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			Analogue situations in Iberian nobility terms. You would bet the blades of these hunting dagger/bayonets never saw daylight ... let alone hunting action. 
		
		
		
			(Toledo 1859 &1863) .  | 
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		#2 | 
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			Thank you for your responses gentlemen. 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	The very high quality double edge dagger is a hunting dagger. Probably used by the lord to prod his helpers into the scrum to finish off the raging boar. I'm convinced. But the other one? Detlef reckons Genovese, or maybe it is a hunting knife too? Perhaps not a knife with a specific purpose, but just a personal knife? It is a nice size for a knife that one could carry day in, day out, to slice up the cheese, the salami and the people who cheated at cards. Don't forget that even though the fork was in use by about the 4th century in Rome, and was in common usage across Italy by the 1600's, in other parts of Europe it took another couple of hundred years to gain universal favour. I guess because Italians eat more pasta than Frenchmen and Englishmen. Anyway, in most of Europe the personal knife was indispensable right through until modern policing methods made them something to be avoided. Maybe this knife with the holes in the ricasso was just a personal knife?  | 
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		#3 | 
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			The second one is outsandingly similar to a "cuchillo criollo" of the gauchos. In both your cases, the widening of the blade after the hilt acted as a handguard to prevent  the hand slipping down to the blade.  It is a usual resource in some type of weapons which are used fastened under the belt, so the cloth does not get hooked so easily as with a traditional crossguard when the owner pulled the knife. The piece that covers the beginning of the blade is not only ornamental. It gives rigidity to the blade and helps in protecting the hand to avoid slipping and have an accidental cut.  
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	Regards  | 
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		#4 | 
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			Thank you for your input Gonzalo.
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
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		#5 | 
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			Just found this pic of another one on-line. 
		
		
		
			Any ideas where this might have come from?  | 
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		#6 | 
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			again, it has the look of an 18c italian/spanish dagger or gaucho facon. could be anywhere from italy west or southern part of so. america. looks fairly new & pattern welded, lots of custom makers out there who could have been influenced by the style. nice tho. odd edge geometry, like the earlier ones, looks like it's designed for thrusting only. 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	dimensions?  | 
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		#7 | |
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			 Quote: 
	
 But all this gives us only probabilities, not a certain attribution. Regards  | 
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		#8 | |
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			 Quote: 
	
 I suspect this latter example is a recent recreation of an Italian hunting knife. Anyhow, I don't think it is "enthnographically correct."  
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		#9 | 
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			Thank you for your further comments gentlemen. 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	Tell me Marius, why don't you think the latter example is "enthnographically correct." ? I recognise that the scabbard is a bit gauche, but how about the knife itself? If not ethnographically correct, where do you think it might have originated?  | 
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