Title: Flintlock Pistol
Date: 17th century
Location: Ottoman Turkey
Materials: wood, steel, ivory or bone, silver, gold or gilt-brass wire, gold damascening
Dimensions: 26cm (length)
Accession Number: MTW 1162
Other Notes:
The smooth-bore barrel is damascened in gold and bears Arabic invocations and a Persian distych punning on the word kundak (in the senses of ‘swaddling clothes’ and ‘gun-stock’, i.e. tiny but deadly). The ramrod is held in place by two silver bands. The stock, made from wood of the plane tree (Platanus orientalis, Ottoman, çinar) has an ivory butt-cap inlaid with gold or gilt-brass studs and wire, green-stained ivory and bone and silver rosettes, which bears a silver chain wrist-strap.
Seventeenth-century Ottoman flintlock pistols are rare outside the Turkish state collections. Among the few exceptions are one in Dresden, and two pairs in the Karlsruher Türkenbeute. There are also two pistols in the Topkapi Palace collection: one bears a tughra of Ahmed III (r 1703–1730); another, dated 1179 AH (1765–6 AD), is signed by its maker, Mustafa.
Bibliography:
D. Alexander, The Arts of War. Arms and Armour of the 7th to 19th Centuries, The Nasser D. Khalili Collection of Islamic Art, volume XXI, London 1992, cat.68, pp.124–5.
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