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#1 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: East Coast USA
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Hi Guys
This just arrived today. Another arm dagger for my growing African collection. Don't ask me why I just really like this style of knife and I think this is number four with another on it's way. This one has a 8" blade and a rather plain wood handle. The scabbard is quite nicely done with lizard skin trim. On on side of the scabbard there is a symbol or letters which was later translated by one of my friends as "Allah". My guess is mid 20th century as far as age goes. Any other comments or information will be appreciated. Lew |
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#2 |
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Yes, the translation is 'Allah'. The scabbard is more elaborate than the blade.
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#3 |
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Hi Louis,This one has silver wire on the handle.I have just recieved this weekend, a copy of De fer et de fierte' from the Barbier-Mueller museum,as recommended by Freddy.This is a must for people in to Africa, it does not have everything but what book does? [IMG]http://[/IMG] Tim
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#4 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Athens Greece
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This is my contribution to the topic.
![]() A dagger that lives last decade in my home. It has plain wood hilt with silver pommel. I suppose that lot of forumites have one |
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#5 |
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Nice daggers gentleman! Here are two others for show. I wonder how many variations of this type of dagger are out there?
Lew |
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#6 |
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This one arrived today and it is very similar to the ones I saw in an earlier thread. The blade is 10" long and has some written in Arabic but I have no Idea what it says. This is the thread that I mentioned.
http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=111 Lew Last edited by LOUIEBLADES; 1st February 2005 at 03:53 AM. |
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#7 |
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LOUIBLADES, difficult to read the text (the pictures are upside down), but the year on the dagger is 1318 A.H., which is the year 1900/1901 according to the Christian calendar.
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#8 |
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Here's my contribution to the thread.
Had it for many years. What is the flat triangular pommel for? Skull crusher? Don't know anything about the knife. One of my few, besides Berbers, African pieces. Rich S |
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#9 |
EAAF Staff
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Rich: Your dagger is a tebu - or toubou, depending on how you represent it - dagger from the Sahara desert. Please refer to these old threads for more information on this style:
Tebu dagger from Goa Toubou knife for your comment, from Chuck Lew: I find it interesting that your most recently pictured dagger has the same device on the forte of the blade as mine that was pictured in the thread you cited in the same post. This style is attributed specifically to Sudan the country, as in Khartoum, while Rick's knife is from further west in the Sahara (Chad, Niger), a product of an oasis dwelling people. |
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#10 |
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That arrow-shaped pommel is associated with certain tribes, and goes hand-in-hand with the leather hand grip. Same sheath though, huh? I have an unusual sword with such a pommel and a disc-shaped cutting tip, which was collected (as rusty farm shed-junk, BTW) in Nigeria. The term "tebu" is associated with the pointy-pommel daggers, but I don't know if it's a name for the dagger or for a tribe. It seems I've seen......Fulanis?.........with them.
Yannis, are those feathered edges on yours? (a secondary bevel similar to "hollow grinding" but usually forged, as common on Berbese kodme) Is it symetrical in cross section, or is the feathering or other features offset? This seems to be a broad widespread style with many varieties. Now a mental excercise: picture if you will those double-sickle Konda/Mongo swords, Kuba ilwoon, and Kenyan (the Massaie don't make their own weapons traditionally, iron-wprling being against their religion/tradition and it seems pretty dang identical to swords of nearby tribes, such as Watutsi) seme on a continuum, along with the many similar swords. Something I've wanted to mention for some time, and now seems to have "come up" is that iron and ironworking (probably due to weapon associations, but perhaps to use as money as well) and the blacksmith/iron god are all commonly associated with royalty in Africa, and I'm noting that nations with prohibitions against working or touching iron may tend to be nations traditionally free from kings and structured governments (thinking here of Tuaregs and Massai; other examples? counter-examples? Input?) |
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#11 |
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Lee and Tom -
Thanks for reference to the old thread on Tebu knives. How do you guys remember all these old threads? I can't recall what I had for breakfast :-) Rich S |
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#12 |
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Tom, Tebu is the name of the tribal group, so I am just using it to modify the subject of dagger.
