Posts: 2,307 Location: Croatia
Tue 14 Dec, 2010 4:19 pm
Transitional ribbon hilts
So, I finally got the "British basket-hilted swords" By Cyril Mazansky to help me with my next custom baskethilt order. I was deciding between the counter curved quilloned ribbon hilts of the first half of the 17th century and the fully developed ribbon hilts of the second half of the century. I liked the later more but I wanted to have a hilt appropriate for the period of the Wars of the Three Kingdoms (1644-1651), especially years 1644-1647 when Alasdair Mac Colla led the "Irish" regiment under Montrose. The beaknosed ribbon hilt seemed to late for that period, but now in the Mazansky, page 69, I saw so called transitional hilt, C1 York castle museum CA 728. It looks more like early 17th century hilt, but has no rear quillon and the front quillon is very short and Mazansky calls it a beak-nose. It also has langets which should be a sign of an early date. (Here I rely on e.b. Erickson post in this thread about dating the ribbon hilts:
http://www.myArmoury.com/talk/viewtopic.php?t...ght=ribbon .) So I wonder what would be a probable date for such a "transitional" sword, are there any other examples, and are there any ribbon hilts that we can date with some precision in the 1640's.
Most quilloned ribbon hilts are dated early 17th century and later beak nosed ones 1650+. There should be something in between and I wonder how it looks. Is the 1650 date for later beak nosed hilts appoximate and were they under developed a bit earlier since typical earlier hilts with quillons seem to be quite a bit earlier (1600-1630)? Is that missing link the transitional hilt from Mazansky?
Transitional hilt:
Edit: This sword is owned by forum member David Wilson and made by E.B. Ericson. This hilt also looks kinda transitional to me and I wonder if it's based on a historical example and what date could it be?
The same one I think is the top one in this picture:
I know this is a lot of questions, but I can't afford several baskethilts, so I would like the few I will have to suit me well. I'm sure there are knowledgable people here who could help me. :)