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#1 |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: FRANCE
Posts: 1,065
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Blade identification needed on Moroccan nimcha sword.
This Nimcha has a rhino horn hilt May be a member could tell me from which kind of European saber could come this Nimcha blade. Best CERJAK |
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#2 |
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Member
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Buraimi Oman, on the border with the UAE
Posts: 4,408
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Probably German blade See # 9 at http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showth...ghlight=NIMCHA for the same crosses and moon mark.
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#3 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Ann Arbor, MI
Posts: 5,503
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Usually, such blades with 3 rather narrow fullers are of local manufacture.
It also seems to me that just at the level of stamps the fullers become somewhat curved: heated for stamping? Kind of too crude for the Germans:-) |
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#4 | |
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Member
Join Date: Aug 2014
Location: Germany
Posts: 525
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Quote:
as a German I'm with you. It is a well known fact, that Kaskara-blades for example were manufactured in Solingen and exported to Africa. But they never had such poorly shaped fullers, never, even not in wartimes. Roland |
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#5 |
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Member
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Buraimi Oman, on the border with the UAE
Posts: 4,408
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Yes that is possible although what if this was straight originally and was hammered into a curved shape.
There is however, no unsharpened section at the forte supporting the idea of a local blade and I tend to agree on the crosses and Dukari moon styles being local... |
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#6 |
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Member
Join Date: Jun 2013
Posts: 2,145
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Well, I have seen a lot of "locals" and to me this blade is not local.
![]() Cerjak is it possible to know the length of your blade? Thanks |
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