the other hand, can be anything, including, importantly, perfectly peaceful purposes: kitchen, cheese, butter, paring etc. It so happened that English has two separate words for a short weapon: dagger and knife. Russian, on the other hand, has only one: nozh=knife. Therefore, anything shorter than saber or sword was a "nozh". They realized that it was insufficient and utilized a (Caucasian) Kindjal as a matrix word. Thus, you see definition like " Jambiya, an Arabian kindjal", "Kris, an Indonesian kindjal", " Nazi SS kindjal", etc, etc. for any short weapon with military purpose. Exceptions are naval dagger "kortik" (probably modified "kortelas", a short naval sword), and sapper's "tessack" ( likely, from German "dussak" or a derivative of Russian verb "tesat'", " to chop). Words get different meanings. I was told, for example, that in the Balkans, yataghans are knives/daggers, but a full size one is called handjar. Jim's favorite example is kaskara that is known as such everywhere, except in ...Sudan. The Sudanese call it Sayf. |
21st October 2009, 02:04 AM | #14 |
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Good points Ariel.
It's fascinating that the sword/saber/knife/dagger/etc continuum of weapons seems so prone to this kind of linguistic weirdness. It shows up in other weapons (notably halberds), but outside of weapon terms, the best example I know of is the shrub vs. tree pair. I suspect that swords, knives, and daggers get into this because there are issues of violence, power, and utility all coming into play. A knife is a fundamental tool, but a military knife is also a symbol of power and maybe that's why they get different names? Just a guess. Best, F |
24th October 2009, 11:50 PM | #15 | |
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