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29th August 2010, 02:28 PM | #1 |
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Hi
I don't think it's stainless steel. There is some light oxidation on the blade, some fluffy black stuff that hasn't shown up in the photo. I believe the scabbard has a wood lining, but can't really tell. However, I do know the other example I spoke about had a wood lining. I believe the copper is wrapped around this wood lining. I think the handle is attached the same ways most old blades are attached. The tang goes right through the hilt. There seems to be a mark visible at the top of the knife - you can see the mark where the tang comes through on the gargoyle's head. This is the same sort of mark you'd see in a sword dating from the 19th century – for instance, the same sort of mark you'd see on a 19th British naval officer's sword (the lion head). However, it is subtle and hard to detect, but it's definitely there. The handle appears to haven been cast in 2 pieces – a line runs through the profile of the hilt. However, is is not quite in the centre. Regards Ron |
29th August 2010, 03:04 PM | #2 |
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I can confirm there is a liner in the scabbard but it's not visible from the outside. There are two bits of wood - one on the front plate and one of the back, that help keep the blade snug when in the scabbard.
The scabbard itself is also copper and cast in two identical pieces - the back and front are the same, with the same design etc. The seam on the scabbard is not all that strong. It would be easy to tear it apart, but then of course it is only copper. |
29th August 2010, 04:58 PM | #3 |
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It seems the mystery has been solved. It is a Dague Romantique. Thank you Dom.
It is a type of 19th century knife, very stylised, and often by prostitutes. A kind of prostitute knife with a fantasy twist. Here's another one http://www.clic-nature.fr/forum/topic2907.html |
29th August 2010, 05:05 PM | #4 |
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Here's another one
http://www.armesanciennes.fr/index.php?eID=tx_cms_showpic&file=uploads%2Ftx_tem plavoila%2Fa180-5w.jpg&bodyTag=%3CBODY%20bgColor%3D%22black%22%3E& wrap=%3CA%20href%3D%22javascript%3Aclose%28%29%3B% 22%3E%20|%20%3C%2FA%3E&md5=f43a07d122faca5303c05ff 670cda368 I'd say mine is a very good example. A+ indeed. Thank you everyone for your assistance. I'm pretty convinced about this one. It is as I expected a 19th century piece. It may even be mid rather than late 19th century. It's almost certainly French, but there's a chance that it's English. |
29th August 2010, 05:10 PM | #5 |
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commercial link removed.
Last edited by fernando; 29th August 2010 at 10:31 PM. |
30th August 2010, 04:39 PM | #6 |
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From what i can tell this category of "Dague Romantique" seems a bit vague, but i would say that your example seems to fit well within it. I would take the "carried by prostitutes" line with a grain of salt as so far i can only find that as a line from sellers to entice sale. Do you have an academic reference to this use. Here is a link to a similar style dagger (different figure and motif) that was claimed "satanic" in nature.
http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showth...ack+notre+dame Here are some examples of what i could find on the web also described as "Dague Romantique". |
31st August 2010, 03:56 AM | #7 |
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Hi David
Thanks for posting those pictures. The scabbards in particular mirror the style of my piece. I think you're right – it is a rather vague category, probably created in hindsight. I doubt at the time anyone would have thought of these as "romantic daggers". They reflect the romanticism of that period, I think, and have been labelled that way to identify them broadly to collectors, and perhaps to separate them from later fantasy daggers. I can only speculate that the reason they were carried by prostitutes is that they were quite pretty and quite dramatic. Mine is a bigger example, but the smaller ones were also obviously easy to conceal, so useful for that kind of work. I believe the manufacturers of these knives found a ready market among prostitutes, but they were no doubt used more widely too. As Mark noted, probably as letter openers. This is guesswork. I have no hard evidence of this. It is interesting that they seem confined largely to France - in fact, to such a degree that collectors elsewhere don't even really know about them. There are one or two English examples I know about. But the English always ended up imitating the French, didn't they? |
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