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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Ann Arbor, MI
Posts: 5,503
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Erlikhan,
Very astute observation! It looks to me that the blade is a tip of a saber (Bayonets are mostly straight, this blade is curved. Yes, I know some bayos are curved but I am talking probabilities here), while the scabbard and the handle were made out of the original scabbard.There are even traces of soldering on both. The decorations were added as an afterthought. In short, somebody took an old and broken saber and made this dagger. May be trench art, may be bored home-grown Assadullah. The bottom line, this thing can do the job! |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Bay Area
Posts: 1,660
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Sword is possible, but bayonet is not less likely. If you take a close look at the scabbard mouth of this piece, it looks like the brass mouth of a bayonet scabbard: you know, the leather bayonet scabbards with brass mountings. And if the trench art theory is correct, the rest could have been made from a brass shell. The crescent and the star appear inconsistent with the rest of the knife, and I think Erlikhan is right in believing that someone added them later in an attempt to enhance the value of the piece, which is an all too common phenomenon with unknowledgeable traders of militaria. Of course, we will never really know who made this knife and for what purpose, but to me at least it seems well suited to be a trench dagger.
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 210
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That scabbard is very odd for a bayonet. Most bayonets scabbards have studs or strap bars by which they are attached to their frogs; but, this thing has a ring, which would lead me to believe that it was intended to be suspended as a sword rather then worn directly on the belt. More likely trench art made from an old sword and a shell casing.
n2s |
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Sint-Amandsberg (near Ghent, Belgium)
Posts: 830
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Thanks for all the input, guys
![]() Erlikhan is right as to the six pointed star. In my hometown, there are many Turkish people and I never noticed that the star on their flag was five pointed. I examined the piece again and yes... the moon and star were added (soldered ?) to the grip. I also looked at some books concerning bayonets and the closest thing I could find which had some resemblance to the point of my knife was the blade of a French 1842 sabre-bayonet. It could also be made from the French 1866 sabre-bayonet 'Chassepot' which had a similar blade. ![]() ![]() Here are some additional pictures of my piece : ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Istanbul
Posts: 452
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Yes.Only Moroccans have 6 pointed star, but not together with crescent. looks like a yataghan type bayonet edge to me as well. Could be a sharpened and rounded chassepot edge perhaps, or Enfield, German??
The strange hand guard..Perhaps silly but no possibility it was originally the part from a nice bronze lamp, which is always used on the lamp-ceiling joints to conceal the cables and trash?? ![]() |
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Sint-Amandsberg (near Ghent, Belgium)
Posts: 830
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Yeah, I know what you mean about the guard. Could perhaps even be part of a candlestick...perhaps older than the rest of the knife
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#7 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: What is still UK
Posts: 5,843
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Does anybody know if Moroccan troops fought with the French, like West Africans did in WW1? That might explain Moroccan trench art. The guard looks like it has come from a French object. Tim
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