5th February 2016, 02:45 PM | #1 |
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Location: Wirral
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Possible old Scottish dirk ?
I accept this is probably a fake but would value more expert opinions than mine . Total length 48 cm, blade length 38 cm , max width of blade 4 cm , max thickness of blade back edge 9 mm.
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5th February 2016, 02:49 PM | #2 |
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some more pics of the back edge and the pommel
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5th February 2016, 02:55 PM | #3 |
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Doesn't look that bad to me. Seems used, wood and leather are well patinated, the writing style of the numbers looks legit. Could also be 19th c. historicism, hard to tell, but the overall impression is quite good.
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5th February 2016, 03:23 PM | #4 | |
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5th February 2016, 11:17 PM | #5 |
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From my limited knowledge this may be quite a rare and early dirk.
There are many forgeries but the age displayed on this example doesn't track with known style of forgery work, and even as a Victorian piece it doesn't display the feel of a Victorian attempt at an early dirk. The date is chiseled in a manner typical and contemporary with known dated Scottish pistols, not in and of itself a mark of an original since that can be replicated. The grip appears to be boxwood or a similar type, a bit harder to copy in the 19th C. The iron fittings display the right type of age one would expect to see on a piece of 17th c. dating, more difficult to copy in the 19th C.. The blade has been cleaned at some point and displays a lack of cleaning, or rather lesser evidence cleaning towards the base, indicating that it was cleaned while the blade was attached to the grip, one of the biggest marks in my book for older work taken in the context of other points. The Celtic knotwork is of fine quality and the tooling in the leather should be examined in the context of pre-Jacobite Scottish leather work. This is all based on photos, but if I had this I would trend more confident in 17th C. origin than not. Kudos on a beauty! LL |
6th February 2016, 01:15 AM | #6 | |
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6th February 2016, 02:02 AM | #7 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Louisville, KY
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The scabbard motif, blade, and top of the pommel look very Scottish to me.
Congratulations! |
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