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Old 25th April 2016, 10:57 PM   #1
kronckew
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reminds me of this one i found with google: described as an 1800 model bulova axe...
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Old 26th April 2016, 04:42 AM   #2
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Originally Posted by kronckew
reminds me of this one i found with google: described as an 1800 model bulova axe...
Something tells me that this is not a description of the collection of the Ethnographic Museum or the Museum of arms and armor

Oh yeah. This is an advertisement for the sale)))) I would not always trust what they write sellers wishing to sell an item ....
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Old 26th April 2016, 06:17 AM   #3
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ah, well. i can stick it in my OOPs corner. or re-sell it.
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Old 28th April 2016, 11:09 PM   #4
Timo Nieminen
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To echo a lot of the above comment: modern.

When they not advertised as "Medieval axe" or "Mid-evil axe", they often called "star farsha". If you want to look for more examples, "star farsha axe" might be the best search term.
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Old 29th April 2016, 12:21 AM   #5
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interesting. that is definitely a copy of this axe. mine does not appear to be stainless steel, so assuming they copied something to come up with the star farsha stainless axe, this could be an earlier model that they copied. or did they copy an earlier real weapon?
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Old 29th April 2016, 01:05 AM   #6
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Somewhere I have a book called "Axes of Power" ( do not recall the name of the author).
According to it, the definitive sign of a fighting axe is the wedge head. Flat ones are always decorative.
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Old 29th April 2016, 02:02 PM   #7
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Ariel, are you referring to Axes of War and Power by James Gamble (2002)? I think that book is out of print now.

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Somewhere I have a book called "Axes of Power" ( do not recall the name of the author).
According to it, the definitive sign of a fighting axe is the wedge head. Flat ones are always decorative.
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Old 1st May 2016, 09:51 AM   #8
kronckew
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ariel
Somewhere I have a book called "Axes of Power" ( do not recall the name of the author).
According to it, the definitive sign of a fighting axe is the wedge head. Flat ones are always decorative.
it arrived sat. p.m., oddly enough the head tapers in thickness from the back edge & the tangs to the front. the crescent is welded to the two tangs, still it is a match for those modern replica star farshas. the star reinforces the tangs. the welds sadly counteract that by weakening the blade/tang junction as they are not overlapped, likely arc welded. otherwise heavily built. will clean it a bit, oil it and proudly display it in the closet. would make a better weapon of i cut the axe part off at the eye, leaving the spikes & spear point which are substantially built.
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