|
6th July 2020, 03:43 PM | #1 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2017
Posts: 445
|
Victorian bastard(?)
So, as some of you know, I am collecting on a budget (I guess we all are, just some budgets are greater than others). That means I often have to swing for the fences on items that hold the prospect of being more than they likely are. This is one of those times.
I would love to get your impressions of the item below. The auction company listed it as 'Late Victorian reproduction of a bastard sword'. This company does not specialize in arms, and I appreciate that hey are generally conservative in their descriptions. This is the same company that listed my 17th century Pappenheim as a 'reproduction basket hilt from the 20th century' just a couple months ago, so there is a pattern of underselling. Anyway, based on the limited auction pictures, I thought I saw something with legitimate age. Ulberth recently offered pictures in a thread about zweihanders that showed the detail of leather on a grip that is consistent with hundreds of years worth of age. The leather on this item's grip seemed consistent with the reference Ulberth provided, and at least placed this in the Victorian era. So, I went for it, and, even if Victorian, got a really (REALLY) good deal. Once I received it, I noticed the whole piece seems understated. Given the Victorian (and modern) reproductions' tendency towards exaggeration and overdoing it, this shows remarkable restraint. Here are the specs: Blade length - 37" Blade width (at guard) - 2" Quillions - 9" Grip (with pommel) - 10.5" (large enough for two bare hands with room to spare) Weight - 2.2 lbs Blade thickness (distal taper) - 1/4"(at base) 2.5/8" or 3.5mm (at 1ft from the guard) 1.8/8" or 2.5mm (at 2ft) 1/8" or 1.5mm (at 3ft) The blade is nearly identical in proportions to the Pappenheim I referenced above. In fact, given the weight and proportions, the entire thing handles like a rapier. It is light, very well balanced, can be wielded with one hand quite effectively. Also, I added a picture below showing the amount of flex this blade has. This certainly would not have been able to punch through mail (and the idea of piercing plate has been largely debunked). However, this could certainly slip into gaps and do some damage. This is certainly a thrusting weapon, and now, when I see some of the early bastard/2-handed swords with swept hilts, I can understand why. The blade has a flattened diamond cross-section, again, like a military rapier blade. So, taking all of this into account, could this be something more than a late Victorian copy? Could this be a conglomeration of parts from different eras that came together to form a chimera? Or, did I actually find something authentic that sold for less than a LOTR novelty sword? Last edited by shayde78; 6th July 2020 at 04:20 PM. Reason: Typo |
6th July 2020, 03:45 PM | #2 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2017
Posts: 445
|
Additional pics, including the picture of the blade flexing
|
6th July 2020, 07:32 PM | #3 |
Member
Join Date: Jul 2014
Posts: 400
|
Hi Shayde ,
this one is indeed a Victorian copy , the leather has some age to it but if you look at the pommel and the crossguard you can see it's to perfectly rounded geometrical identical from all sides . kind regards Ulfberth |
7th July 2020, 01:26 AM | #4 |
Member
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 457
|
Incidentally, it's never wise to flex a blade this way.
Last edited by Oliver Pinchot; 7th July 2020 at 03:36 AM. |
11th July 2020, 03:23 AM | #5 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2017
Posts: 445
|
Oliver,
Proper criticism. I look at that picture and cringe. An idiot move on my part. Ulfberth, Thank you for the straightforward assessment. I knew it was a long shot. Some new questions come to mind now: - When did the technology become available to create symmetrical hilt components? I'm interested in the guard, but specifically, I know that in the typography a spherical pommel is classified as type 'R' (right?). Can you show an example that is an authentic such pommel? I've had a devil of a time finding one since I first started looking to compare to the one on this copy. I'd love to see the differences side by side, and I hope that would prove interesting for others here, as well. - Regarding the blade, I feel like the Victorians were prone to use stiff, overly heavy blades when creating their 'interpretations' of medieval weaponry. Could the one here be a repurposed rapier blade...actually, that seems unlikely given the size of the grip that the tang pass thru. Since I debunked my own question, do you think a blade was forged specifically for this historimus, and would they have bothered making one that seems so well tempered? As always, I appreciate the willingness to share such a wealth of knowledge. Of course I'm a bit disappointed, but the education is well worth the cost of tuition |
11th July 2020, 12:56 PM | #6 |
(deceased)
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Portugal
Posts: 9,694
|
If you read this forum front page ...
Not that we encourage the discussion of replicas, as per the scope of this particular forum but, let us consider this is still within context.
|
|
|