Posts: 235 Location: North Alabama
Sun 15 Mar, 2015 1:16 pm
Seaxes were popular for around 500 years, and have been found from Italy to Norway, so there are a wide variety of types and styles. Your blade is of the brokeback type (type IV in wheeler's classification), and unfortunately there is only one I know of that has the handle intact, the Aachen seax, aka. the hunting knife of
Charlemagne:
[ Linked Image ]
Going by memory, the handle is bovine horn, the end-cap/wrap is either bronze or silver, and the handle is around 8 1/2 inches in length.
In addition to this, we have some period illustrations:
Earlier styles of continental saxes (langsax, breitsax) had long handles. The only exception to this are the Nordic saxes, which had handles in the 4" to 5" range. The are many type IV seax sheaths remaining even when the knife is long gone, and they also indicate long, straight handles. As far as I know not a single type IV seax blade has been found with a cross-guard or pommel, nor do they have them in period illustrations. Based on the scant evidence, I think a long, simple one-piece wooden or horn handle is our best bet for a historically correct handle for this type of blade, possibly with ferrules.