Indian Edged Weapons in the Prince of Wales Museum
- Moin.
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Re: Indian Edged Weapons in the Prince of Wales Museum
Now for some very very interesting hilt types
I was so intrigued by this first sword. What appears to be the entire timur dynasty on the blade. The pics is not very clear and mum could not read the inscriptions.
I was so intrigued by this first sword. What appears to be the entire timur dynasty on the blade. The pics is not very clear and mum could not read the inscriptions.
In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer. Camus
- Moin.
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Re: Indian Edged Weapons in the Prince of Wales Museum
Lollzzz Bhau, lets discuss when we meet. need better quality close ups. My mum's 60 and she has a weak eyesight... Kelwe ??airgun_novice wrote:Dear Moin,
BTW, I first read the plaque as "Faulad par sone ki peechkari" - and I was like "WOW"
It's indeed a six-pointed star (not the 5-pointed "Path of Venus") - plus what's written inside in Farsi would be interesting. For some reason I wish our school Hindi teacher, Shri Tripathi were alive - he was a master of Urdu, Arabic and Farsi but still taught Hindi at our high school level. Most of us never realized his worth when he was alive.
Anyway, now that the star is indeed 6-pointed we are back to square one - Jewish gift or Rajput dowry ? Depiction of moustached Sun with "U-shaped" Vishnu/ Aditya tilak => definitely Indian.
Dear Brihji/ Slingshot/ SD/ Moin,
We - the IFG CMG have to stop talking in terms of CB and CM lest someone think it's some new missile we are discussing about... BTW, someone ran away from "raan" and someone only said "How D'ya" -
Boy! Am I hungry! And yet all set for the Decathlon...
In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer. Camus
- Moin.
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Re: Indian Edged Weapons in the Prince of Wales Museum
essdee1972 wrote:Moin, I don't think me + SLR + tripod can better you + cellphone!! Awesome, man!!
AGN, what an analysis, just looking at the photos!!! I think we'll have to schedule 2-3 days at CSVS - Day 1 - photography, Day 2 - Moin gives a who's who presentation (for me, the only shape I instantly recognise is a Khukri!!), Day 3 - AGN lectures on the likely historical significance of the swords, shields, etc.
Thank you Sdda, but I know little to do this. I'm waiating for Katanaji to analayse the pics and comment.
Katanaji where art thou !!
In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer. Camus
- Moin.
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Re: Indian Edged Weapons in the Prince of Wales Museum
Thank you so much for the compliment VikramVikram wrote:Moin,my man, you did a fantastic job with this thread. Thank you very much for treating us to this historical treasure.Very educative and hugely enjoyable.
Best-
Vikram
Regards
Moin.
In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer. Camus
- xl_target
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Re: Indian Edged Weapons in the Prince of Wales Museum
Wah! Wah! Moin
What an incredible job.
Thanks for taking the time to take and share those images with us.
What an incredible job.
Thanks for taking the time to take and share those images with us.
“Never give in, never give in, never; never; never; never – in nothing, great or small, large or petty – never give in except to convictions of honor and good sense” — Winston Churchill, Oct 29, 1941
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Re: Indian Edged Weapons in the Prince of Wales Museum
Wounderful stuff Moin, been there so often but never had such a detailed insight. They also have a small collection of T'subas (hope I got that right) which are the guards on the samurai swords.
THE MORE YOU SWEAT IN PEACE, THE LESS YOU BLEED IN WAR.
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Re: Indian Edged Weapons in the Prince of Wales Museum
My dear fellow, you have truly outdone yourself! This should be made a sticky, and you Mumbai wallas should get him a keg of beer ( Or whatever he drinks ).Or get him something nice.
Mods - Do you still hand out poster of the month awards? Now would be the time.
Mods - Do you still hand out poster of the month awards? Now would be the time.
I would rather hit my target gently than miss hard.
- Moin.
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Re: Indian Edged Weapons in the Prince of Wales Museum
Sosun Patas
Notice the "T" Spine in all the Patas
Notice the "T" Spine in all the Patas
In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer. Camus
- Moin.
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Re: Indian Edged Weapons in the Prince of Wales Museum
The most amazing hilts in these display panels
This appears to be of solid silver with kundankaari work
The most amazing hilt ever !!!!!
This appears to be of solid silver with kundankaari work
The most amazing hilt ever !!!!!
In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer. Camus
- Moin.
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Re: Indian Edged Weapons in the Prince of Wales Museum
Swords by famous bladesmiths. Their names and makers marks are mentioned on the cartouches
Beautiful Damascus pattern, wish I had a good camera to cpature the detail !!
In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer. Camus
- Moin.
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Re: Indian Edged Weapons in the Prince of Wales Museum
Misc.
In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer. Camus
- Moin.
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Re: Indian Edged Weapons in the Prince of Wales Museum
Various Kataars, Jambiyas, Chilanums and Khanjaralis
This is a Chilanum
This is a Chilanum
In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer. Camus
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Re: Indian Edged Weapons in the Prince of Wales Museum
Katana is currently travelling.
He shuld be online day after.
He shuld be online day after.
To Excellence through Diligence.
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Re: Indian Edged Weapons in the Prince of Wales Museum
Some of the swords r Saif ,goliya and khandas the khukri type r known in many names .Khukri type I was offered in Patiala similarly original tegha and Khanjars r awesome in spears one big blade spear is Karpa Barcha nagani spear u can find in plenty in Anandpur Saheb .Emperor Aurangzeb was known for skills in use of Golya or circular type sword this was known as royal sword as was worn by high offcials and kings it was a purely Mughal weapon .Khanda seems to be Rajput Khanda while sikh Khanda is always broader.Karpa Spear or wrist shaped spear r same but snakeshaped spear is chense or mangol weapon it is very lethal.Katars r purely Rajput weapon but agin sikh katars r broader these r differences.
- Moin.
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Re: Indian Edged Weapons in the Prince of Wales Museum
Qajar Persian Jambiya Dagger Walrus/Ivory Hilt
The seal on the middle eastern Jambiya looks Roman to me ??? An old coin perhaps or left over from the crusades
A beautiful Pesh Kabz
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pesh-kabz
This is a Kard Knife
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kard
This appears to be like a Roman Gladius Sword but with Arabic inscriptions !!!
In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer. Camus