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Old 4th November 2025, 04:32 PM   #1
serdar
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Default Sword 12/13 century or not?

One collector from neighbour country has this sword, i like it very much, it has a great balance in the hand, but it is, or it is not, that is the question, an artefact or piece of trash, if someone could help.
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Old 5th November 2025, 02:19 PM   #2
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It looks OK to me but but but fakers are fakers because they fake.

Any idea as to provenance?
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Old 5th November 2025, 04:03 PM   #3
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I'm not an expert on edged weapons, but the piece just looks too good for me! An iron object that is said to be 700 or 800 years old will certainly look different in terms of surface structure. My opinion.
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Old 5th November 2025, 09:35 PM   #4
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Too many fakers out there to risk it I'm afraid.

This one has a couple of red flags to me, not least that the corrosion looks too consistent and 'fresh'.

I would give it a wide bearth personally.
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Old 17th November 2025, 11:39 PM   #5
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ed View Post
It looks OK to me but but but fakers are fakers because they fake.

Any idea as to provenance?
Provenance, curent owner got it after old owner died, he got it fromriver near their town it was in a mud in the river.

As he stated.
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Old 17th November 2025, 11:45 PM   #6
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It handles wery well in the hand, i was 50/50 on its originality, so i didnt take it.

But will examine it further on xrf and then i will compare with similar specimen allso localy found that is in museum.
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Old 20th November 2025, 07:19 PM   #7
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The uniformity of corrosion, and the apparent lack of actual use, push me to suspect its bona fides.

On the other hand, if it is offered at a reasonable price, a handsome, well-balanced fake has its own interest.

I don't know if analysis of the metal would be informative, but I suspect that it would tell the tale.
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Old 21st November 2025, 10:46 PM   #8
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We have two problems here, one is we tend to assume it's fake and secondly using digital photos online cannot tell us everything one needs to make a good assessment. Corrosion levels are dependent on a number of factors and we don't know this either. Expert research may be required.
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Old Yesterday, 10:45 AM   #9
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This sword is a fake there is absolutely no doubth about it, some may need further hands on research but not this one.
XRF examination can show the composition of the alloys used in steel but nothing more, it can not show you if its original or not, it shows the composition of the steel.
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Old Yesterday, 12:43 PM   #10
Will M
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I agree this is likely a modern sword that has been corroded to fake age. Straight edges have not lost any material and overall corrosion is even. The metal impurities would cause some uneven corrosion and loss that is not seen here. However stating it's fake without providing proof/reference isn't very helpful, it's interesting to know what you see that leads you to your conclusion.
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Old Yesterday, 12:57 PM   #11
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yes i understand it is interesting, but I will never tell the fine details on an open forum because it will teach people with certain intentions what to do better and different next time they want make something like this.
The question was : fake or not. the answer is : fake !
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Old Yesterday, 09:18 PM   #12
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Thank you all on coments, metal can be tested both from this sword or another one and then compared with sword found in tje same area that is prowen original example.

Regarding claims someting is fake, every one has right to his opinion and to claim what ever, BUT i agree with Will M if someone says that something is a fake but wont say why, becouse of what and give me a 100% accurate proofs of that, i wont even speeak about that, nor take that in acount, there are too many wolfs in sheeps skin, even on this forum, i learned that hard way.

And fraze "i wont write becouse someone can use that" is for small children, forgers work with museum curators, and they allready know those details if they exist.

And please, dont make argument from this or go in discussion.

Point is simple, if something is 100% fake, write, say, and Prove that with 100% evidences, only that is straight game and fair, everything else is wolf in shhep skin.

Thank you.
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Old Yesterday, 09:20 PM   #13
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bob A View Post
The uniformity of corrosion, and the apparent lack of actual use, push me to suspect its bona fides.

On the other hand, if it is offered at a reasonable price, a handsome, well-balanced fake has its own interest.

I don't know if analysis of the metal would be informative, but I suspect that it would tell the tale.

Metal from 12 century from one foundry is diferent from fake, but if this is original it can have similar metal composition like 12 century known original.

