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		#1 | 
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			Join Date: Dec 2014 
				Location: Black Forest, Germany 
				
				
					Posts: 1,240
				 
				
				
				
				
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			I think at one side  the dagger shows St. Sebastian (not St. Stephan) standing after having overcome his death under a baldachin and over the purgatory which is fired by heavy smoke coming from the hell. The other side shows a lady sitting on a lions back playing a harp over an Austrian coat of arms guarded by a grasshopper.  
		
		
		
			My idea................  | 
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		#2 | 
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			Join Date: Nov 2013 
				
				
				
					Posts: 252
				 
				
				
				
				
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			Im tending to read the whole thing as a Dainty Device. A clever allegory that means something special to the owner , or giver , but not a lot to anybody else . The figure has to be Eros ; carefree youth crowned with flowers . Hence arrows and wings . Perhaps significantly protector of homosexual love . The female figure playing the Portative organ looks straight out of the Cluny tapestries . An allegory of hearing or sound. Also the lion. What we read as an eagle could be a parakeet , as in taste. The armorial device with the shield on its side could be read as something rejected or cast aside. From the gothiky architecture a  fifteenth century date seems credible  
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
			Probably a wacky idea but following on the classical allusions and a superficial similarity to a Roman Gladius perhaps it was originally made as a symbolic sword with a wooden blade which was later converted. Its certainly a rare and fascinating thing Waster , as in wooden sword . The youths of this city also have used on holy days after Evening prayer, at their masters’ doors, to exercise their wasters and bucklers.”Stowe 1598 Last edited by Raf; 5th May 2022 at 05:07 PM. Reason: inf. added  | 
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		#3 | 
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			Join Date: Nov 2013 
				
				
				
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			Couple of wasters.
		 
		
		
		
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		#4 | 
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			Join Date: Sep 2020 
				
				
				
					Posts: 27
				 
				
				
				
				
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			I don't think that it was made for field use. It looks like a kind of wedding present . There's nothing about war in this. With the pommel it's not very practical to handle having said this there are 19th century swords that have eagle head pommels.
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
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		#5 | 
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			Join Date: Nov 2013 
				
				
				
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			I agree. I didn't suggest it was ever intended as a practical weapon. Rather more , as you say  a symbolic object.
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
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		#6 | 
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			Join Date: Mar 2009 
				
				
				
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			Looks good with the brass plate between the wood and the iron plate. 
		
		
		
			The condition of the blade is sublime, almost too good to be true, but I am not yet 100% convinced that it is a newer replaced blade because this geometry is quite uncommon however did occur in the 15 and 16th centuries @ Daggers! best,  | 
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