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#1 |
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Join Date: May 2020
Posts: 830
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also 2 different ones I bought some time ago in the Balkans
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#2 |
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Join Date: May 2020
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just got a 3rd one; a small Bosnian knife or little dagger.
Some call it kama, other cakija others again noz... Depends whom you are talking to and where. It is # 3 on the pics. Nevertheless sharp they are and deadly as well. Nicely decorated with similar paterns on the blade, small curved lines and dots ( triangle and circular) First one with a scabbard although nothing fanciful like the bicaks who have wooden scabberds with copper decorated overlay. Only metal left; could well be that either cloth or leather did cover it at some time , which has gone or deteriorated through the times. Timewise diffecult to determine; could be anything from 1860ies to 1930ies. Handle or grip is bone, decorated with colored circular signs ( not as nice as the bichaqs which have inlays) , one without quillion and two with. One without a rear bolster / pommel and two with |
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#3 |
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Join Date: Feb 2017
Posts: 95
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There is not a single Bosnian knife in the photograph shown.They are characteristic of the region of Θεσσαλονίκη/Thessaloniki/Солун located on the territory of present-day Greece.There, the ethnic composition of the population is so diverse that there is no way to define exactly which ethnic area the knives belong to
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#4 | |
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Either a woman is pregnant or not, but there does not exist something like a little pregnant…(defining it to yet a region….) ![]() Nevertheless….I bought 2 out of 3 in Herzegovina…which is part of Bosnia now and in the past since the Kingdom of Tvurtko. Than again a lot of folks from different etnicities lived in Bosnia and Hercegovina: Vlachs, Montenegrins, Serbian, Croation, Bosnian, Turkish, Albanian, Greek, Roma, Sephardic Jewish….hence many influences did enter, were taken over into different ways of live. In a multicultural society like the Ottoman Balkans was, one must be careful to make such firm statements…. When you mention characteristics, mention them specifically and in detail, but I can assure you that there are also Austrian books on the Balkans from 1880 which mention characteristics dedicated to (perhaps) others…. Solun was not Greek but Macedonian with a first in the Balkans very heavy Sephardic population, which spread later to other countries an regions like Serbia, Dalmatia, BiH and so on ….. I can only claim where I did buy the knife… Last edited by gp; 11th September 2023 at 05:48 PM. |
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#5 | |
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Look...I have no desire to argue. You can believe whatever you want. The very fact that you claim that Thessalonica was Macedonian ![]() In my humble opinion, the knives you have shown are not typical Bosnian knives. ![]() |
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#6 | |
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![]() Kindly requested to provide me the characteristics of your determination as I am most eager to learn from your wisdom and also the literature where I can find this to add that / enlarge my small collection of books... |
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#7 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Bay Area
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Ethnic attributions can be tricky and loaded with potential controversy. Geographically, I have seen a mention of "солунски ножове" (Thessalonica knives) in Bulgarian literature, and seems to refer to small knives with bone hilts with the solar decorative motive, like the second one from top to bottom on your stand.
Yours came from Herzegovina, which may mean that it was made there or it may mean that it simply ended up there at one point after being made elsewhere. I cannot claim anything conclusively, but I believe Osobist may be on to something in this case. |
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#8 | |
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