There is not much rhyme and reason to Afghani  traditional weapons. Tribes had their local peculiar features, to which even their own village armorers subscribed quite loosely.  And taking into account that  similar swords were manufactured across the country, up north in various emirates in what is now Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, other “stans” , India and Persia, by everyone with a hammer and an anvil ( or even a more or less flat boulder), the variability must have been enormous.   Indeed, some are straight, some are recurved, diferent sizes , widths etc. I have seen pictures of  contemporary Uzbeki bazaars  where similar items were sold from a knife stand as just butcher knives. However, a false edge you describe  is another non=traditional feature. Usually, these “ khybers” had no false edges. Would be nice to be able to see it  photographed.  How thick is the blade? It is a  modestly unusual “khyber”, but khyber it is. Age-wise it is likely between 1830 and 1930: not a lot of  cultural revolutions happened in that bizarre part of the world,,,, 
In general, better pics of the  different sides of the handle might be interesting. Is it wooden? Any losses? 
 
I have been to a couple of old British bars with Indian and Afghani swords nailed to the wall. Provincial Russian museums have no monopoly on such a way of assuring that the visitors would not hack each other to pieces. I do not think that this blade was ever mounted on a  “khanda” handle: the hole is quite  off-center and neatly drilled. I am with the nail croud:-), a
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
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