Rich, I forget a lot more of the old threads than I remember, but the search functions run on all of the forums; it is just that there are three separate searches which one must do to scan the entire archives, though I believe Google will find the oldest material and the current forums. Use the FreeFind Search Service for the static part of the site and the oldest forum archives, and the built in search functions of each forum for the more recent UBB and current vB forums... |
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#13 | |
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#14 |
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Louie,
Excellent, man. If I remember correctly, you got one of those with the silver wrap for a total steal. Your examples are what Mr. D'Angelo termed as "karra". This came from his Italian colonial military handbook on north African terms and phrases. The book was distributed to soldiers during the occupation of Ethiopia. Someone else noted that "karra" seems like a short form of "kaskara". Interesting comparison, but I don't know if there's a linguistic connection. I just got one this week as well. I'll post pics asap! -d |
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#15 | |
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Rarher's deciphering is OK. the whole inscription reads "Omdurman - year 1318". BTW does anyone know how these knives are/were worn? I have heard and read that on the left arm, but where and how exactly? Maybe there exist a picture showing such knife "in use"...? ![]() |
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#16 | |
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I know that at least one reason why iron working is given such a high place in many societies is the importance that weapons played, and having a blacksmith was an important advantage. They used to get kidnapped a lot in West Africa apparently, and taken prisoner in battle rather than killed. I would guess that also the fact that is is a developed and somewhat arcane art, turning a lump of something into a useful and beautiful item, adds to the mystique. |
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#17 |
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I've seen them worn on the outside of the left arm, with the belt passing around the narrow part above the bicep/tricep mass, and the tip hanging downward in typical fashion.
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#18 |
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Hi Tom
A few months ago I saw one of those 19 century orientalist paintings of a Sudanese warrior on ebay and he was wearing a large Tebu style dagger on his left forearm hilt faced down. The scabbard was Tuereg looking with a round brass arm band hold it in place. Unfortunately I was stupid and the auction ended before I was able to bid on it ![]() Lew |
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#19 |
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I have read of them worn this way, on the forearm, supposedly within the sleeve of a robe, and I have seen it in illustrations, but I don't think I've seen it in a photograph. Perhaps the fashion has changed over the years, too?
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#20 |
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I have heard the same, but what worries me is that all examples I have seen have rather loose sheaths; it would be not very practical to wear the knife with its hilt faced down...
BTW: Spring's African Arms and Armour, plate 3: isn't it a Tebu knife attached to the upper part of the sword's sheath? |
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#21 |
(deceased)
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Hi Guys
Here hopefully is my last Sudanese dagger ![]() Lew Last edited by LOUIEBLADES; 11th February 2005 at 11:55 AM. |
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#22 |
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Hi Lew,
another great piece! I, personally, hope that it is not your LAST Sudanese dagger ![]() |
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#23 |
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Lew,
I haven't noticed the last picture (the photograph of the inscription) - it is quite good and I must correct my previous guesses concerning the lower line of text. I'm now sute that it reads "al-Khartoum", quite ornately written, in two lines. Alas - no date. Or maybe there is something more? |
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#24 | |
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I found a black and white print of Sudanese warrior notice the position of ther dagger. Lew |
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#25 |
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Kamil, you're 100% correct about that being a tebu dagger affixed to the outside of the takouba scabbard worn by the Taureg in the photograph on plate 3 in Spring's....I posted a close up of that same picture several years ago in the old forum and even have mine displayed that way as a great space saver **grin**....that little leather strp fits the scabbard much better than my arm!!!!
The only knives I've seen with the wider bands have all been teleks, as opposed to the old illustrations with it on other style knives. Heck, at that time the style that started this thread were still being attributed to having been derived from German daggers, a la Stone. Mike |
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#26 |
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This is elvoving in to the official African arm dagger thread, so I'm posting mine here. Also, I'll repeat my question here: Can anyone share a good resource for info on these styles? A book that (at least partly) focuses on N. African daggers?
-d ![]() ![]() |
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#27 |
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I think this little Mangbetu piece is an arm dagger.There is a small leather loop on the back of the scabbard.It is too top heavy to stay in position unless touching the body.Tim
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#28 | |
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with a lot of delays ... but I just get back my translator ![]() about the text if really it has a meaning, it's not in Sudanese language language, very similar to Egyptian those two ligns, hasn't apparently a sense in Arabic dixit my translator ![]() regards à + Dom |
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#29 |
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Hey Dom,
It does actually:P The top word is الخرطوم AlKhartoum and the 2nd is أم درمان Um Durman. |
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#30 | |
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I know one, she will be teased ![]() and "Lew" will have an enigma solved ![]() thanks my Bro. for your help ![]() à + Dom |
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