Posts: 870 Location: Seattle area
Tue 28 Oct, 2003 7:12 pm
If one could handle this, and "it handled like a sword", then the doubts might just go away.
But photos are hard to judge by.
Some of the things that raise alarm bells in my head:
1. Main bevel angle from fuller to edge
2. Relationship of finger ring to edge
3. Pommel doesn't seem to fit with a sword with fingerring { I would have expected more detail}
4.
Profile taper {or lack thereof} in a "15th century sword"
5. Uniformity of patina on all three features {blade, guard, and pommel}..... different materials should patina differently, and likely not uniformly
There's others, but these are the maing thing. The handle isn't necessarily a problem, as a lot of handles of existing antiques are later replacements. The fuller shape is a bit odd, but I don't see it as a real problem........
The "dynamic balance" though would be a giveaway one way or the other. The fingerring kinda points to the intention of thrusting {though not necessarily}, and the lack of profile taper jars a bit with that. The dynamic balance would tell whether the intent of the sword was to thrust, to cut, both, or whether it was likely a Victorian era fake.
This isn't meant to be a condemnation of the sword. Just pointing out some of the questions it brings up to me.........
Auld Dawg