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Tim Anderson
Location: Indiana Joined: 25 May 2009
Posts: 4
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Posted: Mon 25 May, 2009 1:33 pm Post subject: Can you help me identify this sword? |
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Good day,
I am in possession of an interesting sword I have not been able to identify...
It has a brass hilt, a lion's head pommel, writing (I believe it to be Arabic / other Persian) engraved on the blade.
I will attach pictures. Any help is greatly appreciated.
Tim
Attachment: 149.2 KB
More to follow once files condensed... [ Download ]
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Bennison N
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Posted: Mon 25 May, 2009 1:39 pm Post subject: |
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Looks INDIAN to me...
I've seen these ones before.
"Never give a sword to a man who can't dance" - Confucius
अजयखड्गधारी
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Sa'ar Nudel
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Posted: Mon 25 May, 2009 1:41 pm Post subject: |
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Judging only the hilt (from the photo) this is a contemporary turist market Indian saber.
Curator of Beit Ussishkin, regional nature & history museum, Upper Galilee.
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Tim Anderson
Location: Indiana Joined: 25 May 2009
Posts: 4
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Posted: Mon 25 May, 2009 1:44 pm Post subject: More pictures |
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Here are some more pictures...I know many are hard to see.
I think the writing is definitely a form of arabic though...
Thanks
Tim
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Sa'ar Nudel
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Posted: Mon 25 May, 2009 1:48 pm Post subject: |
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My identification stands. The script appears to be Sanskrit, not Arabic. I don't read it myself.
Curator of Beit Ussishkin, regional nature & history museum, Upper Galilee.
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Norman McCormick
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Posted: Mon 25 May, 2009 2:37 pm Post subject: |
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Hi,
In total agreement with Sa'ar, this is without doubt a modern tourist piece from India. I collect antique Indian pieces so have seen a lot of these sabres and variants thereof in my travels. Sorry for the disappointing appraisal.
Regards,
Norman.
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Allan Senefelder
Industry Professional
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Posted: Mon 25 May, 2009 2:57 pm Post subject: |
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These have been around in various gift catalogs since I was a kid, they made short and long versions as well as similar daggers and also more traditional disk tulwar hilts. I have a short sword with the horse head some place and the full size tulwar and both are secured with the brass nut. The horse heads came with a blue velvet scabbard and the tulwar hilts with a red velvet covered scabbard. Got 'em out of a catalog as a kid. Reproduction tourist stuff all the way.
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Bennison N
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Posted: Mon 25 May, 2009 3:12 pm Post subject: |
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It is Sanskrit. I'd need to see it all at once to tell you what it means. The punctuation marks in Sanskrit can change the whole meaning.
"Never give a sword to a man who can't dance" - Confucius
अजयखड्गधारी
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Tim Anderson
Location: Indiana Joined: 25 May 2009
Posts: 4
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Posted: Mon 25 May, 2009 5:13 pm Post subject: Thanks |
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Thanks for the replies...
Definitely surprising to me, though...I found it in Iraq.
Thanks again,
Tim
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Tim Anderson
Location: Indiana Joined: 25 May 2009
Posts: 4
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Posted: Mon 25 May, 2009 5:26 pm Post subject: You guys were right |
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Copy link below...great job...you guys know your stuff. I was just....um....testing you.
aka...Good thing I found it in the middle of nowhere Iraq and didn't buy it.
So does anyone want an awesome Indian replica sword?
http://images.search.yahoo.com/images/view?ba...=13f9hc3aj
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Hal Siegel
Industry Professional
Location: Austin, Texas Joined: 30 Aug 2003
Posts: 113
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Posted: Tue 26 May, 2009 2:02 pm Post subject: Re: You guys were right |
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Tim Anderson wrote: |
aka...Good thing I found it in the middle of nowhere Iraq and didn't buy it.
So does anyone want an awesome Indian replica sword?
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You can always give it to your favorite amateur belly-dancer, who will reverse the guard so it is upside down and then balance the sword on her head.
I've seen hundreds of these swords used/misued thusly.
Hal Siegel - TherionArms
http://www.therionarms.com
http://www.facebook.com/TherionArms
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