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Old Yesterday, 05:13 PM   #28
Jim McDougall
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Route 66
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ian View Post
Hi Lee,

Lew's knife is consistent with a Spanish colonial origin also. The ring for the first finger is found on espada ancha and occasional knives of Latin America.
Well noted Ian, these 'finger ring' types of edged weapon are (according to Levine '85) dirks from Central America. Not sure of the scope of examples with this distinctive feature, but the scope of diffusion throughout Spanish colonies is almost immeasurable. The Spanish main extended from the Caribbean, Gulf colonies, Mexican coastal ports and extended to the Spanish Philippines, and weapons of all forms were aboard the vessels that plied these vast trade networks for centuries.

I recall one weapon that seemed to fall into the Latin American category with such a feature yet its other character leaned into the familiar espada ancha category. ..truly a variant and illustrating how these forms were inclined to meld together at times.

Colonial blacksmiths and artisans were always innovative, and well used whatever resources were at hand, repurposing components of many forms constantly. They provided perplexing csonundrums for those of us afflicted with the arms investigation obsession

Spanish colonial, again, is probably the most accurate designation for most of these kinds of weapons, with qualifying additions as required.
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