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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: England
Posts: 373
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Hi guys, I came across another, here is the hilt;
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: East Sussex, England.
Posts: 103
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Hello Simon,
I'm pretty sure that the hilt isn't from a British P1796. The guard is very lightweight and not particularly well made. I would say that the sword is of German manufacture. Ian |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: England
Posts: 373
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Hello Ian,
Thanks for you observation, however my Dawes of Birmingham 1796 LCS also has a comparatively lightweight hilt; And why the 1853 pattern blade? so perhaps Michael has a point? |
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: East Sussex, England.
Posts: 103
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Hello Simon,
Can you see where the cross guard joins the knuckleguard? On the hilt of your sword this appears to be bent to this shape very similar to many swords that I have seen from the German states. On a British P1796 officer's sword this junction is almost at right angles and has a re-enforcing piece. On a troopers' sword this junction is the same without the re-enforcing piece. If you look at the hilt on your Dawes sword you will see what I mean. The ferrule and thereby the grip are also much too narrow. I have owned many and still own five British P1796 sabres and I am very confident that your sword doesn't have a British P1796 hilt. Are there any markings on the blade? Ian |
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Nipmuc USA
Posts: 508
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I am in no way an expert on P shaped hilts but I do read many maybe going by a basic profile and thinking it must be a 1796 hilt.
The top sword looks like a late Prussian artillery sword and the second by Simon also late and maybe infantry and of the continent. http://www.deutsches-blankwaffenforu...nwaffen-2.html Just a few there and I'm sure more on Old Swords for browsing http://zietenhusar.de/blankwaffen/ http://www.militaria-web.de/ Cheers GC |
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: East Sussex, England.
Posts: 103
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Hello Glen,
I think that the 2nd sword of Simons is a composite sword. It has a British officer's P1976 hilt painted black and it has lost its quillon and has had a very basic wooden grip fitted to it with screws through the 'ears' instead of a rivet. The hilt, with its faceted ferrule and swept 'ears' could possibly be made by Osborn. The blade doesn't look original to the hilt and is possibly a P1796 trooper's blade. If the blade is marked with 'Dawes, Birmingham' on the back edge I am 99% sure that it is a trooper's blade. Ian |
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#7 |
Member
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Nipmuc USA
Posts: 508
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Simon posted three images and I was regarding the first two, as opposed to the comma eared 1796 hilt. The two above that one don't look to be 1796 at all to me but what do I know ?8^)~
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