LOT 359 Ottoman Inscribed Pattern-Welded Yataghan Sabre
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c.1800 AD. A pattern-welded 'damascened' single-edged T-section blade with swept profile, guard with quadrant profile with rosettes, antler grip with projecting ears; silver-inlaid name panel to one face, with silver-inlaid arabesque panel to the other; blade inscribed with the Arabic year '1172'; silver maker's mark and inscription either side of the blade. See Nicolle, D., Armies of the Ottoman Empire 1775-1820, London, 1998; Tirri, A.C., Islamic Weapons: Maghrib to Moghul, Indigo, 2003. 650 grams, 79.5cm (31 1/2"). Collection of a London gentleman; acquired 1970s. The yataghan is a long knife or short sabre that lacks a guard for the hand at the juncture of blade and hilt, and that ually has a double-curve to the edge and an almost straight back. It was one of the favoured side-arms of the Janissary infantry regiments. Yataghans were carried by the Zeibeks, who lived on the Ionian coast, around Smyrna.
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