During my last visit at the Musée de l'Armée, I took pictures of a somewhat special sword I had noticed previously. I don't remember seeing the like of it anywhere else...
The inventory number of the sword is J PO 1818. The only information provided on the notice is that it is a German work from 1590-1600, with a blade by Clemens Meigen from Solingen (the blade is engraved CLEMES but it does not show on the photos). Unfortunately this sword is located in a rather crowded display, with abysmal lighting and a specially reflective glass in front of it. So I had to post process the images quite heavily, hopefully they are still informative...
As you can see on the first picture below, the sword has a very classical complex hilt, but the blade is surprising. On the first three quarters, the blade is single edged. The true edge is created by flat bevels starting from a ridge about one third of the blade from the edge (i.e. the ridge is not centered). The back edge has these saw-teeth that I think are uncommon on swords of this type (historical swords, I mean ;) ), and is hollow ground. Over the last quarter of the blade, a false edge appears, symetrical to the true edge, and the hollow grinding turns smoothly into a fuller.
The saw teeth are more complicated than it seems at the first glance. In fact the teeth are not lined up on both sides of the blade. I think the effect is created by some imaginative file work, where the slope of the back of the sword changes direction twice over the length of one tooth. It's very hard to see, even being there in person. I tried to shoot it from an angle, and zoomed in to obtain the second picture below. There you should see the two series of serrations that alternate from side to side. Well, maybe :) The black part at the bottom is the flat of the blade, the greyish part at the top is the backdrop. The strange lightning on the top and to the right is an artefact...
Now I wonder what this sword was meant for exactly? I have found this discussion of a simpler saw-back hunting sword, but the one here is not grouped with hunting swords... Of course there is the possibility of a misidentification by the museum. However it does not show the wide flaring tip and the bar that other hunting swords with complex hilts seem to often have. I'm not sure it would be too efficient as a saw either, because of the central ridge.
If this is a fighting sword, why was the ridge brought so close to the true edge? A ridge in the middle might have allowed deeper cuts... And what was the saw-back used for? The most plausible explanation I can come up with is that an adversary trying to grab the blade or oppose it with his hand would probably regret his move. Or maybe this was done in order to ruin the edge of other swords?
Bonus question: how would you go about making a scabbard that could survive sheathing a blade like that :p ?
Regards,


The saw-teeth.

Full view of the sword. [ Download ]