Dhal (shield)

Dhal (shield), from North India, Mughal period, 17th century, made of steel, gold, silk, leather, at the Royal Ontario Museum.

The dhal is a type of buckler or shield found in the Indian subcontinent.[1] They are nearly always geometrically round and yet they vary in diameter from about eight inches to twenty-four inches. Some are nearly flat while others are strongly convex or curved.[2] The edges may be flat or rolled back in the reverse direction to that of the curvature of the shield. Dhal shields were either made from metal or hide.[3]

  1. ^ Sristidhar Dutta; Byomakesh Tripathy (2006). Martial Traditions of North East India. Concept Publishing Company. pp. 97–. ISBN 978-81-8069-335-9.
  2. ^ Cameron Stone, George (1961). A GLOSSARY of the Construction, Decoration and Use of Arms and Armor IN ALL COUNTRIES AND IN ALL TIMES Together with Some Closely Related Subjects. Jack Brussel. p. 206.
  3. ^ DK (2011-08-15). DK Eyewitness Books: Arms and Armor: Discover the Story of Weapons and Armor—from Stone Age Axes to the Battle Gear of the Samurai. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-7566-8951-3.

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