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  2. Tabar (axe) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tabar_(axe)

    Heavil patinated head and handle with traces of engraving. The tabar (also called tabarzin, which means "saddle axe" [in persian], Persian: تبر) is a type of battle axe. The term tabar is used for axes originating from the Ottoman Empire, Persia, India and surrounding countries and cultures.

  3. Mace (bludgeon) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mace_(bludgeon)

    Persians used a variety of maces and fielded large numbers of heavily armoured and armed cavalry (see Cataphract ). For a heavily armed Persian knight, a mace was as effective as a sword or battle axe. In fact, Shahnameh has many references to heavily armoured knights facing each other using maces, axes, and swords.

  4. Battle axe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_axe

    What made the Persian axe unique is the very thin handle, which is very light and always metallic. The tabar became one of the main weapons throughout the Middle East, and was always carried at a soldier's waist not only in Persia but Egypt, and the Arab world from the time of the Crusades.

  5. Category:Indo-Persian weaponry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Indo-Persian_weaponry

    Category. : Indo-Persian weaponry. "Indo-Persian weaponry" were weapons (artillery, swords, etc.) that were employed, and/or manufactured in Persia, the Ottoman Empire, India and other nearby countries.

  6. Aswaran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aswaran

    The Arabic word asāwira ( أساورة ), used to refer to a certain faction of the Sasanian cavalry after the Muslim conquest, is a broken plural form of the Middle Persian aswār. [2] However, the word aswār only means "horseman" in Middle Persian literature, and it is only the late Arabic term that has a more specialized meaning.

  7. Sagaris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sagaris

    The sagaris ( Ancient Greek: Σάγαρις and Σάγαρι) [1] is an ancient shafted weapon used by the horse-riding ancient Saka and Scythian peoples of the great Eurasian steppe. It was used also by Western and Central Asian peoples: the Medes, Persians, Parthians, Indo-Saka, Kushans, Mossynoeci, and others living within the milieu of ...

  8. Epsilon axe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epsilon_axe

    The epsilon axe is a type of battle axe named for its similarity to the Greek letter epsilon (ϵ). The epsilon axe was widely used throughout the Middle East, its usage spread from there and grew in popularity to be used in eastern Europe and Russia as well as the Nordic countries.

  9. Mughal weapons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mughal_weapons

    Tabar (war axe), 3. Eight Bladed flanged mace, 4. Tabar (war axe) and 5. Zaghnal (battle axe) 6.Sword Stick (at the time of Mughals) If the head was pointed and had two cutting edges, the axe was called a zaghnol, or "crow's beak". A double headed axe with a broad blade on one side of the handle and a pointed one on the other was styled a tabar ...

  10. Battle Axe culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_Axe_culture

    The Battle Axe culture, also called Boat Axe culture, is a Chalcolithic culture that flourished in the coastal areas of the south of the Scandinavian Peninsula and southwest Finland, from c. 2800 BC – c. 2300 BC.

  11. Saintie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saintie

    Saintie. Various staff weapons invented by the Indo-Persian to equip foot soldiers. The fourth spear-like object with the loop handguard from the left is a saintie. The saintie is an Indo-Persian parrying spear. It is a staff weapon that can be used both for offensive and defensive purposes.