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#29 | |
Member
Join Date: Sep 2017
Location: Tyneside. North-East England
Posts: 577
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The earliest swordmaking centres of Europe were at Milan, Brescia, Toledo, Strasburg, Passau and Solingen. The distribution point was Cologne. The merchants congregated there to take their percentage and send the blades on in chests or bundles to be furbished in other towns and countries. If these 'Cologne' swords (as they were called), bore the mark of the 'Flying Fox' which guaranteed Solingen make, they were enhanced in value. The mark was not associated with any particular bladesmith (who always inscribed his own mark on the blade or tang- which is hidden in the hilt), but was granted to the Armourer's Guild at Passau by Archduke Albert in 1349 and was subsequently stamped on all Solingen blades as a mark of excellence. In those days the marking and stamping on the blades was witnessed in the market place. It would seem that the blades would already bear the Passau Wolf and the public stamping of bladesmith identity was done in public. Even so, if you are buying a chest of blades (how many blades in a chest?) you would be waiting around some time while each one was stamped. Last edited by urbanspaceman; 19th November 2017 at 07:41 PM. |
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