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Old 29th June 2017, 06:31 AM   #23
Gonzalo G
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Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Nothern Mexico
Posts: 458
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kronckew
again, it has the look of an 18c italian/spanish dagger or gaucho facon. could be anywhere from italy west or southern part of so. america.
Sorry, just to clarify: facones have only one edge, dagas (daggers) have two. Argentinians differenciate both. Gaucho daggers are usually very large, but I have not seen them all. Although this type of dagger is not usual in Argentina, it is not impossible it actually could be made there. But I have reserves on this. The workmanship on the handle looks as it could be made in Spain or Argentina, but the workmanship and style of decoration on the blade does not look Argentinian. Triangular blades on daggers are more common in Italy than Spain, and this dagger looks as designed as a weapon and not as a hunting dagger. It looks small and not robust enough for this purpose, but the pictures alone does not give us a precise idea of it's dimensions. Daggers also can be used to cut and not only to stab. Poignards are exclusively designed to stab. Just search the different ways the British commando's daggers were used to (the Fairbairn-Sykes dagger). Also, the scabbard does not look Spanish or American.
But all this gives us only probabilities, not a certain attribution.
Regards
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