Posts: 281 Location: Eastern Panhandle WV, USA
Fri 16 Apr, 2010 10:51 am
Histprical period of hanwie tinker swords.
Hello all, I was inquireing as to what period (earliest possible) would work for the hanwei Tinker hand-an-a-half sword.
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Posts: 66 Location: Germany, Düsseldorf
Fri 16 Apr, 2010 11:18 am
Hi
I would say, there is no historical period for this long fullered blade with this slender profile.... If it had a wider blade, you could say it's a type XII so it could have been used around 1250-1400. But I really think that this blunt trainers are not meant to represent any historical period. They just need (in this example) the fuller to have the right balance with this thick "edge".
Best regards
Posts: 671 Location: The Netherlands
Sat 17 Apr, 2010 1:28 am
P. Cha wrote: |
Well even if you did make the blade wider there is the issue of the square tip as far as how the blade looks as well...so it still wouldn´t be a type XII. |
The square tip is because the image is of a blunt training sword. If you look at this page, halfway down you can see this sword side-by-side with it's sharp counterpart. The sharp version of this sword does not have a fuller and does have a pointy tip.
Posts: 30 Location: Lawrence, Kansas, USA
Sat 17 Apr, 2010 2:36 am
Re: Histprical period of hanwie tinker swords.
Nathan Quarantillo wrote: |
Hello all, I was inquireing as to what period (earliest possible) would work for the hanwei Tinker hand-an-a-half sword. |
The sword is based on the Oakeshott type XVIIIa blade, it's simply the blunt version. Time period is roughly mid to late 15th century. Hope this helps.
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