Posts: 30 Location: Voorhout, The Netherlands
Sun 08 Mar, 2009 6:47 am
Roger Hooper wrote: |
Gert-Jan, what you have is a messer/hauswehr rather falchion. |
No falchion? I always thought that it is an Falchion, here i've got an picture where it shows the blade.
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Posts: 361 Location: Haifa, Israel
Sun 08 Mar, 2009 7:30 am
Oooh, this is a rare type of a messer, a stubby cleaver-like implement that probably was a part of a hunting trouse. I remember seeing a similar original one for sale in Budapest. It is not common to see even a repro of this knife.
Who is the maker?
Posts: 125
Sun 08 Mar, 2009 1:06 pm
Hi Gert-Jan,
Cleaver from a Hunting Trousse, here are some 15th Cent examples.
Regards,
Norman.
P.S. I did read somewhere once that Falchion type weapons may have had their roots in early butchering implements.
Posts: 30 Location: Voorhout, The Netherlands
Sun 08 Mar, 2009 1:41 pm
Sa'ar Nudel wrote: |
Oooh, this is a rare type of a messer, a stubby cleaver-like implement that probably was a part of a hunting trouse. I remember seeing a similar original one for sale in Budapest. It is not common to see even a repro of this knife.
Who is the maker? |
The creator is an Czech Smith named Pavel Marek.
He's got more on www.armorymarek.com
My breastplate, poleaxe and gauntlets are from him as well
greetings,
Gert
Posts: 1,435 Location: California, Maryland, USA
Sun 08 Mar, 2009 4:00 pm
I rather like that romanesque scabbard for the last cleaver.
M.
Posts: 1,757 Location: Storvreta, Sweden
Mon 09 Mar, 2009 12:38 am
To chime in with those who has already posted:
IŽd say it looks like the big chopping knife from a hunting set. I would not date it to the 15th C, but rather to the 16th C. Perhaps even the latter half, but "dating" is tricky on modern replicas that aspire to a historical style. Most elements are easily recognized in knives from the mid to late 16th C, however.
As a knife it is more the tool of a hunter with a good budget. It is not primarily a blade youŽd expect a soldier to carry to a fight.
Posts: 65
Mon 09 Mar, 2009 4:01 am
I've seen a lot of debates over how to exactly define what is a messer and what is a falchion. However it is generally accepted that the main defining point is the hilt construction rather than the blade. Messer's have a typical knife style hilt where as falchions use a sword hilt style construction.
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