Fake is never good, they are made for scaming people.
Its beter to buy cheap modern reproduction and hang, than to buy fake.
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Old Yesterday, 10:25 PM   #14
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I can't comment on whether the sword "seems" authentic or not as I personally lack the necessary expertise, but just to put in my two cents, I would look at it this way: Given the prevalence of forgeries of swords from this era and the small number of surviving examples, the prior probability of the sword being fake far exceeds the prior probability of the sword being authentic. So, all other things being equal, from a scientific evidence, i.e. Bayesian point of view, the default hypothesis should be that it is most likely a fake, until strong evidence accumulates of its authenticity. That evidence can take many forms, but it should be strong and robust enough to cancel out the prior (and of course any evidence to the contrary).

I would not be so quick to dismiss Dirk, as he has a lot of experience with older swords.
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Old Today, 12:28 AM   #15
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I think it is unscientific to assume such swords found are automatically labelled fakes, it's like being guilty before proven innocent. I do suggest due diligence and proper testing by recognized professionals.
Yes there are obvious fakes however when it's not obvious it does not help to label anything as a fake. Anything is only fake if it's not authentic and is being represented as being so.
I do not believe that online digital photos alone can decide the authenticity of a sword. You need it in hand. People that have handled many of these particular swords would have a better take on this sword. Not many people have the experience due to the rarity and locations of such swords.
When I know something is a reproduction or fake I will point out the details.
If I don't know I will depend on professionals and testing if required.
Providing an opinion is good but requires backup, otherwise it's not useful to the poster of this sword.
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Old Today, 09:02 AM   #16
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you will get there to it will just take some more time and making mistakes
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Old Today, 09:11 AM   #17
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Will M View Post
I think it is unscientific to assume such swords found are automatically labelled fakes, it's like being guilty before proven innocent. I do suggest due diligence and proper testing by recognized professionals.
Yes there are obvious fakes however when it's not obvious it does not help to label anything as a fake. Anything is only fake if it's not authentic and is being represented as being so.
I do not believe that online digital photos alone can decide the authenticity of a sword. You need it in hand. People that have handled many of these particular swords would have a better take on this sword. Not many people have the experience due to the rarity and locations of such swords.
When I know something is a reproduction or fake I will point out the details.
If I don't know I will depend on professionals and testing if required.
Providing an opinion is good but requires backup, otherwise it's not useful to the poster of this sword.
It is not an opninion , it is the truth
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Old Today, 02:45 PM   #18
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Will M View Post
I think it is unscientific to assume such swords found are automatically labelled fakes, it's like being guilty before proven innocent.
Except law is not science. We work from the presumption of innocence in law but that is not the case in science. Ideas are very often immediately suspect and will even be discarded without consideration because they lack evidence and plausibility and are simply not worth our time and money. They are guilty of being inconsistent with science and we don't bother trying to prove their innocence.

It's simply about which option is more likely a priori. Failing to take that prior plausibility into account is a problem you see a lot of in pseudoscience and fringe science. It is what distinguishes "science based" approaches from "evidence based" approaches (see here for a discussion; in this case pertaining to medicine, but the same principle applies to all fields of scientific knowledge). Basically, science has the additional requirement that the hypothesis has to be consistent with a hard won and strongly supported theoretical framework that is based on years or even centuries of rigorous work and evidence gathering. If it doesn't, then it must have exceptionally strong evidence in its favor, or else the more likely explanation is that the hypothesis is in error since it goes against an extremely robust body of established knowledge.

To come back to swords: If we know that there are many more artificially aged reproductions out there than real examples and that it is exceedingly rare for unseen specimens to pop up out of nowhere, then the default assumption should be that what we have is a reproduction, because that is statistically the most likely. That's a major reason why we want provenance dating back to before the 2000s.

To give a reductio ad absurdum example, suppose we knew of a single real example of a 12th century sword and a 999,999 fakes, then the a priori chance of a never before seen example being real is 1 in a million whereas the a priori chance of it being a fake is 999999 in a million. We could probably all agree what the default assumption should be in that case. It doesn't mean it never happens (it happened at least once, after all), but we better cross our t's and dot our i's if we want to make our case.

In real life we can of course only guess at the real numbers, but I don't think it's controversial to say that the forgeries significantly outnumber the real examples that have never been described before, and in the absence of strong evidence and well established provenance, the same principle applies.

Anyway, sorry to drone on but the science demarcation problem is my other hobby.
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