Posts: 2,160 Location: New Hampshire
Thu 15 Sep, 2005 5:49 am
Hi Guys
Yes, there certainly is a big difference when you go the custom route, especially if it's made to suit !
Do keep in mind though that even originals came in a variety of sizes, and some baskets were purposely made larger !
Many of the cavalry /military basket hilts of the 18th century ( production ?) tend to be larger & heavier than ones that the infantryman carried, and no doubt had some extra room in there (liners & gloves probably helped fill the voids).
Charles Whitelaw's 'Scottish Arms Makers' writes :
The horseman's form of basket-hilted sword was used in Scotland probably by yeomanry regiments as well as by other mounted men. This has a larger and heavier basket than the sword used by the infantryman, and often has an oval ring about 3 inches by 1 1/2 inches in diameter on the inner thumb side where it takes the place of the usual pierced rectangular plate.
and continues ......
Basket hilts of this period are sometimes made heavier than previously, probably owing to the custom in vogue at the beginning of the 18th century of parrying on the basket, and not on the blade, a practice condemned by Sir William Hope in his book on fencing ("Hope's New Method of Fencing, by Sir William Hope of Balcomie, Bart., Late Deputy-Governour of the Castle Edinburgh, 1714.")
Mac
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