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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 256
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 256
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How could I have forgotten?
A movie theater was literally around the corner from me when I was a kid. I went to see this (alone!!!) and stayed in the theater for 3 showings. I was 8. Thinking about it, it explains a lot. ![]() |
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#3 | |
Arms Historian
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Route 66
Posts: 10,193
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Absolutely, a great movie!! Theater that close would have been a real problem for me...probably would have moved in!!! While its great having movies etc available endlessly in our own homes these days, I really miss the big screen of theaters (and popcorn) ![]() In the small town in Texas where I live, the only theater is closed and the nearest is a considerable distance in the next city. |
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Apr 2017
Location: Sweden
Posts: 755
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As a child of
7-9 years old I developed a strong interest in history. My favourite TV series was “Once upon a time.” (See pic below) Maybe it partly triggered my interest. My grandmother also encouraged it. When I reached my early teens she gave me the best Christmas gift ever! She gave me the cavalry sword of her late brother who was an officer in Kungliga Norrlands Dragoner stationed at K4 in Umeå. That triggered my interest in swords. Sadly her brother passed away at a relatively young age from tubercolosis. She kept his sword all those years and then gave it to me when she sensed an interest. Now it proudly hangs on the wall in my study. |
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#5 | |
Arms Historian
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Route 66
Posts: 10,193
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If only our schooling of today taught history with any degree of dimension to kids, but thankfully these kinds of media venues provide the prompts to bring interest. What an amazing and personal story of this cavalry sword! and all the better as it belonged to your great uncle, which brought you into the history it had seen with him. To have the actual weapon(s) of family members who have literally been involved in history themselves is pure treasure!!! I'd love to see pics of the sword and him! It is amazing at what a comprehensive interest this brought to you, and the knowledge on swords in general you gained and share here constantly. Thank you for that and for sharing this. ![]() |
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: Sep 2021
Location: Leiden, NL
Posts: 553
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When I was a kid I had already caught the more general collecting bug, and I was obsessed mainly with the Suske & Wiske comic books. I collected every one I could find and in several of them they went back to musketeer times:
I was already starting to become a bit obsessed with swords around that time and I really wanted one of those cup hilts. My first one was plastic. Now I have this one: I still think of this as my Suske & Wiske sword. ![]() Eventually I started a sword-like object collection with a friend of mine around the age of ten that consisted primarily of this kind of thing: We used to playfight with these and they were pretty blade heavy. It's kind of a wonder we didn't bludgeon each other into the hospital. But that always had me wondering how those swordsmen could move those swords so fast in the movies, and because of that unwieldiness of those fake swords, I'm still very much fascinated by the feel of the weight distribution of various real swords and how big a difference that can make in their handling characteristics (which is why I am always a bit disappointed if a sword blade is loose when I buy it from abroad as it makes it more difficult to wave them around slightly). I was extremely jealous of my friend when one day he came home from vacation in Spain with a toreador sword and one of those Collada del Cid repros (we later did modern fencing together as an outflow of this shared sword fascination but I always found it a bit disappointing in how abstracted it was from the real thing and I was pretty terrible tbh; still, I should try my hand at HEMA some time). I'll add here a story I told recently on Matt Easton's youtube channel. My uncle had a sword he got in Nigeria (a takouba, I later learned) and I was of course obsessed with it. Here in the Netherlands we celebrate Sinterklaas with presents which have a poem attached and are sometimes wrapped in a kind of arts and crafts project of sorts. One Sinterklaas in 1993, I got one of a paper maché dinosaur and my uncle's sword! The poem told me to slay the dinosaur. Inside were tickets to see Jurassic Park (dinosaurs were another obsession). I got to keep the sword, and I still have it until this day. It's not sharp and it's not the highest quality takouba out there (and the blade is a bit loose in the hilt) but of course that one will never leave my collection. ![]() It took me another 25+ years to start a real sword collection. Last edited by werecow; 22nd January 2025 at 03:07 AM. |
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#7 |
Arms Historian
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Route 66
Posts: 10,193
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Very good points about the balance of swords and the impact of awkward weight and balance in wielding the reproductions in many cases, or the fantasy types. I recall in years later when I took fencing...my dad grumbled, 'oh good, something you can always use!'
![]() We exercised for quite a while before we ever began using the blades, and it was surprising how quickly you could be spent in many forms of these combats. With kids using 'real' swords playfully (this often accounts for many of the supposed combat nicks in blades) I can recall once I had been asked about a sword a guy had, and I called him to tell him it was a Caucasian shashka. He had no idea what it was, and then asked, well what is it worth? I told him.......he gasped and looked out at his young sun whacking away at weeds and brush with it in the backyard, instantly screaming....AUUUGHHH! STOP IT AND BRING THAT SWORD IN HERE , NOW!!! Werecow, FANTASTIC cuphilt BTW!!!! |
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#8 | |
Member
Join Date: Apr 2017
Location: Sweden
Posts: 755
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Last edited by Victrix; 2nd March 2025 at 06:31 PM. |
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