So, some first impressions with the sword in hand.  No way I would suspect it to be a Victorian or later attempt.  The hilt is comprised (as I suspected) as several individual pieces, joined and peened.   The castings of the writhen elements actually quite delicate, with the grip sounding as not too hollow a shell.  Speaking only to the hilt, the annelets are large enough to treat as a rapier grip.  The grip by itself between the ferrules is 3".  Photos in hand to follow. 
 
Now some nitty gritty. 
 
The weight is considerable at 2.5 pounds (spring fish De-liar scale)  eek, right?  Well, hold on here, mixed dimensions 
 
Blade length is at 33" as shown. 
Width at the guard 27 mm 
Thickness at the guard 7 mm 
A very linear forte distal 
Thickness at the pob still 6mm a fighting distance from the guard pob at roughly 4" 
The blade (in my mind) shortened from a blade that was likely about 40" long at its original use 
Thickness at the point 2.5 mm 
The blade has the feel of varnish and the clank of a sword with good spring.  Perfectly ovoid lenticular. 
 
Sorry, no spreadsheet.  I judge swords as fencible or not.  At a pound more than a light magic spadroon, it is still at the range of what a longer rapier might tip 3 lbs or more.  Instantly appraised before I opened the USPS priority box, I was under no allusion it would be a box of air, as felt with an epee.  I feel it was a marriage sometime before 1700 but folk are welcome to disagree.  For me, as with so many, the questions of its history will always be there.  My take is someone wanted a weapon, not a decoration. 
 
Pictures and more thoughts to come 
 
Cheers 
GC
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
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