Shamshir

A shamshir is a curved sword of Persian origin, with a curve that is considered radical for a sword: 15 to 30 degrees from tip to tip. It takes its name from the city of Shamshir which in turn means curved like the tigers nail. This sword was popularized in Persia by the early 16th century, and had "relatives" in Turkey (the kilic), Mughal India (the talwar), and the ajoining Arabian world (the saif). These blades all were developed from the ubiquitous parent sword, the Turko-Mongol saber. Shamshir at times was called 'samsir'; this is the root of the word scimitar which is now a more inclusive (though perhaps inaccurate) term. The shamshir features a slim blade that has almost no taper until the very tip. Instead of being worn upright, it is worn horizontally, with the hilt and tip pointing up. It was normally used for slashing unarmored opponents either on foot or mounted; while the tip could be used for thrusting, the drastic curvature of blade made accuracy difficult. Like Japanese blades, there is no pommel and it is not quilloned, with a very small handguard. The blade was attached by a flat slab tang with rivets to the scale grip. A shamshir is a one-handled single-bladed sword. It was similar in design to its contemporary, the Indian tulwar. For history see Dao (sword)

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
creighton, ontario
kielder water
lvaro de soto
tony ianno
nancy wilson
queen's flight
kill uncle
telesoftware
sorocaba
nancy wilson (singer)
nancy wilson (guitarist)
douaumont
coset enumeration
heathkit
arnold gehlen
grandia ii
george ramsay cook
votadini
fathom five national marine park
glass bottom boat
flag of the socialist federal republic of yugoslavia
computational group theory
ex pfc wintergreen
british mediterranean airways
grb2
languages of the caucasus
wilgefortis
rick stein
wally fawkes
lund cathedral
sensitive compartmented information
threading (grooming)
kleo pleyer
alliedsignal
admiral piett
low back pain
bishop of oxford
perfect circle
golden bridge
goa'uld
aurora gory alice
powered armor
beijing opera
tok'ra