- A
karabela was a type of
Polish sabre (szabla) po****r in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.
Polish fencer Wojciech Zabłocki
defines a
karabela as a decorated...
-
karabela entered service around 1670. A
karabela was a type of
szabla po****r in the Polish–Lithuanian
Commonwealth in the 1670s. The word "
karabela"...
-
bedding without a
karabela, don't
leave your bed
without an obuch"). It was a
common secondary weapon to a
Polish sabre (
karabela).
Polish Renaissance...
-
Patag (sword)
Pichangatti Pinutí
Pirah Ram-dao
Rhomphaia Sabre Dusack Karabela Shashka Swiss sabre Szabla Turko-Mongol
sabre Scimitar Arab
sword Kilij...
- Basket-hilted
sword Colichemarde Cutl**** Dirk
Dusack Executioner's
sword Karabela Katzbalger Sgian-dubh
Swiss degen Szabla Early modern fencing Feder Rapier...
-
Hungarian hussar cavalry after 15th century.
Around 1670, the
karabela (from
Turkish word
karabela:
black bane) evolved,
based on
Janissary kilij sabres; it...
-
Nikolaos "Nikos"
Karabelas (Gr****: Νίκος Καράμπελας; born 20
December 1984) is a Gr****
former footballer who pla**** as a left back.
Karabelas made his debut...
- weapon,
possibly inspired by
Hungarian or
wider Turco-Mongol warfare. The
karabela was a type of
szabla po****r in the late 17th century, worn by the Polish–Lithuanian...
- al-Rawandi
became a free
thinker and
repudiated Islam and
revealed religion.
Karabela,
Mehmet (2014). Kalin,
Ibrahim (ed.). The
Oxford Encyclopedia of Philosophy...
-
called kontusz, knee-high boots, and
carried a
szabla (sabre),
usually a
karabela.
Moustaches were also po****r, as well as
decorative feathers in men's...