5th June 2020, 08:53 AM | #1 |
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Help with French Sword
Hi Guys
I picked up this sword recently and it was described to me as a 1780 pattern French General Officers sword. I can’t find it in the books I have on French swords and believe it to be later in any case. Can anyone shed some light on what this one actually is? PS the sword has the letters S H . T at the top of the 32 5/16" blade. Cheers Cathey |
5th June 2020, 11:02 AM | #2 |
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Hi Cathey,
the model was in use during the French first Empire period but still in use during the restoration period. So its a French Officers dress sword between 1800 and 1820, because there are no lilies on the guard plate this on is probably First Empire = Napoleonic. Kind regards Ulfberth |
6th June 2020, 10:59 AM | #3 |
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Your sword has been made by Samuel Hoppe Frères à Solingen and was in use during the French July monarchy and Second Republic 1830-1852.
corrado26 |
6th June 2020, 01:20 PM | #4 |
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The blade yes , the Guard is older.
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7th June 2020, 11:09 PM | #5 |
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I have a small contention regarding SH and SHF as Samuel Hoppe. Samuel Hoppe is listed later in the 19th century and definitely as displaying a beehive mark.
Contrarily and confirmed in other threads, SHF is for Simon Helvig&Sons, SH as Simon Helvig. An adjacent thread here http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=16549 The preponderance of 1820s and 1830s blades marked SHF without the beehive, to me, reads as the Helvig theory sticks. The French book not being the first, or last to have a differing opinion. From Bezdek "Samuel Hoppe & Sohn of Solingen was active between 1827-1861 (Bezdek:54) being Samuel Hoppe & Co. between 1861-1885 (Bezdek:54)" So, that is not SH&F but rather clearly and in German, Sohn. The Feres or Fils and F of French notations Helvig. In my opinion anyway and I welcome more sources but as far back as my own studies go these past couple of decades, the Hoppe& Son(s?) and Co. marks are later than the Simon Helvig blades. A broad jump from the light b&g Helvig dress blades to the field infantry and cavalry swords known to Samuel Hoppe. Cheers GC Last edited by Hotspur; 8th June 2020 at 03:14 PM. |
8th June 2020, 12:42 PM | #6 | |
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Quote:
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8th June 2020, 03:12 PM | #7 | |
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I understand it as F for fils. I don't know if a link to SFI would cause a problem but a discussion over the decades. A quote from Robert Wilkinson-Latham
Quote:
See my inquiry post #6 in that thread and following replies. I approached this at SFI a few years ago and the contention was that Hoppe did not use the mark we see on this blade above, indeed dozens I have archived as blades meant for the US (eaglehead pommel swords). Others insist the book plate shared above is correct. Honestly, it would not be the first disagreement but it is a mark SHetFils and SH for a ciouple oof decades and while the jury still seems to be out and a very divided opinion, Helvig is how I approach the mark, vs Hoppe. Helvig in Alsace and Hoppe in Soingen. Cheers GC |
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8th June 2020, 03:55 PM | #8 |
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Another contention in the names list there is the K&S, which is labeled by most as Kirschbaum&Schimmelbush, not Kirschbaum&Schnitzler.
All tripe? I think not but how some read differences from text to text, discussion to discussion. More food for thought. A 2007 thread discussing the possibility of Knecht & Stamm Cheers GC |
8th June 2020, 04:47 PM | #9 | |
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Quote:
This you can find in the book shown here. |
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8th June 2020, 06:53 PM | #10 |
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Yes, I am aware. However even your last reference lists them as Schnitzler&Kirschbaum (imo both of whom were agents, not makers/smiths), and not listed as K&S aside from that one source.
At any rate, have you any reference books listing Helvig at all? I have only Bezdek, Wagner and the various fora for German marks, let alone much regarding Alsace. Cheers GC |
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