It is a long sword of a style belonging to the mid 15th C. A few swords of the Castillion group has been primary inspiration and source of information, but other swords have also supplied both data and inspiration.
The guard is directly influenced by a two hander from the Castilion group that I got to document at the Royal Armouries a few years back. The grip with its spirally bound cord under the embossed leather is taken from a German long sword kept in the Army museum in Paris. Overall shape and proportions are influenced by those medium sized long swords of the Castillion group.
It is of type XVIIIb and has a powerful and responsive feel to it. I wanted to make a sword that was not light, but rather compact and rather hefty. Its dynamic balance is strongly influenced by the sword of Svante Nilsson. In the hand the sword feels much lighter than its 1.96 kilos: on horseback you could use it single handed for powerful deliberate strokes, but it will invite two handed use when fighting on foot.
The blade is 88.5 cm long. At the base it is 5.2 cm wide and 1 cm thick. Shaping of the edge and hollow ground section is influenced greatly by the sword of Svante Nilsson Sture, only made a few cm longer and a bit more pointy. Forward pivot point is right at the point, giving good control and precision for thrusts as you move from guard to guard.
Point of balance is 7 cm in front of the guard.
In fact, the original idea behind this sword was to make a weapon with similar size and balance as the sword of Svante Nilsson. Even if this sword looks very different they share quite a bit of the same character.
The grip is made of calf and goat leather (goat leather is used for the part under the wire wrap). The grip cord is fully cord wrapped and the forward part is given a spiral winding of cord to create a riser. The spiral cord is inspired by suriving swords and depictions on effigies.
The narrow part of the grip is bound by fine twisted iron wire and secured by domed tacks. The wire provides good purchase and will also strengthen the narrow part of the grip.
Below are some snap shots showing full length and some details.
If you are interested in seeing some work in progress images, I have posted a thread at Don Fogg´s blade smith forum:
http://forums.dfoggknives.com/index.php?showt...ntry162954
Thanks for looking :-)
Peter









