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Old 16th December 2020, 03:58 PM   #2
Jim McDougall
Arms Historian
 
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Route 66
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Originally Posted by daggpil
Hello,

I found this sword in an old collection and it is said to be a British sword of Mortuary type. I also believe that, but what can be said about it? Usual or unusual model? Is it worth something? Best regards/Ulrik (Sweden)
Yes, this is definitely a 'mortuary' sword from c.1640s. The term 'mortuary' is another 'collectors term' which is believed to derive from the face often incorporated into the motif which was suggested to be a death mask of Charles I. However these hilts were around some time before his execution in 1649.

These hilts seem to have been being produced most probably at the well known Hounslow workshops just outside London, or in London at Oxford and in about 1640, perhaps earlier as the Hounslow shops were begun c.1630s. While with Hounslow the objective was to bring in German blade makers to produce there rather than to bring in blades from Germany, it seems there was still a lively importation of German blades, which seems the case on this example.

While the Hounslow shops were taken over by Cromwell in the English Civil wars and the mills converted to powder mills, there was still some limited production of hilts and mounting there.

I am attaching my own example of one of these which is believed c. 1642, and I have believed quite possibly one of these Hounslow products.It is in similar condition and has a blade marked ANDREA FERARA, distinctly a Solingen product.

As an arms historian far more than collector, I deeply admire this rugged, virtually unhampered condition as the patination and often nearly relic state typically shows history itself in situ, and we can better see how these were in thier origiinal unaltered state.

As you can see by comparison with my example, there were degrees of variation in these 'semi-basket' hilts which of course depended on the cutlers making them.
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