Page 169 - ART OF THE ISLAMIC AND INDIAN WORLDS Carpets, Ceramics Objects, Christie's London Oct..27, 2022
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145
 A GILT-COPPER (TOMBAK) SHIELD
 (KALKAN)
 OTTOMAN TURKEY, LATE 16TH OR EARLY
 17TH CENTURY
 The domed circular body with a raised central boss
 and with pounced decoration in three bands, the
 inner band with row of palmettes, the middle band
 alternating with arabesque medallions containing
 split-palmettes and stylised cypress tree motifs,
 the outer band with alternating rosettes, ten rivets
 with rosette-shaped heads fixing to iron washers
 144  with attached loops on the inside, the outer rim
 pierced
 22æin. (57cm.) diam.
 144
 £80,000-120,000  US$92,000-140,000
 A DAGGER (JAMBIYYA)  €92,000-140,000
 OTTOMAN TURKEY, SECOND HALF OF THE
 17TH CENTURY
 PROVENANCE:
 The curved double-edged watered steel blade   By repute, taken at the second Siege of Vienna
 pierced by four rectangular and one circular   (1683)
 sections, three filled with coral beads, cross-  Pidhirsti Castle, Poland, by repute
 hatched at the forte with a red number '70' painted   London market by 2012
 on one side and '3819' inscribed on the other, the
 faceted hardwood grip of typical waisted form
 Tombak was prized by the Ottomans and was
 143  10q (26.5cm.) long
 widely used to embellish objects including parade
 £1,500-2,000  US$1,800-2,300  arms and armour. Whilst visually impressive and
 €1,800-2,300  luxurious the softness of the material makes it
 143  completely impractical for battlefield armour and
 PROVENANCE:  a shield (kalkan) such as this and this would have
 A JADE-HILTED DAGGER (KARD) WITH   London trade by 2015  been purely ceremonial, probably reserved for a
 SILVER-GILT SHEATH  high ranking official or member of the Sultan’s
 OTTOMAN EMPIRE, LATE 18TH OR EARLY   Sixteenth and seventeenth century Ottoman
 19TH CENTURY  guard. Other than shields, helmets, body and   145
 daggers are characterised by their small size,   horse armour worked in tombak are known. When
 The single-edged watered steel blade of tapering   faceted handles, and gently curving blades.   fully caparisoned the golden Ottoman army would
 form, the dark jade hilt with gilt metal bolster, with   These were frequently picked up on battlefields
 accompanying silver-gilt scabbard  have been a truly impressive sight.
 14qin. (36.8cm.) long  following clashes between Ottoman and
 European armies in the seventeenth and   The present shield is reputed to have come from
 £6,000-8,000  US$6,900-9,100  eighteenth centuries, and the inlaid numbers on   Pidhirsti Caslte in Poland as part of the spoils
 €6,900-9,100  the blade are likely to date from when the blade   taken from the retreating Ottoman army following   combined European forces at the Battle of Vienna   shield entered the Pidhirsti Castle Collection.   (S.C.Spiteri, Armoury of the Knights: a study of
 was stored in a museum or armoury. A similar   the Battle of Vienna in 1683. The battle marked   and had at a time stayed in the castle. The castle   Our shield belongs to a group of distinctive   the Palace Armoury, its collection, and the military
 Often attributed to the Ottoman Balkans, this
 dagger, also with the 'tears of Allah' coral beads   a crucial turning point and is considered to be   was later sold and then inherited by Wacław   form with raised ribs and pointillé decoration   storehouses of the Hospitaller Knights of the Order
 is an example of an Ottoman kard (A. C. Tirri,
 in the blade, can be found in the collection of the   the moment the tide of Ottoman expansion   Rzewuski, a noted military commander who   including cypress trees and palmette   of St John, Malta, 2003, p.317, No.O4). For similar
 Islamic Weapons: from Maghrib to Moghul, 2003).
 Furusiyya art foundation (Bashir Mohamed, The   into Europe was broken with the reconquest of   assembled a great collection of arms and armour,   cartouches. Suggesting the work of a common   shields sold at auction see Sotheby’s Amsterdam,
 A sword with a very similar hilt was sold in these
 Arts of the Muslim Knight, Milan, 2007, p. 167). A   Hungary, Transylvania and some of the Balkans   specifically in relation to King Jan III Sobieski and   workshop, other examples are in the Badisches   19 December 2006, lot 413, Sotheby’s London, 8
 Rooms, 12 October 2004, lot 54. Another dagger
 further example with an ornate scabbard sold in   soon following. Pidhirsti Castle had been the   the Battle of Vienna. Buying a great number of   Landesmuseum Karlsruhe (Inv.D16), the Askeri   October 2008, lot 235 and Olympia Auctions, 29
 with a similar hilt was sold at Bonham’s, London,
 these Rooms, Anon. sale, 10 October 2000, lot   home of Jakub Sobieski, son of the Polish King   Ottoman pieces taken from the Battle of Vienna   Museum in Istanbul (no.A.171 and no.A.181), and   June 2011, lot 120.
 23 October 2017, lot 146.
 212.  Jan III Sobieski (r.1674-96) who had led the   in 1788, it is probably at this time that the present   the armoury of the Knights of St. John, Malta
 166  In addition to the hammer price, a Buyer’s Premium (plus VAT) is payable. Other taxes and/or an Artist Resale Royalty   167
 fee are also payable if the lot has a tax or λ symbol. Check Section D of the Conditions of Sale at the back of this catalogue.
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