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John, any guess where this is from? The dragon head looks Norwegian to me but the rest seems Asian. The blade is not sharp, i think it may have been for tourist sale.

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D ale which pictured unit are you refering to? The first one John posted was from a for sale web site. my pictures are from my basement. lol. 

Interesting thread, and I think the one thing we can all agree on is that is is just a tourist/ decorative dagger. thanks for all the input.

Ok, so now i used "Flysaa dagger" as my search and i found a few more slytly different but with the same horse or dragon profile, very distinctive, calling it Algerian. And also verysimular wire inlay decoration. 

I have to tell you, this is a favorite recent thread for me!  We have gone from knowing virtually nothing, to knowing the name of the style and possible origins.  Good Work Guys!

Ok, scratch Algeria. Ibe narrowed it down to a Morrocan Nimcha. Google it and I think you will agree. The few i found listed as Algerian were mistakes and one even said it could be Morrocan. Cool, I did not have a Morrocan knife uet, now I do. thanks I couldnt have done it without all your help.

Michael-I think  North-western Africa might be more appropriate. Algeria and Morocco are neighboring countries and I have found numerous examples from both countries. Here is one of the best explanations I have found-

  1. This dagger is most commonly known as a Moroccan "wedding nimcha". In this incarnation it is a tourist item or at best used in celebrations, weddings, etc... The blade is derived from the flyssa sword type from the Algerian Kabyles. The handle derives from that of Moroccan nimcha swords and another ellusive sabre simply referred to as "Berber sabres". Manufacture of the small, curved flyssas began after the 1850s for tourists and French colonists/troops, when the old sword craft became obsolete. These have been simplified and combined throughout the 20th century. The newest ones have very thin, flat blades cut from a sheet with drawings scratched into them. The older ones are thicker, have distal taper with better incisions and brass overlay. 
    These were often sold in pairs as ceremonial Wedding presentation knives or for other ceremonial occasions. From what I can tell, the wedding nimchas had opposing ornate sides, such as yours with one side much more decorative. The wedding nimchas were often cut from steel sheets thus having no blade grind to the single non-sharp edge.Here are a couple of pairs of wedding nimchas-
    http://www.antiquetribalarms.com/OI@@2015%23%23%23MICOS/01@%23%23%2... Also a ton of informative information on these

Michael- BTW, the red ornamentation on these was often coral or red sealing wax, yours appearing to be the wax version.

WEDDING KNIVES!  Wow, we need to pick up that tradition

They look like they are dancing. 

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