Ethnographic Arms & Armour

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-   -   A Strange knife (http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=21169)

thinreadline 8th March 2016 06:13 PM

A Strange knife
 
1 Attachment(s)
Any ideas on what this is or what it might supposed to be ( as I doubt that it is very old ) ? It is 26 cm long measured in a straight line.

fernando 8th March 2016 06:16 PM

Pictures ?

thinreadline 8th March 2016 06:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fernando
Pictures ?

The picture did not upload at first as it was too large, I have resized it and it is showing now.

Andi 8th March 2016 06:37 PM

I guess it is a modern knife such as the ones sold renaissance fairs

thinreadline 8th March 2016 06:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Andi
I guess it is a modern knife such as the ones sold renaissance fairs

Hi Andi , what is a renaissance fair ?

Rick 8th March 2016 07:30 PM

See link :)
http://kingrichardsfaire.net/

broadaxe 8th March 2016 07:38 PM

Crude replica of a Viking-style utility knife, with the handle bent the wrong way, a common mistake.

David 8th March 2016 07:45 PM

I have to agree. Modern beginners blacksmith knife. I doubt they were even trying to create a replica Viking knife so i don't see the design as a mistake, simply a creative choice. If this has been hardened well a bit of finishing work might make a nice knife out of this.
Anyway, more a subject for a knife making forum then what we talk about here. :)

thinreadline 8th March 2016 08:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by David
I have to agree. Modern beginners blacksmith knife. I doubt they were even trying to create a replica Viking knife so i don't see the design as a mistake, simply a creative choice. If this has been hardened well a bit of finishing work might make a nice knife out of this.
Anyway, more a subject for a knife making forum then what we talk about here. :)

Yes I entirely understand David, though I was not trying to stimulate such a debate, I only wished to know if ( whether modern or not ) it was a historic style of knife and if so when & where . I thank all respondents .

David 8th March 2016 08:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by thinreadline
Yes I entirely understand David, though I was not trying to stimulate such a debate, I only wished to know if ( whether modern or not ) it was a historic style of knife and if so when & where . I thank all respondents .

I completely understand as well. I didn't mean for you to feel that i was chastising you for posting this. You didn't know what it was when you did. I was merely pointing out that know that ID has been established i may be time to move on from the discussion. :)

thinreadline 8th March 2016 11:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by David
I completely understand as well. I didn't mean for you to feel that i was chastising you for posting this. You didn't know what it was when you did. I was merely pointing out that know that ID has been established i may be time to move on from the discussion. :)

Correct on all counts, no offence taken
:)

Timo Nieminen 11th March 2016 10:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by broadaxe
Crude replica of a Viking-style utility knife, with the handle bent the wrong way, a common mistake.

While these (with the handle bent the "right" way) are sold as Viking knives, Viking women's knives, etc., I don't know of any Viking examples. Others have asked this question and looked, but not found any examples.

There are apparently Scandinavian (Danish) Iron Age examples.


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