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#1 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Ann Arbor, MI
Posts: 5,503
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Jim,
Allow me to lift a veil of ignorance from your Texan eyes. Slivovitz is a Central European plum brandy. Realistically, they make brandy out of every fruit possible: plums ( Polish, Czech, Balkan Slivovitz), pears ( Hungarian Palinka), cherries ( German and Swiss Kirshwasser), apples (French Calvados), you name it. Come to think of it, they also use grape skins and pips to make grape Brandy: French Marc, Italian Grappa, Balkan Loza, Balkan Rakija, Georgian Chacha and even Peruvian/Chilean Pisco. These are all simple peasant drinks: aristocracy took the choiciest part of the grape, ie the juice, fermented it, ran it thru sophisticated distilling apparati, aged it in special barrels and sipped it slowly. Peasants took all that grape residue, or just cheap and plentiful fruits, mashed it, made a moonshine and gulped it like real men:-)) As you can see, the infamous "name game" is played not only by weapon collectors, but by us, old sots, too:-) I fully appreciate Ian's and Jens' comments. I am just having a gut feeling that I might be right. What is sorely missing, is a solid list of true Deccani examples with such handles. Elgood has one. Does anybody here knows of other examples: provenance would be crucially important. Who knows, we may even make a Bollywood movie out of it, " The Adoni Conspiracy", with Danny de Vito playing Aurangzeb, Nicole Kidman as Queen Victoria, and late Rudolf Nureev as Alexander Borgia :-) Last edited by ariel; 30th April 2016 at 02:44 PM. |
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#2 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Ann Arbor, MI
Posts: 5,503
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Jens,
Thanks! Glad you also have the same gut feeling.Getting better proof is another thing altogether. If you or any other Forumite happen to recall other examples of such hilts on proven Deccani swords, please let me know. |
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#3 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Europe
Posts: 2,718
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Ariel,
You must remember that tons of weapons were taken in Deccan after all the battles and moved to Rajasthan. Why leave weapons on the battle field that the enemies can use against you at a later time? Very few of these weapons are registrated as comming from the Deccan. The only ones I am aware of, are the ones in the Bikaner armoury, and only some of them are marked as comming from Deccan. This gives us another head ache, and that is are all the chiselled weapons from the Deccan, or are they north Indian? If you read Goetz, you will see, that all the gold and silver decoration came slowly in the north, for a long time chiselling was prefered, by others than the Mughals. Chiselling was used a lot in the south, but are all the chiselled weapons in the Bikaner armoury from the south? Would you be able to point out the ones from Deccan? |
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#4 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Ann Arbor, MI
Posts: 5,503
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Jens,
Yes, it is a conundrum... If we cannot identify actual examples from Deccan, is it possible at least to talk about " Deccani pattern"? Or, do you think even that is hopeless? You know, I never thought much about Deccan: for me martial culture of India was either North or South. The entire center of the country was a blur, a white spot. Just to think that we cannot pinpoint anything specific about it, is rather depressing. Dhup? Sossun Pata? Tegha? Are even they Deccani in origin? Kind of tragic for the martial culture of almost half of the entire India to disappear without a trace..... When Elgood can write a whole book about Vijayanagara, two volumes about a single Northern museum but only a short and tentative paper about the entire Deccan, it means we lost a giant chunk of human history.... |
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#5 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Europe
Posts: 2,718
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Ariel,
Some types can be pin-pointed to Deccan, while other types will get the stamp - maybe/could be/perhaps/possible and so on. An example could be a Deccani miniature. You see one of the Deccani Sultans and two or three other persons. We know who the Sultan is, but the names of the others are seldom given, so are ther employd at the court, or are they visitors? If they are visitors, maybe from Rajasthan their weapons are not from Deccan, but you can get the feeling that when they are shown in a Deccani miniature it must be Deccani weapons. They could be Deccani weapons, but they dont have to be. In the very early times, the kukri and the kora were widely spread over big parts of India, but this did not last, at least not in most places. There is, however, some hope ahead as many objects of art from Deccan have been researched far more than the weapons, and that is where we should look for some of the answers - books like. Mohamed, Bashir: The Arts of the Muslim Knight Stronge, Susan: Bidri Ware Zebrowski, Mark: Deccan Painting and others. |
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