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Mughal Gem Set Jade Hilted Khanjar
The khanjar is a double-edged dagger with a slightly recurved blade and a pistol grip hilt. The distinctive pistol-grip can be traced to the southern Deccan, where it developed from hilts in the shape of parrot heads.1 No weapons with a pistol grip hilt appear in the Windsor Padshah-nama, considered the best source for weaponry of Shah Jahan’s reign, suggesting that they were popularised during the reign of Shah Jahan’s successor, Aurangzeb (r. 1658-1707).2
This khanjar has an unusual hilt with alternating silver and gold chevron inlay. Each side of the pommel is set with a roundel of rubies and emeralds around a rose cut diamond, perhaps designed to emulate the eyes of a parrot. Between these ‘eyes’ is a smaller, oval-shaped medallion of rubies and emeralds around a teardrop diamond.
The double-edged watered steel blade is carved at forte with an arabesque.
A khanjar with a very similar hilt, featuring jade inlaid with silver chevrons and a jewelled roundel at the pommel, is published in Robert Hales’ Islamic and Oriental Arms and Armour and dated to the 18th century.3
[1] Welch, Stuart Cary (ed.) India: Art and Culture 1300-1900. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1985, p. 178.
[2] Ibid.
[3] Hales, Robert. Islamic and Oriental Arms and Armour. London: Robert Hales C. I. Ltd., 2013. p. 22 cat. 55.
This khanjar has an unusual hilt with alternating silver and gold chevron inlay. Each side of the pommel is set with a roundel of rubies and emeralds around a rose cut diamond, perhaps designed to emulate the eyes of a parrot. Between these ‘eyes’ is a smaller, oval-shaped medallion of rubies and emeralds around a teardrop diamond.
The double-edged watered steel blade is carved at forte with an arabesque.
A khanjar with a very similar hilt, featuring jade inlaid with silver chevrons and a jewelled roundel at the pommel, is published in Robert Hales’ Islamic and Oriental Arms and Armour and dated to the 18th century.3
[1] Welch, Stuart Cary (ed.) India: Art and Culture 1300-1900. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1985, p. 178.
[2] Ibid.
[3] Hales, Robert. Islamic and Oriental Arms and Armour. London: Robert Hales C. I. Ltd., 2013. p. 22 cat. 55.
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