Tabar (axe)

The tabar (also called tabarzin which means "saddle axe") is a type of battle axe. The term "tabar" is used for axes originating from the Ottoman Empire, Persia, Armenia, India and surrounding countries and cultures. As a loanword taken through Iranian Scythian, the word Tabar is also used in most Slavic languages as the word for axe, (e.g топор).

Persia
The tabarzin (saddle axe) (sometimes translated "saddle-hatchet") is the traditional battle axe of Persia (Iran). It bears one or two crescent-shaped blades. The long form of the tabar was about seven feet long, while a shorter version was about three feet long. What made the Persian axe unique is the very thin handle, which is very light and always metallic. The tabarzin was sometimes carried as a symbolic weapon by wandering dervishes (Muslim ascetic worshippers). The word Tabar for axe was directly borrowed into Armenian as "Tapar" (տապար) from Middle Persian "Tabar", as well as into Proto-Slavonic as "topor" (*toporъ), the latter word known to be taken through Scythian,  and is still the common Slavic word for axe.

India
During the 17th and 18th centuries, the tabar battle axe was a standard weapon of the mounted warriors of India, Afghanistan and what is now Pakistan. Made entirely of metal or with a wood haft, it had a strongly curved blade and a hammer-headed poll and was often decorated with scroll work. Sometimes a small knife was inserted in the tabar's hollow haft.