I have a question about historical parrying daggers. It seems that some daggers have four quillon shapes:
1. straight quillons
2. forward projecting quillons
3. S-shaped: left quillon up, right down (seems most typical of S-quillons for right-handed fencers)
4. S-shaped: right up quillon up, left down (I've personally only seen this for lefties)
Which styles seem to be more prevalent and why? Was one of them more common for a wielder who prefers a thumb grip?
I'm interested academically but ultimately I have a specific reason for asking this question. I have an A&A cavalier rapier and am considering purchasing a matching parrying dagger. The sword has S-shaped quillons and I'm right-handed, so the dagger would match nicely if it also had S-shaped quillons. However, I prefer a thumb grip over a hammer fist grip.
http://armor.com/rapier164.html
I've attached an image of a matching dagger that A&A built for a leftie. (However, I'm right-handed.)
Cheers,
Paul

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