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Old 14th April 2020, 04:38 AM   #1
Bryce
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G'day GC,
I completely agree. The blade is by Osborn, I am not suggesting the hilt must also be by Osborn.
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Bryce
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Old 23rd January 2022, 05:39 PM   #2
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I've been meaning to add this one, also sold by Shiloh Relics back in 2020. A blade marked with O and G and something else. Looks like an 1803 type blade on a Bolton type slotted hilt eagle pommel.

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GC
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Old 23rd January 2022, 09:29 PM   #3
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G'day GC,
Thanks for posting this. The first stamp could be an O or maybe another G? Not sure what the other mark is.
I have discovered that prior to 1796, Henry Osborn was marking his blades with a crown over HO mark. Thanks to Henry Yallop, I know the royal armouries has several swords which have the crown HO mark on the ricasso and H Osborn stamped on the tang. These markings are found on swords of the type shown in the middle of the photo below. I also have an early 1796 LC officer's sabre with what looks like the same crown stamp low on the ricasso and have seen another 1796LC with a crown HO stamp. This leads me to believe that the change from the crown HO stamp to the G stamp occurred around 1796.
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Old 25th February 2023, 10:01 PM   #4
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the mystery deepens
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Old 25th February 2023, 10:13 PM   #5
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G. For Galle Ceylon,

the G mark was done like the Dutch company office marks?

British took over about the time frame in question.
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Old 26th February 2023, 06:35 PM   #6
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some coins, with G, with and without serif, seen some with S, some with I, some with number 12....
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Old 26th February 2023, 11:00 PM   #7
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G'day Joe,
Way outside my area of expertise, but the G on the Dutch klewang blade? you posted is part of a larger marking and unrelated to the G stamp used by Osborn. Hope someone else can shed some light on the use of the letters on the VOC coins.
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