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13th October 2021, 06:51 AM | #1 |
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Join Date: Jul 2020
Posts: 7
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Sudanese Dagger,grip translation
Hello,I posted a previous thread about a dagger I have,the post is named - Persian or Sudanese dagger
if you wish to view the full item The blade is covered with Thuluth but I think that the grip is written in Arabic ? I would appreciate any further information and/or a translation if possible or to know that it cannot be translated thank you Andrew Freeston |
13th October 2021, 06:36 PM | #2 |
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Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 408
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Andrew,
I can't help with the translation. While the Thuluth is suggestive of blades available in Omdurman during the Mahdiya, the handle doesn't exhibit any Sudanese design motifs that I am aware of. Maybe of unknown types from Northern Sudan influenced by Nubian culture?? Maybe similar examples can be offered by others. Edit: Just found a couple of examples like your handle style attributable to Mahdist Sudan. Often with triple daggers with croc. skin sheaths. Here's a link (but with a price. couldn't separate dagger from the price). Google images of thuluth daggers. Still, no info on what ethnic group/region produced them. https://www.faganarms.com/products/s...mahdist-war-15 See this link too. http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?p=262229 Best, Ed Last edited by Edster; 13th October 2021 at 11:32 PM. Reason: Found new data. |
20th October 2021, 04:13 PM | #3 |
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Join Date: May 2019
Posts: 153
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The inscription is not clear, words run into each other etc. and it is incomplete.
The style of the inscription goes back to the Mamluks, though this does not necessarily mean that it is that old of course. It looks like the following, but it is really a guess and should not be taken as definitive. I guess it is an extract from a poem العلق(؟) لا الملطاء(؟) العمر لا 'A blood clot(?) rather than a penetrating wound(?), life rather than ..." |
20th October 2021, 05:05 PM | #4 | |
Arms Historian
Join Date: Dec 2004
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Quote:
It is my impression that the use of thuluth on the Mahdist blades derives from inscriptions on Mamluk metalwork, and the Sufi influences of course were strong throughout Sudan. These kinds of poetic phrases were well known in those contexts with metalwork. That the inscriptions were not properly configured runs in line with the way the thuluth was usually applied, and often had to be worked into a set space. Thuluth inscriptions themselves, long thought to be illegible and simply decorative were actually Quranic phrases used in repitition as motif. |
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