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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Modern pesh-kabz with scabbard made in India. Blade: steel; hilt: buffalo horn and brass.
Pesh-kabz, 18th century. Blade: gilt steel; hilt: gilt ivory or bone, Louvre Museum, Paris France.

The pesh-kabz or peshkabz (Persian: پیش قبض, Hindi: पेश क़ब्ज़)[1] is a type of Indo-Persian knife designed to penetrate mail armour and other types of armour.[2][3][4] The word is also spelled pesh-qabz or pish-ghabz and means "fore-grip" in the Persian language; it was borrowed into the Hindustani language.[1] Originally created during Safavid Persia, it became widespread in Central Asia and the Indian subcontinent during Mughal period.[5][6]

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Transcription

Design

Most pesh-kabz use a hollow-ground, tempered steel single-edged full tang, recurved blade with a thick spine bearing a "T" cross-section for strength and rigidity.[7][8] In most examples, a pair of handle scales are fixed to the full-tang grip, which features a hooked butt. The earliest forms of this knife featured a recurved blade, suggestive of its Persian origin.[9][10] In all variants the blade is invariably broad at the hilt, but tapers progressively and radically to a needle-like, triangular tip. Upon striking a coat of mail, this reinforced tip spreads the chain link apart, enabling the rest of the blade to penetrate the armour.[7][8] One knife authority concluded that the pesh-kabz "as a piece of engineering design could hardly be improved upon for the purpose".[8]

The knife is typically used as a thrusting weapon also held upside down in hand with the thumb on the bottom of the handle.[11] However, the wide hollow-ground blade also possesses considerable slicing performance, and as such may also be used effectively with slashing or cutting strokes. Its ability to be used as either a cutting or thrusting weapon has caused more than one authority to erroneously classify the pesh-kabz as a fighting dagger.[4][7][8][12]

Pesh-kabz are typically around 40–46 cm (16-18 inches) in overall length, with blades of approximately 28–33 cm (11-13 inches). When compared to other similar knives with T-section blades and reinforced tips, the pesh-kabz is virtually indistinguishable, save for its length of blade. The kard or bahbudi (antiq.) has a longer blade (though still shorter than an Afghan sword such as the salwar yatagan)[13] and is considered a separate design,[14] while the chura, used by the Mahsud clan of the Pashtun Khyber tribe, is a slightly shorter version of the pesh-kabz.[8]

The pesh-kabz has a full tang and is traditionally fitted with walrus (دندان ماهی dandān māhi) ivory scales or handles,[15][16] but other examples have been found using ivory from the tusks of the rhinoceros, or elephant.[14][17] Still other knives may be found with scales of wood, agate, jasper, rock crystal,[9] horn, serpentine (false jade),[18] or metal.[8][10] The sheaths are typically constructed of metal or leather over wood, and may be inset with silver or precious stones.[4]

History

The pesh-kabz originated in Safavid Persia and is believed to have been created sometime in the 17th century to overcome the mail armor worn by mounted and foot soldiers of the day.[3] The term itself was first used to describe the front of a girdle worn by Persian wrestlers, indicating that the pesh-kabz was worn centrally as opposed to the kard and other blades which were worn at the sides. It soon spread to neighbouring Afghanistan and Central Asia before eventually being introduced to the Indian subcontinent by the Mughals. After armor ceased to be worn by modern armies, the pesh-kabz retained its utility as a close combat knife, and many Pashtun tribesmen, particularly the Mahsud, Afridi, and Shinwari clans, continued to use the design, along with the chura and kard.

During their period of colonial rule in India, the British frequently referred to all Afghan blades of this pattern collectively as "Afghan knives" or "Khyber knives",[13][18] after the Khyber Pass that marked the transition from British India to the nation of Afghanistan. In India, manufacture of the pesh-kabz was centered in the northern city of Bhera,[18] now part of Pakistan.

The pesh-kabz is still used today as a personal weapon as well as a ceremonial badge of adulthood for Pashtun and other Afghan hill tribes.

