Marketplace
Dagger (Pesh-kabz) with Mother-of-Pearl Handle
Back to all artworks

Dagger (Pesh-kabz) with Mother-of-Pearl Handle

Amir Mohtashemi Ltd.

Period 18th century

Origin India, Gujarat

Medium Steel and mother-of-pearl

Dimension 37 cm (14⁵/₈ inches)

This dagger has a straight-edged blade with a T-shaped cross-section, and is decorated with mother-of-pearl plaques around the hilt. The plaques create a chevron pattern and are riveted to the wooden frame, while two pairs of silver bosses highlight either side of the pommel area. 
Pesh-kabz is a Persian term meaning ‘fore grip’ and these types of daggers can have straight or curved blades. Designed to pierce through chain mail, they originated in Iran and then spread to Northern India and Central Asia. For similar examples to our dagger see The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Accession Number 36.25.976a-c; and The Al-Sabah Collection, Kuwait, Accession Number LNS 1617 M, and illustrated in Kaoukji, p. 261, fig. 96.

Stock no.: A4836a

Period: 18th century

Origin: India, Gujarat

Medium: Steel and mother-of-pearl

Dimension: 37 cm (14⁵/₈ inches)

Literature: Kaoukji, S. Precious Indian Weapons and Other Princely Accoutrements, Thames & Hudson, London, 2017.

Discover the Gallery
image

Amir Mohtashemi Ltd.

Indian,Islamic and Cross-Cultural Works of Art

An unhandled error has occurred. Reload 🗙