Posts: 870 Location: Seattle area
Thu 06 Nov, 2003 10:44 pm
Well its true that there was a sword that was named the "Slovenian Kkk-nig-git-ly Sword", and that the blade came to be from a CNC programming error.........*g*
It was my first attempt to do the programming myself, as the first programming system I got wouldn't handle the 3D stuff so I had a neighbor actually do the software stuff. Once I got BobCad 17, all of that changed however........
The Slovenian was supposed to be what later became the "
Oakeshott XVIII" or what later became the "Classic XVIII", or what is now the AT1422. However, instead of getting an arc from 11 inches out {from the tip}, I got a straight line. Classic error when one isn't used to a new system.......
By the time I knew the blade wasn't the way it was supposed to be, it was thru heat treat, and rough ground. At that time, it was "what the heck, lets finish it and see what we've got". So I finished it........
The guys from Portland came up for a little cutting party, and a couple of us {Alex Chin and I believe Dave Wilson} did a little cutting with this, including into and thru the rolled top of a steel barrel {where Albion got the idea}. The sword wasn't what it was supposed to be, but it was one hell of a tough little trooper, quite capable of dealing more damage to 55 gal barrels than it received in return.....
I no longer remember exactly what possessed us to call it the Slovenian, but I know it had more to do with the humor of the day than historical accuracy. The cutting party was discussed in detail on the forum, along with the name..... Howy wanted the little guy on his site, so it wound up on his site, with the name just like it looks up above.... humor intact.......
One of these wound up going to Nova Scotia to visit Al Massey. Al had things set up for a rifle barrel cutting session, and had the big guy himself, Randal Graham show up. Both gents, larger fellas than average {with the typical strength that large smiths have} tried a couple of swords, including the Slovenian on a 55 gal barrel up there, and the rifle barrel. Sword came thru unscathed.......
This was all over three years ago........... the sword world was smaller and a much friendlier environment then......{those were the days........sigh}
A few months after all of this, a guy who posted regularly at the time on Netsword's swordsmanship board mentioned that he thought it odd I had named that sword the Slovenian..... because he had seen several similar swords........ He posted as Tomaz, and was reputedly from Slovenia..........
So it wouldn't surprise me if there aren't anything like this in the Slovenian national museum. On the other hand, I wouldn't be surprised if swords similar in Slovenia weren't in use in the fifteenth century...as much of the rest of Europe....If you look at the profile closely, what it resembles more than anything else is a classic XVIII that has been resharpened, and repaired repeatedly.......
That's the reason that the sword proved so capable of dealing with a 55 gal barrel..... the bevel angles from the spine to the edge were steeper than originally planned, making for a very strong edge........
Sorry, no arcane knowledge, no photos, no special provenance....... Just a mistake that performed better than it should have, that set some humor off, that had staying power which started a name that should never have been.............all there is to it.......*g*