Szilágyi András (szerk.): Ars Decorativa 15. (Budapest, 1995)

GERELYES Ibolya: Oszmán-török dísztőrök az Esterházy-gyűjteményből

tes, and inscribed with a Turkish couplet on one side and a Persian one on the other, which has a jade hilt and scabbard incrusted with gold and rubies. 16 (111. 7). The last mentioned two ob­jects, the motifs on the blades of the Esterházy dagger, and the quality of their artistic execut­ion show significant similarity, which may also indicate that they were made in the same work­shop. The hilt, hand-guard and scabbard of the Esterházy dagger represent a separate style in the sixteenth-century goldsmith's art - a style different from that of the blade. Two outstand­ing objects, both made in the workshop of the sultan seray in the second half or at the end of the sixteenth century, can be regarded as its closest companions. One is a ceremonial mace chased and embossed with rosettes, lotus flo­wers and sedge leaves on a punched back­ground and enriched with turquoises and rubies in appliqué settings forming six-, or eight-pet­alled rosettes. The other is a helmet with iden­tical style and decoration. Both represent a new trend in Ottoman goldsmith's art, one that has already broken free of the Persian influence ty­pical of the beginning of the century (111. 8). A great number of objects representing a similar style but enriched with incrusted jade or neph­rite, or - occasionally - emerald were made in Ottoman workshops during the early seven­teenth century. As an example, we could men­tion another piece from the Esterházy Collec­tion (Inv. No. E 60.8), a stiletto dagger decor­ated with incrusted nephrites and bearing the signature (tugra) of Sultan Murád IV ( 1623-40) impressed at three places 17 (111. 9). The hilt, hand-guard and scabbard of the Esterházy dag­ger described above can be placed in the same category. Summary: The dagger was manufactured in an Ottoman workshop. Its blade was not made before the second quarter of the six­teenth century, and followed Persian models. The hilt, hand-guard and the scabbard, on the other hand, were made at the end of the six­teenth, or in the first quarter of the seventeenth century. The other dagger introduced in present study has a hilt of black ebony, decorated on its whole surface with inlaid gold network. 18 The sections of the net are enriched with small turquoises, rubies and emeralds in rosette-shaped gold settings. The head of the hilt has a similar de­coration in the middle of the rectangles created by the net. Below, the midlle of the rectangles are enriched with small gold dots. The edges of the hilt are enframed by identical gold doots. The scabbard of the dagger is made of em­bossed, chased and punched gilt-silver, appli­quéd on wood. The front is covered with lotus flowers and sedge leaves on a punched base, creating a background for the three rows of al­ternating rubies and turquoises. The appliqué settings of the jewels form eight-petalled ro­settes. Seven of the jewels are missing (111. 10). The back of the scabbard depicts flowers and leaves arranged in cartouches that are con­nected with an "endless-knot" pattern. The back of the scabbard lacks the ring for hang­ing: only the fitting for holding it has survived (111. 11). The pressed, gilt-silver and embossed hand­guard ends in curved dragon heads, with parts missing from one side. The decoration is iden­tical to that of the scabbard, except for the eme­ralds embellishing the rows of turquoises and rubies: the stones are all held in strongly prot­ruding appliqué settings. One jewel is missing from the front and the back. The plain iron blade is a latter replacement. The scabbard and the hand-guard of the dagger were made at the same time and in the same style. It is identical in all respects to the dagger described previously, thus its date of manufacture can be placed in the late sixteenth or early seventeenth century. Analogies suggest that it was also made in Ottoman workshop. The ebony hilt groups the object together with Ottoman goldsmith's pieces of the early sixteenth century. The jewel box of dark jade, which is also decorated with alternating gold dots and jewels in rosette-shaped settings", indicates a similar artistic approach. The blade, the hilt and the hand-guard and

Next

/
Oldalképek
Tartalom