A JADE-HILTED DAGGER (KHANJAR)
A JADE-HILTED DAGGER (KHANJAR)
A JADE-HILTED DAGGER (KHANJAR)
2 更多
ARMS AND ARMOUR FROM THE COLLECTION OF HOWARD RICKETTS
A JADE-HILTED DAGGER (KHANJAR)

OTTOMAN TURKEY, 17TH CENTURY

细节
A JADE-HILTED DAGGER (KHANJAR)
OTTOMAN TURKEY, 17TH CENTURY
The gently-curved watered steel blade with ridge and minor later reinforcement by the hilt, the pale green nephrite hourglass-shape hilt inlaid on one side at the centre of the grip with rumi arabesques in gold, the pommel inlaid with scrolling vine motifs in worked gold and set with two pale turquoises and a ruby
13 ½in. (34.3cm.) long
来源
Acquired from a Private American collection, 1970s

荣誉呈献

Phoebe Jowett Smith
Phoebe Jowett Smith Sale Coordinator & Cataloguer

拍品专文

The basic hourglass shape, in which a narrow grip is flared towards the pommel and guard, is among the most widespread basic hilt form, with attestations from the second millennium BC across Afro-Eurasia (Salam Kaoukji, Precious Indian Weapons and other Princely Accoutrements, London/New York, 2017, p.113). This dagger hilt finds its most immediate precursors in the jade hourglass hilts of the first half of the 16th century, when daggers of this form begin to proliferate in manuscript painting, most notably in the Shahnama of Shah Tahmasp, completed in the 1530s. A dagger in the Wallace Collection, London, is fitted with a hilt that represents an early surviving example of this fashion, possibly dating from as early as the late 15th century (OA1414; Thom Richardson and Paula Turner (eds.), The Wallace Collection Catalogue of Arms & Armour from Asia, Africa and the Ottoman World, London, 2026, pp.228-9; Arthur Bijl, “A 15th-century dagger in its late Timurid context,” in K.D. Smith and Ruth R. Brown (eds) At the Sign of the Dragon: Papers to Celebrate the 700th Anniversary of the Armourers and Brasiers Company of London, Leeds: Basiliscoe Press, 2024, p.110).

Iterations of this fashion were seen from the Balkans to India with only minor variations and, judging by their proliferation in manuscript paintings, periodically returned to fashion over subsequent centuries. The revival of this fashion during the late 17th and early 18th centuries can be seen on another dagger in the Wallace Collection, consisting of a blade from the second half of the 16th century fitted with a hilt and scabbard attributable to the late 17th or early 18th centuries (OA1430; Thom Richardson and Paula Turner (eds.), The Wallace Collection Catalogue of Arms & Armour from Asia, Africa and the Ottoman World, London, 2026, p.360). The evidently precious openwork blade, richly-inlaid with fine islīmī tendrils and two couplets by the Ottoman poet Misali (Kınalızade Hasan Çelebi, Tezkiretü'ş-Şuara, ed. Ibrahim Kutluk, Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu, 2014, p. 246) is eminently suitable for a hilt style which by this period had acquired a classic status. On the present dagger, the blade is instead left undecorated in order to show off the very fine watered pattern. The fine rumi inlay on the hilt suits such understated luxury particularly well.

更多来自 伊斯兰与印度世界艺术品包括地毯

查看全部
查看全部