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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Romania
Posts: 204
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And ultimately, from what century is this karabela sword
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Room 101, Glos. UK
Posts: 4,224
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Hard to say, they've been around a while. Mine is apparently early 20c where there was a revival of popularity & some officers carried them on parade. I'm fairly sure it's polish tho the inscription is in latin. Wiki, notoriously inaccurate has a listing https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karabela that indicated it's use in Poland to to the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish...n_Commonwealth but it as noted here was used elsewhere much earlier. Hopegully somone acn help pin it down.
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#3 | |
Member
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 936
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#4 | |
Arms Historian
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Route 66
Posts: 10,281
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Sorry the discourse was not more explicit, we got side tracked with the history of the form ![]() Actually these karabela sabres have I believe been pretty much regularly used in a parade or ceremonial sense since the end of the 17th c., which is why they have often been described as the 'national sword of Poland'. While it seems odd that a sword of apparent Ottoman heritage would be so chosen, but the victory over the Turks by Polish king John Sobieski III at Vienna in 1683 was one of the most significant in Polish history. |
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