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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Netherlands
Posts: 534
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I specifically looked at tournament armour (stegzeuge) because of the probability of damages.
If anyone has other period armour with damages, please post these. This would be very enlightening. ![]() |
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#2 |
Arms Historian
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Route 66
Posts: 10,191
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Marcus, thank you for noting the concerns and comments present outside the discussion here, and I agree, it is best to focus on helmets of this style and original character in examining your example.
There are apparently quite a number of reproduction helms out there available mostly for re enactment and decoration, however these would seem immediately obvious. We must admit that the price realized in this case is incredibly low for an authentic example of this desirable style, so immediately begs the question if is or not. We always hope to find a 'sleeper' in estate sale or auction, however this is highly unlikely for a specialist auctioneer. Since here we strive to learn from historic examples, it might have been important to include the description from the source of the example as the discussion would direct to its features and character in compliance with other examples known authentic. If the 19th century description is noted, we should move to prove otherwise. Thank you for 'staying in' by presenting other examples, and I look forward to others and observations on the elements and fixtures......really want to learn more on these. No matter what....its quite an attractive helmet! |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Jul 2014
Posts: 412
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Hi Marcus,
thank you for showing us helmets of the same period to compare with. It does happen and has happened before that auction houses mistakenly label good authentic pieces as 19th C. That being said, the bigger or more experienced the auction house has, the less this happens. Looking closely at the helmets presented it seems there are some differences in the impact / pattern strikes . Most of them have a around dozen of these impact and are different in shape, none have all the same looking impact marks. The place were these marks visible on the helmets as presented here are in the neck area or the place were a sword blow would have been deflected to in case of a frontal blow. On the Maximilian Helmet I easily count around 50 impact marks, they all seem to come from the same object the only difference is that some are deeper than others. What concerns me more is that they are structural divided over the whole helmet and appear in places were this helmet would in most cases deflect a hit or blow. I think we can rule out sword blows completely as many of these strike marks are in the deeper part of the gully or groove. These impact marks look like they are made by a hammer. They don't seem to come from a war hammer but rather from the back of a modern hammer. They have a repetitive similarity,when they were inflected concerning : force , angle, shape of the object and distance , all these circumstances together would be impossible in battle. In my opinion , the battle blows you see on the other helmets was exactly what they were trying to mimic, but they over did it. I hate to visualize the situation, a nutcase with other intentions hammering from a distance of 50 CM an otherwise beautiful handmade helmet. Of course I would like to hear other thoughts as well. kind regards Ulfberth Last edited by ulfberth; 4th January 2017 at 09:49 AM. |
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#4 | |
Member
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 214
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Netherlands
Posts: 534
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Hi Ulfberth,
Thank you for your responce, it is much valued. Do you have period armour pictures with more damages for comparison? As to the auction, i have looked trough there auction archive prior to buying this piece and the only other noteworthy piece of armour was a fluted backplate which reached 10 times their estimate. Other things like a replica wheellock pistol beeing dated by them as 16/17th century make me somewhat doubt there indebt knowledge, which in all respect is a hard enough. We know of original pieces of arms and armour beeing molested to add more "colour" to such pieces... problem is that this happened by either people without true knowledge or respect for such items.. thus the colouring outside of the lines. What i want to say with all of this is that we can not sollely date this helmet on these strange markings. I am far more interested in the construction, the patina inside, and if it is a victorian piece.. how they made it to look like this. Especially the leather strap pieces that are inside the helmet without disturbing the natural (?) patina. Also does anyone know a way to date the iron, if possible? |
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 1,060
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Marcus,
could you please give the lot description and name of the auction house ? best, Jasper |
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#7 |
Member
Join Date: Oct 2012
Posts: 26
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I like the look of this helmet. Somebody has put a lot of effort in making it. But it gets let down by poorly applied ageing. The exterior marks are as others have said -- Not correct. I would also question the inside patina, from the pictures it looks like it has been rusted artificially. The photographs appear to show bright steel in places under the rust. Next, the visor. Hard to tell from the pictures but the steel looks a little thin, I would also question the burrs left on the inside of the chisel cut openings, not something you would expect from a true artisan. Last bit, the visor construction seems to be overlaid steel plates but the exterior has a shaped but smooth finish. So has this been welded and filed down? Of course fire welding has been around for a long while but this requires heat and hammering but I can see no sign of this on the plates. OK, that's me done--- Age, I don't think it has any. Just my feeling and I am not a expert and have never played with a helmet of this supposed era.
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