During World War 1, on 17 January 1916, the Maharaja of Patiala ordered a modernized version of the traditional knife fit for the use in modern war from the Wilkinson Sword Company. This exemplar combined a - straight - blade of the classic form with the hilt of a Lee-Enfield bayonet. Only 555 pieces were manufactured and none of these seems to have survived though there is a detailed sketch from the producers' archives.[19]

References

  1. ^ a b Shakespear, John (1834). A Dictionary of Hindustani and English. Parbury, Allen and Co. p. 471.
  2. ^ Byam, Michèle (1 April 1995). Arms and Armor. Dorling Kindersley. p. 34. ISBN 9780789458377. The pesh-kabz was a specialist dagger from Persia and north India, used mainly for piercing chain mail.
  3. ^ a b Lexicon of Medieval Knives and Daggers, retrieved 5 July 2011
  4. ^ a b c Shackleford, Steve, (ed.), Blade's Guide To Knives And Their Values (7th ed.), Krause Publications, ISBN 978-1-4402-0387-9 (1989), p. 406
  5. ^ The New Weapons of the World Encyclopedia. Macmillan. 21 August 2007. p. 28. ISBN 9780312368326. Pesh kabz, a dagger popular in Persia and Northern India.
  6. ^ DK Eyewitness Books: Arms and Armor. Dorling Kindersley. 15 August 2011. p. 34. ISBN 9780756689513. The pesh-kabz was a specialized dagger from Persia and northern India.
  7. ^ a b c Paul, E. Jaiwant, Arms and Armour: Traditional Weapons of India (1st ed.), Roli Books, ISBN 81-7436-340-8, ISBN 978-81-7436-340-4 (2005), pp. 67-70
  8. ^ a b c d e f Stone, G. Cameron, A Glossary of the Construction, Decoration and Use of Arms and Armor: In All Countries And In All Times, Portland, Maine: Dover Publications, ISBN 0-486-40726-8 (revised, 1999), pp. 493-494
  9. ^ a b Egerton, Wilbraham, (Earl), A Description of Indian and Oriental Armour, London: W.H. Allen & Co., Ltd. (1896), pp. 102-109, 130
  10. ^ a b Pant, Gayatri Nath, Mughal weapons in the Bābur-nāmā, Delhi: Agam Kala Prakashan, South Asia Books, ISBN 0-8364-2473-5, ISBN 978-0-8364-2473-7 (1989), pp. 60-68
  11. ^ Ayres, James (8 July 2014). The Tactical Knife: A Comprehensive Guide to Designs, Techniques, and Uses. Skyhorse Publishing Company, Incorporated. p. 365. ISBN 978-1-62914-116-9.
  12. ^ McNab, Cris (ed.), Knives and Swords, A Visual History, London: DK Publishing, ISBN 0-7566-5646-X, 9780756656461 (2010), p. 295
  13. ^ a b Hartrick, W. B., The Romance of King Edward's Swords, The Strand Magazine, London: Geore Newnes, Ltd., Vol. 30, July–December 1905, pp. 258-259
  14. ^ a b Balfour, Edward, The Cyclopædia of India and of Eastern and Southern Asia, Volume 1 (3d ed.), London: Bernard Quaritch (1885), pp. 162, 231
  15. ^ Ettinghausen, Richard, Studies in Muslim iconography I: The Unicorn, Washington, D.C.: Freer Gallery of Art, Occasional Papers, Vol. 1, No. 3, (1950), p. 127: The famous author and arms collector George Cameron Stone alleged that the custom of using ivory derived from walrus for knife hilts in the Near East arose because it was less likely to split than elephant ivory, while others, such as the Jesuit explorer Father Philippe Avril state that it was used because it was believed that walrus tusk had the property of staunching a hemorrhage.
  16. ^ Frederick, George F. (Ph.D.), Ivory and the Elephant in Art, in Archaeology, and in Science, New York: Doubleday, Page & Co. (1916), p. 238
  17. ^ Gemstones: Ivory, retrieved 6 July 2011
  18. ^ a b c Watt, Sir George, The Commercial Products of India, London: John Murray Publishers (1890, rev. 1908), p. 561
  19. ^ Frederick J. Stephens (1981), Kampfmesser: Ein illustrierter Führer zu den Kampfmessern und militärischen Survival-Waffen der Welt (1 ed.), Stuttgart: Motorbuch Verlag, pp. 172 (Inklusive Zeichnung), ISBN 3-87943-812-9

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This page was last edited on 13 April 2024, at 13:58
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