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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 1,060
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Hi,
yes, sword nr 5 is indeed Oakeshott Type XIIA, I described it as a precursor/forerunner of the type XVIIIC (actually not as a type XVIIIC.) Because it has a blade with a kind of wedge towards the cutting edge, caused by the concave, this really makes it like type XVIIIC a pure cutting sword. The mid rib of the type XVIIIC causes a similar kind of wedge towards the cutting edge. When the geometry and balance of this XIIa sword are improved during the time it can evolve into a cutting sword like type XVIIIC. The group XIIa was created by oakeshott some time after his classification , I believe with the publication of ROMS, before these 2 hand swords with tapering blades and longer fullers were (incorrectly) placed in XIIIa. Original swords with arsenal inscription and Tamga actually are not known, I am very curious about each example which has both. about the type of sword # 1 is also much Published, for example by DG Alexander-European Swords in the collection of Istanbul partII. Swords captured directly by the ottomans or recieved as Sultan gifts. Sword #1 is placed in group XVII ,according to DG Alexander it is not possible to know when these swords fell in hands of the ottomans, only for the simple fact that during the 2nd half of the 15th century many battles have been fought. An almost identical sword as nr 1 is in Topkapi Museum Istanbul under # A14793 best, Last edited by cornelistromp; 3rd April 2012 at 03:14 PM. |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 129
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Schiavona in the Military Museum Istanbul, grip replaced.
Best |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 129
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Fig. 6
This photograph, taken in 1889 by Abdullah Freres, shows another panoply of captured arms. The two swords dating c. 1400 are of European origin, captured by the Ottomans during their conquest of Alexandria in 1517. They bear the Arsenal inscription from Alexandria. The two halberds of the early 16th century are of German origin. The left one has distinctive features: The spike bears a small round mark, the blade has a small nick on the lower side (hardly visible on the low resolution scan), and the side straps are broken off at the fourth hole. Fig. 7 A German halberd of exact the same shape as the one on the panoply. This halberd is not only a halberd of the same shape and workshop, it is the one depicted on the panoply! It has exactly the features as the one on the panoply: The same mark, the nick on the blade, and the later added lower parts of the side straps are welded on at the fourth hole. It was sold some times ago at auction. Best Last edited by Swordfish; 3rd June 2012 at 07:03 PM. |
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 1,060
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yes it is indeed the same, very nice catch.
best, |
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 61
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wishful thinking but I don't believe this is the same halberd, the tip is broken off and the shape of the last serration at the back is quite different...
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 129
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The tip of the halberd 7 is a bit reshaped, the mark is not only at the same position, it is the same mark (only visible on the original scan of the panoply with a magnifying glass). The lower cog has a roundet tip (this was surely pointed when the halberd was new), the two cogs above have pointed tips.
What you need more? |
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#7 |
Member
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 61
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The mark would be the same if it's from the same workshop ?I meant the valley between the last serrations is different, you can't reshape that without adding metal. My apologies for doubting
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