Combination Weapon thumbnail 1
Not on display

Combination Weapon

19th century (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Combination weapons were both objects of curiosity and showcases for the ingenuity of the maker. Many combination weapons combined the growing popularity of firearms with an already proven and familiar weapon design, in this case a katar, or punch dagger, a design peculiar to India.

In Europe and Asia from the 1500s there was an explosion of innovative and unusual designs produced to incorporate this new technology, often sponsored by heads of state. Henry VIII was an enthusiastic patron of new weapons technologies but their popularity seems to have been universal.

After the conflicts in India between the British and the French during the Seven Years War, new firearms technology was enthusiastically studied and adopted by many Indian rulers. This weapon incorporates the percussion lock mechanism developed in the early 1800s. Percussion locks were popularly used in sporting weapons because the detonating cap propelled the bullet faster without the delay, noise and smoke of match and flintlock guns which tended to startle the quarry.

The marrying of pistols with a close quarter weapon most often kept on the person suggests that the additional threat of assassination may have also been a consideration in its creation.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.
(Some alternative part names are also shown below)
  • Combination Weapon
  • Punch Dagger
  • Katar
  • Combination Weapon Sheath
  • Punch Dagger
  • Katar
Brief description
Punch dagger katar with a pair of pistol barrels on the sideguards, Lahore, 19th century.
Gallery label
(pre 1993)
Dagger with pistols: kutar-type dagger, blade decorated with foliated ornament in low relief, side guards continued into pistol barrels, one on each side of the blade, the triggers lying within the side guards, barrels unscrew & can be removed, hilt, side guards & pistol barrels of gilt steel, red velvet sheath; Lahore.
3448 I.S.
Credit line
Transferred from the India Museum in 1879
Object history
As originally arranged and displayed in Exhibition Road Indian Museum galleries until 1955, with some additions while in storage, case F.715
Production
Transferred from the India Museum to South Kensington Museum in 1879
Summary
Combination weapons were both objects of curiosity and showcases for the ingenuity of the maker. Many combination weapons combined the growing popularity of firearms with an already proven and familiar weapon design, in this case a katar, or punch dagger, a design peculiar to India.

In Europe and Asia from the 1500s there was an explosion of innovative and unusual designs produced to incorporate this new technology, often sponsored by heads of state. Henry VIII was an enthusiastic patron of new weapons technologies but their popularity seems to have been universal.

After the conflicts in India between the British and the French during the Seven Years War, new firearms technology was enthusiastically studied and adopted by many Indian rulers. This weapon incorporates the percussion lock mechanism developed in the early 1800s. Percussion locks were popularly used in sporting weapons because the detonating cap propelled the bullet faster without the delay, noise and smoke of match and flintlock guns which tended to startle the quarry.

The marrying of pistols with a close quarter weapon most often kept on the person suggests that the additional threat of assassination may have also been a consideration in its creation.
Bibliographic references
  • Egerton, Wilbraham, An illustrated handbook of Indian arms; being a classified and descriptive catalogue of the arms exhibited at the India museum: with an introductory sketch of the military history of India, London, 1880 p.131
  • Lord Egerton of Tatton, Indian and Oriental Armour, London, 1896, p. 131, Cat. No. 638
Other numbers
  • 638 - Egerton Catalogue Number
  • 8549-'55 - India Museum Slip Book
Collection
Accession number
3448(IS)

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Record createdSeptember 8, 2003
Record URL
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