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#1 |
Arms Historian
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Route 66
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The area of Masonic swords is notably vague in certain respects, particularly with those used ceremonially such as those held by the Tyler. While the regalia swords are well established with Masonic symbolism reflecting rank, lodge etc. that of the Tyler is not personally or specifically identified, at least in the examples I have seen.
By tradition, it seems that these swords are intended to have the wavy blade, but this seems superceded by instances where other types of sword with either historical, traditional or local importance associations take place as this key weapon to the lodge. In the U.S. there are various examples of Civil War sabres, rehilted versions with Mexican blades with 'Spanish Motto', presentation swords of military officers with significant service and lodge members etc. The rebated blade corresponds to many traditional bearing swords or swords of state in Europe and in England with these type blade tips....these are also similar to 'executioner' swords, which also are grouped with these type swords. Perhaps the squared tip reflects this type importance in use in a Masonic or fraternal situation, and as noted, would not necessarily have been marked. For those out there who are Freemasons, please forgive my speculative description of the Tylers sword in Masonic tradition, which is as close as I understand and hopefully at least nominally correct. Returning to Ron's observation on the thistle, possibly if this is indeed a Masonic sword, perhaps the Scottish Rite might be surmised? Last edited by Jim McDougall; 1st September 2010 at 01:09 AM. |
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#2 |
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Location: Sydney Australia
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Hi Jim
Another strong reason for my suspicion of it being Scottish is that it came from a Scottish home. In fact, it came from the home of someone with a Scottish aristocratic connection. Ron |
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#3 |
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Even though it was purchased along with some Masonic swords, I would forgo the Masonic attribution, and go to the reenactor's market on this one. Which doesn't mean that this sword wasn't used in Masonic rituals.
Due to the interest in the 18th century military reenactments all over the world, replicas, like this one, are made and sold by many sutlers, and have been for the last 30 years or so. http://www.re-enactmentshop.com/p_18th_century.htm http://www.gggodwin.com/cartgenie/prodList.asp?scat=10 http://www.americanrevolution.org/reenact.html My $.02 |
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#4 |
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HI Dmiitry
Thank you. I fear you are right. I've just found this item on google - identical to my hilt (see below). So this appears to be an exact replica of a Scottish small sword (the Auld Alliance – Scottish items often follow French styles). Which explains the thistles. The owner of this sword and the masonic swords I mentioned was named Hogg – a Scottish family long connected with the freemasons. I'd say it's a lot older than 30 years, however. The leather is old and brittle, broken in three places. The blade is heavily oxidised. It appears to be an old replica for a proud Scottish family. (A proud Scot - who'd have thought?) http://www.antiques-arms.com/catalog...er-pi-429.html |
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#5 |
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Yesterday I took this sword back to the man I bought it from and swapped it for a masonic sword. A horrible recently-made sword (it has a gauche Toledo blade and a yellow plastic handle under the wire on the grip.)
I don't even like masonic swords. But really - for me a poor piece of authenticity of any kind is better than a quality fake. This guy is an old man who doesn't generally deal in swords and for some reason yesterday he suddenly remembered where they had come from – a ballet company. So Jim was right. It was a theatrical item. A very well made one. I suspect made in the later 19th or early 20th century, and probably by a real sword maker. Certainly, the scabbard seemed authentic. This was not a contemporary re-enactment piece. You don't find many old replicas - not here in Australia. End of story. You live and learn. |
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#6 |
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Kind of late to the game in responding to this thread, but... in Wither's self-published World Swords, he shows this very similar pattern hilt (actually twice) in his smallswords section and attributes it to ca. 1760 (and later to ca. 1800). Cutlers often had established pattern numbers from manufacturers they offered to their customers, such as those Bezdek shows on pgs. 269-273 in his book on English (and Scottish) sword makers. It would seem reasonable that some patterns (such as this Rococo pattern) would have been more popular than others, whether it be for stylistic or cost reasons, the latter which would have been impacted by the use of cast hilts to meet the demand at the time. After all, what 18th C. gentleman worth his weight would be caught without his smallsword?
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#7 | |
Arms Historian
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Location: Route 66
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Nicely researched Chris, and well made points on the social importance of smallswords in the 18th century. It is quite true that all this fashion did call for a great degree of selection in the styles befitting the gentleman, and the cutlers did thier best to accomodate by cataloguing various styles and features to order. Many of these pattern books have been the mainstay of the esoteric quest for smallsword research, and would have possibly even been known to theatrical outfitters. Ron thank you for the kind note on my suggestion, and in my opinion even these kinds of weapons have thier own degree of novelty niche'. I recall interesting stories and even movies about the mid to latter 19th century travelling theatrical troupes, which had a history all thier own, as they portrayed classical and historical themes. I would guess that the unusually rounded tip on the blade would have prevented any accidental cuts on stage. All best regards, Jim |
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#8 |
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Hi, Jim.
Indeed, the rounded tip was no doubt useful. Good ballet dancers are hard to replace. ![]() On that point, there were several small indentations and marks all the way along the sword, as if it had been used in a mock sword fight. These only made sense when I realised it was a theatrical sword. Certainly, it made no sense at all when I thought it might be a court or masonic sword. Interesting, because I've not seen those kinds of marks on any real swords. And it just goes to show the way people imagine the way that swords are fought with is probably quite different from the way they were employed in a real life fight. No doubt the actors/dancers here engaged in a lot of knocking swords together and prancing around on stage, and very little true cut and thrust. |
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