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View Full Version : 18 CENTURY HUNGARIAN SWORD


VANDOO
21st July 2005, 04:07 PM
HERE ARE SOME PICTURES OF A INTERESTING SWORD SAID TO BE 18 CENTURY HUNGARIAN. IT IS 29 5/8 IN LONG OVERALL AND HAS A BRONZE HANDLE IN THE SHAPE OF A OTTOMAN SULTAN, POSSIBLY TO SIGNIFY THAT A HUNGARIAN HELD A OTTOMON SULTAN IN HIS HAND. THE SWORD IS NOT MINE UNFORTUNATELY WAY TOO RICH FOR ME, BUT IS WELL MADE AND INTERESTING ENJOY!

ariel
21st July 2005, 06:36 PM
Unless my eyes deceive me, the same handle was offered on e-bay couple of years ago, only then it was attached to a VERY different blade.... :confused: :confused: :confused:

not2sharp
22nd July 2005, 03:44 AM
That is a strange looking blade; could it possibly have been a sawback that has been removed?

n2s

ALEX
20th March 2017, 02:01 PM
Unless my eyes deceive me, the same handle was offered on e-bay couple of years ago, only then it was attached to a VERY different blade.... :confused: :confused: :confused:

Have you noticed this very sword just sold on eBay, also as 17-18C Hungarian/Turkish. The handle is crude and unusual to say the least, the blade is old but... what this could be?:)

mariusgmioc
20th March 2017, 04:05 PM
Hello,

The hilt appears to be rather crudely cast.

As with respect to the blade... well... it looks rather new to me. :shrug:

And other than the "turk" of the hilt, it doesn't appear to have anything Turkish. :shrug:

Jim McDougall
20th March 2017, 04:36 PM
It is good to see VANDOO pop up on a post here, as I always looked forward to his entries, miss him very much already.
As always, an interesting item, and well observed as far as the crudely cast hilt, which seems almost fanciful, and the blade which does not seem anything to do with Hungarian swords.

The blade seems potentially very mid to latter 19th century to me, and possibly one of the support units like pioneers, sappers etc. which may have brought the suggestion of saw back removal (N2S). The hilt is cast much like band swords in character.

Whatever the case, this was not anything Hungarian, nor 17th/18th c. despite the always (reliable??!!) online descriptions in these auction entries.:) and as Ariel notes, often hilts pop up year to year with different blades. Industrious and creative sellers.