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Old 11th September 2006, 06:39 PM   #1
Marcus
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Default anyone recognize this mark?

This mark appears on a Belgian-made Montenegro pistol, along with a Persian crest (http://www.mbi.ufl.edu/~papke/curios/Montenegrin06.JPG).
Thanks,
Marcus
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Old 12th September 2006, 05:16 AM   #2
David
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Don't know if this would be helpful, but crossed keys is often intended as a sign for St. Peter and can be found quite often in heraldry. There is a Danish one in this group that looks close to yours, but given the pistol's origin it is probably coincidental.
http://www.ngw.nl/themes/sleutels.htm
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Old 12th September 2006, 06:42 AM   #3
Pangeran Datu
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Hi,

Just my thoughts:

IMHO:
The two crossed keys (one for binding, one for loosening) is the symbol for St. Peter, gatekeeper of heaven in the Catholic religion. St. Peter is a very popular saint, hence the two keys are a common charge.
I am not familiar with a crown with five sections as depicted. The closest arms to that depicted is that of the Bishopric of York, England (AD 625).

Don't bother with the penny (joke)

Cheers.

Last edited by Pangeran Datu; 12th September 2006 at 07:09 AM.
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Old 12th September 2006, 05:47 PM   #4
Marcus
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Default It's a start (maybe)

Thanks for the link to the heraldry site. I tried to follow up to see if anything look particularily close in towns of either Belgium or Montenegro, but that is a pretty big data base. I did not get very far.
One fellow collector suggested that it might have been a maker's mark but I have also posted on a site that specializes in Belgian firearms and they have not come up with anything. Still a mystery....
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Old 12th September 2006, 06:03 PM   #5
Ian
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Marcus:

What is the mark beside the ones you show (keys and crown)? Perhaps there is more information to be had from this piece.

Ian.
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Old 12th September 2006, 08:32 PM   #6
Marcus
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Default Since you ask:

The pistol is a Belgian-made Montenegrian revolver. The link I provided above I believe is a 1913 date stamp below a Persian crest. There is a similar mark on broomhandle Mauser pistols that were sold to Persian around 1910 (http://www.mbi.ufl.edu/~papke/curios/persia.JPG). The other marks on the pistol include the usual Liege proof, and the typical Belgian Crown R (rifled) proof, as well as a "Crown L", "a Crown AM" proof and what could be a Star AL or HL. these later three are probably just inspection proofs with no special significance. The only words on the pistol are "VERO MONTENEGRIN". Below are links to pictures of the other marks:

http://www.mbi.ufl.edu/~papke/curios/Montenegrin03.JPG
http://www.mbi.ufl.edu/~papke/curios/Montenegrin04.JPG
http://www.mbi.ufl.edu/~papke/curios/Montenegrin05.JPG
http://www.mbi.ufl.edu/~papke/curios/Montenegrin08.JPG
http://www.mbi.ufl.edu/~papke/curios/Montenegrin09.JPG

By the way, for people who do not know the story of these pistols: around 1874 Nikita 1, the King of Montenegro, mandated that all adult males in his kingdom should be well armed, a novel form of gun control, and that each man should own at least one Gasser Montenegrin type revolver. At the time, Montenegro was part of the Austro Hungarian Empire, and most of the guns sold in Montenegro were made by the Austrian firm of Gasser, of which King Nikita was a stock holder. Supplemental guns were also supplied by several small Belgian manufacturers. Montenegrin revolvers fired one of the largest pistol cartridges ever designed, nearly 50 caliber, with cartridges an inch and three quarters long. The design of these massive guns was rather primitive compared to other contemporary revolvers, but nonetheless the national mandate kept them in production up until World War 1. However, I have never hear that they were imported in any number to Persia. Below is a link to a picture of the pistol.

http://www.mbi.ufl.edu/~papke/curios/Montenegrin01.JPG

Cheers,
Marcus
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