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Michael Pearce
Industry Professional
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Posted: Fri 19 Jun, 2009 9:28 am Post subject: Rondel dagger on Tinkerswords.com |
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Specifications:
OAL: 16-5/8 inches
Blade Length: 11-3/4 inches
Blade Width @ Base: 3/4 inch
Blade thickness at base: .262 inch
Hilt OAL: 4-7/8 inches
Handle Length: 4-5/8 inches
Rondel Diameters:
Lower (Base of blade:) 1-1/2 inches
Upper (tip of handle:) 1-5/8 inches
COG: 5/8 inch from Base of Blade
Single-edged Rondel dagger in the style of daggers from the 12th-16th C. The triangular section blade is 5160 spring steel and is convex ground with a rolled edge. Blade is heat-treated and Marquenched to HRc 58, with the shoulder, spine and tang drawn selectively to approx. HRc 45-48. The Rondels are Brass. The handle is Osage Orange wood and is carved in a 'writhen' pattern. The brown leather scabbard is of traditional form with the throat expanded to envelope the lower rondel.
This style of dagger was very popular throughout the Medieval period for it's simplicity and utilitarian design. The very stout single-edged blade with it's wedge-shaped cross-section was well-suited to piercing light armors, and the rondels flanking the handle kept the hand firmly in place when stabbing with or withdrawing the dagger. The blade can also be used as a short baton for trapping and controlling techniques as shown in "Fior dei Battaglia" written in 1409.
Michael 'Tinker' Pearce
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Then one night, as my car was going backwards through a cornfield at 90mph, I had an epiphany...
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Jean-Carle Hudon
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Posted: Fri 19 Jun, 2009 4:48 pm Post subject: rondel |
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Very elegant, nothing overdone,clean lines....nice. I don't have a rondel..yet....JC
Bon coeur et bon bras
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Joe Fults
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Posted: Fri 19 Jun, 2009 5:39 pm Post subject: |
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I like that one.
"The goal shouldn’t be to avoid being evil; it should be to actively do good." - Danah Boyd
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Michael Pearce
Industry Professional
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Tim Lison
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Posted: Wed 24 Jun, 2009 9:59 pm Post subject: |
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Very, very nice rondel. I love the scabbard too. How does this hang from a belt? Is there a suspension in back that we can't see?
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Michael Pearce
Industry Professional
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Posted: Wed 24 Jun, 2009 11:16 pm Post subject: |
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Tim Lison wrote: | Very, very nice rondel. I love the scabbard too. How does this hang from a belt? Is there a suspension in back that we can't see? |
Nope- I always wear this type thrust through the belt, and the expanded throat keeps it from slipping through. I honestly don't know how the ones that were suspended worked; I could only speculate that there were ties affixed to the back of the scabbard.
Michael 'Tinker' Pearce
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Then one night, as my car was going backwards through a cornfield at 90mph, I had an epiphany...
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M. Eversberg II
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Posted: Thu 25 Jun, 2009 12:14 am Post subject: |
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As far as I am aware, they do tie to the belt. Nice work; don't know how I missed this thread.
M.
This space for rent or lease.
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Jean Thibodeau
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Posted: Thu 25 Jun, 2009 3:30 am Post subject: |
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Michael Pearce wrote: | Tim Lison wrote: | Very, very nice rondel. I love the scabbard too. How does this hang from a belt? Is there a suspension in back that we can't see? |
Nope- I always wear this type thrust through the belt, and the expanded throat keeps it from slipping through. I honestly don't know how the ones that were suspended worked; I could only speculate that there were ties affixed to the back of the scabbard. |
Don't know historically for sure but some sort of leather tong or loop might have been used ? But the way I would do it is to slip it behind a belt and use a belt tong as a " safety line " looped around the belt: I do this with my cell phone carrier i.e. use a safety line as backup to the spring clip.
In period art it does seem that the rondels are pictured as hanging from a loop in some cases ? Maybe both methods were used alone or in combination ?
You can easily give up your freedom. You have to fight hard to get it back!
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Michael Pearce
Industry Professional
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Posted: Thu 25 Jun, 2009 7:29 am Post subject: |
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I've seen representations from in-period with the dagger hanging from a loop, thrust through the belt or simply shown with the scabbard outside of the belt- presumably tied to it with ties on the back of the scabbard. I don't know the precise attachment of the loop or the ties; I could make a pretty educated guess based on the contemporary sheaths of other knives, but as I said it would be a guess.
Michael 'Tinker' Pearce
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Then one night, as my car was going backwards through a cornfield at 90mph, I had an epiphany...
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