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Old 30th September 2022, 05:49 PM   #16
Jim McDougall
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Route 66
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Quote:
Originally Posted by M ELEY View Post
Here's my Wundes head marking from my Scottish basket hilt. Very similar to yours, Toaster-
This is an amazing Scottish basket hilt of latter 17th c. and it seems had multiple kings head stamps in linear progression, which was another of the variable applications using this mark. Obviously not 'every' Scottish basket hilt had an ANDREA FERARA blade, though that was one of the most favored.

In these times, the Netherlands were one of the most prevalent entrepots of arms and blades from Germany were of course well known going into North England in notable quantity. This was likely the reason they often became termed colloquially 'Dutch' blades, when in fact 'Duetsche'.

With this being the case it does not seem surprising that the bilobate hilt arming swords which became collectively deemed 'walloons' were so widely popular in European armies, as often fully assembled swords were among commerce distributed through there.
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