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Old 2nd February 2013, 08:45 PM   #4
Jim McDougall
Arms Historian
 
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Route 66
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Apparantly there is a quite clouded history of these unique sword blades, as with the etymology of the term. It is claimed that the term is a French corruption of the name Konigsmark, but according to Aylward (1945) there is no record of the term 'colichmarde' in contemporary usage in either French or German. However more recently the Larousse 'Dictionaire Universalle' has the word 'Konigsmark' listed as a term for a type of German sword blade.

Even more perplexing is the presumed originator of the blade form, Count John Phillip von Konigsmark (1665-1694?), a Swedish noble known as a soldier of fortune, duellist and apparantly philanderer, which seems likely the root of his reputation as a duellist. He is believed to have been murdered in 1694 during a scandal in the Royal court in London.

Aylward notes that these blades seem to have passed out of fashion in the later part of the reign of George I, but believes this pertained more to civilian versions of these swords (c. 1720s) and they continued favored by military officers (George Washington had one). He states further that these are known into the 1790s, perhaps even later, as one he mentions has the cypher of George III, again military regulations do not specify any type of sword using this term.

Hope this might be helpful.
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