25th February 2006, 11:33 PM | #1 |
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Interesting tribal knife
This one was supposedly collected recently in Afghanistan. It represents an interesting clash of technology. The knife is crude and appears entirely fabricated under very primative conditions; but the materials themselves are a different story. The handle and guard looks to be carved from a massive and solid block of high density brown plastic, perhaps electrical insulating material at least 3/4-inch thick. The decorative bands and copper rivets were probably once electrical components as well.
Have anyone come across other similar examples? n2s |
26th February 2006, 12:09 PM | #2 |
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Very interesting and not unattractive, it has a strong and confident finish, what a shame there is no scabbard to add its information. I would say this was well made and not something the maker has done just the once. To me the blade could very easily be African. There was a knife on ebay recently with the same lazy "S" shaped guard. It to was said to hail from Afghanistan, however the handle was made of that horn and metal/other materials layers very often seen in the North and NE Africa and Yemen, bit of a mystery? I think this another, could you made anything as good denied of your wealth education and equipment just down the road in a shop. I like it. Tim
Last edited by Tim Simmons; 26th February 2006 at 06:04 PM. |
1st March 2006, 09:51 PM | #3 |
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I found the picture of the knife that was on ebay. Note the shape of the guard. Tim.
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3rd March 2006, 07:57 AM | #4 |
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Tim,
That last one reminds me of this one. It is an old Jambiya from my collection. n2s |
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