Turkic Auxiliary, Tang Dynasty-8th century Anxi Garrison 突厥辅兵♢安西




A Turkic auxiliary horseman in heavy armor serving the Tang Army, 8th century. He wears heavy Tang lamellar armor and helmet but carries a Turkic bow and saber, which were made of pattern welded high carbon crucible steel, generally with long slightly curved blades with one sharp edge and outward jutting guards. Many Turkic tribes served the Tang either as allies or directly as soldiers, some, like the Shatuo Turks even went on to claim whole provinces after the Tang disintegrated.



Heavy Tang dynasty armor. 

Map of the 10 major Jiedushi and their military strengths during Emperor Xuanzong's reign (as of 745 AD.) The Anxi Protectorate guards the Tarim Basin while Beiting Protectorate guards the north of the Anxi Protectorate. 

Agate rhython with strong Central Asian influence, according
to curators the cup was able to change color if the wine was 
poisoned. Currently housed in the Shaanxi Museum




Thank you to my Patrons who has contributed $10 and above: 
You helped make this happen!
➢ ☯ José Luis Fernández-Blanco
➢ ☯ Vincent Ho (FerrumFlos1st)
➢ ☯ BurenErdene Altankhuyag
➢ ☯ Stephen D Rynerson
➢ ☯ Michael Lam



Comments

kol said…
Have you ever consider cooperating with Kings and generals because
Unknown said…
curious fact, the curved blade used by turks made its way to tang china, influencing swordsmiths and from there to japan, remade and during the wokou raids and JAPANESE SWORD TRADE WITH MING CHINA one version kinda came back called wodao

What do you think about this?
Dragon's Armory said…
@Unknown, I think it's very likely. Traditional swords in China had always been straight, sometimes very long and straight. During the Han and later dynasties China was recorded to have very long two handed cutting swords.

But the curvature of the blade~ it serves horsemen well, gives extra room incase the initial cut missed its mark. So I very much think that the Tang swords were influenced by the Turkic people, or if not the Turkic people other steppe peoples.

Remember that the Japanese initially used these swords for heir horsemen as well. The first samurai were foremost mounted archers.
Dragon's Armory said…
@kol, I haven't thought about it before but I'd totally be honored, I'm trained in animation and After Effects so~ hey, if he's interested lol.
Der said…
Curved blades seem to be characteristic of cavalry fighting, being one handed operated, single cutting side, etc. So you would think straight double edged swords are characteristic of fighting on foot, but that doesn't seem the case. Why would Samurai use katanas, Chinese soldiers use daos and Ottoman Janissaries use scimitars?
Dragon's Armory said…
@Der, well the Dao and the Katana are both influenced by curved cavalry swords, the Tang sword influenced them both, or should I say Tang sword influenced > Japanese katanas > then influenced Chinese Dao by the beginning of the Ming dynasty.

Curved swords also gets carried over to the Turkish MENA polities, combined with Persian and Indian influences.
Unknown said…
I just discovered this site, so far it's a pretty good read
Dragon's Armory said…
I'm glad you like it, hope you stick around!
henrique said…
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