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Old 1st March 2023, 09:26 PM   #1
Radboud
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SwordLover79 View Post
Perhaps it was made in India as a copy...
I doubt that. The decoration style is entirely in keeping with the Georgian era, plus the hilt and blade all show ageing. My only thought is that there is a chance that the blade and hilt didn't start life together. If only because I wouldn't expect to see a plain blade on a fancy hilt.

But these things did happen. Maybe an officer wanted a sturdy fighting sword that only needed to look fancy when it was in its scabbard? We must remember that these swords were often very personal to the officer. They could have been a gift or purchased with the thought that one day his life may depend on it.

This is one of mine showing similar decoration to the hilt and langets:
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Old 3rd March 2023, 02:31 PM   #2
SwordLover79
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the flame=pattern langets on your sword are very similar to those on mine. Made me think Grenadier or artillery officer...
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Old 3rd March 2023, 09:54 PM   #3
Radboud
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Originally Posted by SwordLover79 View Post
the flame=pattern langets on your sword are very similar to those on mine.
They’re Acanthus leaf, which is believed to represent long life to the Greeks and Romans. It’s a typical neo-classical motif of that era and not specific to any service branch that I’m aware of.

For it to be a grenadier sabre you’d want to see the flaming bomb emblem.
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Old 5th March 2023, 02:07 AM   #4
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I was just looking at the antique swords.com site at a blade with similar crown marks. The write-up suggests that the sword he sold (photo attached of the mark on the blade) was most likley a Royal Navy saber/cutlass.
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