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#1 |
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Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Kent
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Hi Glen,
thanks for the reply ...here is a better picture of the pommel. To me it looks like a nut but the tang could have been peened over the finial (after passing through it) and due to the fact they are both steel could, with the effect of age/rust etc become almost invisible ? Another picture provided by Marc on SFI ![]() Best Regards David |
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#2 |
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Trying to find the significance of the 5 balled knuckleguard .....I found on Wiki (
![]() I also read that this ball feature is more common on Infantry swords.........stylised musket balls ?? Kind Regards David |
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#3 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Nipmuc USA
Posts: 514
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![]() Quote:
I prefer beaded as a terminology and more apt for a lot of hilts. It might make more sense to continue that old thread than add it to this one but here are some more cause to pause. They are not just found on infantry swords but the spadroons probably most recognized. Artillery, naval examples as well. I have pretty much summed up my thoughts there but would point out that Wiki articles are really no more than a start and much more information can be found in dealer listings as well as books. Musket balls you say ![]() Someone that could produce the first use of the term five ball might warrant a meritorious certificate of rightness ![]() Cheers GC |
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#4 |
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Thanks Glen,
my knowledge in these types of sword is, shall we say, limited ![]() ![]() Kind Regards David |
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#5 |
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Location: Nipmuc USA
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How odd ?8^)~ There are just two in the one I posted above.
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#6 |
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Hi Glen,
Sorry for the late reply. My main area of collecting is ethnographic ....where decorative elements are often symbolic or talismatic. These decorative features often aid dating, origins etc and subtle differences can equate to a difference of many years or origins a thousand mile apart. The hilt with the 'disc' shaped sections of the knucklebow and the other with the elongated 'bead' with a ball at either end, which you mentioned are not even subtly different to the usual 5 'balled' or 'beaded' decoration that I am refering to.....so agreed 'odd'. My question was about the decorative (or symbolic) grouped 'beaded' design, usually 5 in a row .....either with beads of equal size or those which graduate in size ie smaller at the ends, increasing in size to the middle. This design seems to have travelled to a number of countries....some of which were enemies. To my mind this suggests some symbolic, talismatic or religious meaning. ![]() Kind Regards David |
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#7 |
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Continuing the possibillity of a religious meaning to the 5 beaded design....
The basic 'unit' of the Rosary is 5 .....simplistic ...but beads and 5 ![]() ![]() I am sure there are many possible interpretations , assuming there is one at all. If originally symbolic perhaps the meaning later 'forgotten' and later designs 'just based' on the earlier one ![]() |
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