Made around 1900 in Alwar, Rajasthan, for the tourist market.
40.5 cm
20.8 cm
Base 8 mm
Thickening at point 10.5 mm
Base 55 mm
At thickening 29 mm
443 grams
Rajasthan, North India
(Wootz) steel, iron, gold, wood, fabric, leather
Mid 19th century
Prior to 2019, Runjeet Singh
2019; Peter Dekker, sold to a a Scandinavian private collector
2024 Purchased back from collector
Description
A nice example of a north Indian katar. It has a strong and thick wootz blade with pronounced ridgeline between two hollow sections. The center is etched to reveal the wootz pattern, while the edges are burnished bright following the typical northern aesthetic.
Hilt
The hilt is decorated with thick gold floral scrollwork, most of it still intact. Where the hilt meets the blade, there is an unusual loss of gold. An inscription has probably been deliberately removed here.
Scabbard & tools
It comes in its original wooden scabbard, covered with olive green fabric. It has a silver endpiece and a leather belt wrapped around it with a golden damascened buckle. It has a separate compartment in the front that holds four tools, each damascened in gold, just like the katar itself.
The tools consist of two pairs of tweezers, a pin of square cross-section, and a chisel-like implement with an oblique head and a dagger-like hilt.
Condition
Katar and tools in very good condition, with only some minor losses to the gold save for the katar's base. Blade in very good condition, no edge damage, etc. The scabbard has some losses to the textile covering.
Provenance
The piece was previously sold by Runjeet Singh, see multi-tool-katar. I acquired it from a collector in 2019, and sold it the same year. In February 2024 I purchased it back from the collector, to offer to the market once again.
Conclusion
Katar complete with tools are very rare. Such pockets with tools are more commonly associated with the Nepalese khukurī, which often carried a flint striker, a little knife, and a tinder pouch, but sometimes also tweezers and other more unusual tools. See for example this trousse khukurī.
This is a good quality example in a rather good state of preservation, retaining all its original parts. The katar itself has a substantial wootz blade and lavish gold decoration.
Of a style often associated with Tanjore, the seat of the Vijayanagara empire.
With a very fine Nepalese blade, but kard-like hilt and scabbard.