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The "River Thames Sword" and Other Oakeshott Type XVII Swords
An article by Björn Hellqvist, with contributions by Peter Johnsson
"A long, slender blade acutely tapering. Many are reminiscent of 16th century blades, but others are nearly as broad at the hilt ( Going by the dimensions of the confirmed examples in his book Records of the Medieval Sword, the Type XVII blades averaged 34" (86.5 cm) in length, not counting the tang (nine blades, range 30"-38"/76.2-96.5 cm). The blades were fitted to relatively long-gripped hilts, which allowed for both hands to be used, either by one hand on the grip and the other gripping the pommel, or by both hands on the long grip. This made possible more powerful thrusts, as well as better control. The variation in size and mass is interesting. Some are big, heavy and long-bladed weapons weighing c. 2 kilos, probably demanding both hands for full control, while others are more like long-gripped single hand swords (at almost half that weight). Some have blades that are very similar to some later hexagonal sectioned cut and thrust swords, being slim and agile. Others are really the "sharpened bars of steel" as Oakeshott puts it. The handsome ones are very knightly in character; stark, simple and uncompromising. As the blades are typically very stiff, they have a lot of authority and can be balanced to achieve a high degree of point control. A Look at Three Swords Danish antiquarian Ada Bruhn Hoffmeyer's book on fellow Dane E. A. Christensen's collection, Gammelt jern ("Old Iron") shows three Type XVII's, here illustrated to scale, which can serve as examples of the type. The pommel is disc-shaped and flat. The crossguard is straight and increases in thickness towards the ends. The blade is 101 cm long, 4.5 cm wide, evenly tapering, with a shallow fuller in the first third. In the blade are faint traces of an inlaid latten mark. Earth find from Alsace. The pommel is disc-shaped and flat. The crossguard is straight and increases in thickness towards the ends. The blade is 101 cm long, 4.5 cm wide, evenly tapering, with a shallow fuller in the first third. In the blade are faint traces of an inlaid latten mark. Earth find from Alsace. Heavy pommel, diameter about 5.2 cm, with pyramidal rivet block. The crossguard is straight, around 17.5 cm long, with slightly thickened ends. The tang is around 20 cm long and slender: widest in the middle. The blade is narrow, evenly tapering in width: 101 cm long and 3.5 cm broad at the base with a short fuller. Fencing With Type XVII's
What is often overlooked is the effect a high degree of stiffness will have on cutting/cleaving. It is possible to make a sword true to the character of Type XVII and still get it to present some serious cutting power. If the target is difficult to cut to begin with, your effort will be wasted on slim edge geometries. Instead, you have to work with the dynamic handling characteristics of the sword (distribution of mass, inertia and dynamic balance). A thicker blade can have the same final sharpening angle as the thinner sword but will have more material behind the edge to back it up. This is not the best edge geometry for cutting light or yielding targets, but a thicker section is less of a problem when hitting armour and hard targets. The effect is a weapon with a slim Gothic outline that delivers heavy blows and precise thrusts. It can be swung on a bascinet without too great a risk of it breaking, probably not cleaving the helm, but surely stunning the poor guy inside. The "River Thames Sword" Measurements and Specifications: Overall length: 1194 mm (47") Blade length: 927.5 mm (36.5") Blade width (at base): 43 mm (1.69") Length of the ricasso: 156 mm (6.14") Blade thickness at base: 7 mm (0.28"), 100 mm (4") from the point: at 5 mm (0.2") Pommel height: 65 mm (2.56"), width (max): 45 mm (1.77") Grip length: 193 mm (7.6") Tang width (max): 20 mm (0.79") Guard width: 258 mm (10.16"), square section of arms, 8 x 9 mm (0.315 x 0.354") Point of balance: 110 mm (4.33") from the cross Weight: 1535 grams (3 lb 6 oz), of which the pommel weighs 350 grams (12.25 oz) With the pommel loose, there wasn't much chance of swinging the sword, and as it was a few years since I handled it, I have almost no memory of how it felt. But as I own a replica of this sword made by Del Tin Armi Antiche, the DT5140 (see our hands-on review), I was still able to make a comparison of sorts. The original sword felt a bit more maneuverable, but not by much. Point control would be somewhat better, but I think this is one of those swords where Del Tin gets really close. The sword is clearly a knightly weapon, but it is impossible to tell who originally owned it, as it has no distinguishing marks whatsoever. It was probably made by the end of the 14th century, or perhaps in the beginning of the 15th century. Why did it end up in the Thames? My theory is that it fell overboard during a transport, as there are few good reasons why one would dump a fine weapon in the river. Regardless of how it was lost, it was rediscovered and now rests in the Royal Armoury where I had the pleasure to handle it some 600 years later. Like most XVII's, it's a straightforward design, but one which I'm partial to. A link in the development of the sword, the "River Thames sword" and its peers offers insights into the constant development of European medieval arms and armour. About the Author Björn Hellqvist is a Swedish optometrist with an interest in historical European swords. About the Author Peter Johnsson is a Swedish swordsmith and researcher, who does both custom work for collectors and designs for Albion Armorers. Sources Bruhn Hoffmeyer, Ada: Gammelt jern, E. A. Christensens våbensamling, 1968 Sword in the Age of Chivalry, The, by R. Ewart Oakeshott Records of the Medieval Sword, by R. Ewart Oakeshott Acknowledgements Text © 2004 Björn Hellqvist and Peter Johnsson, except for quoted excerpts Sword Concept Illustrations © 2004 Peter Johnsson for Albion Armorers Photographed by Björn Hellqvist and reproduced with permission of the Board of Trustees of the Royal Armouries |
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