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Old 1st September 2007, 11:21 PM   #1
Runjeet Singh
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ummm seems I am wrong. I compared the down turned quillions straight away to the South Indian Spear (of which I have seen a few)....interesing similarity between Indian and European eitherway,
Cheers,
Runjeet
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Old 1st September 2007, 11:54 PM   #2
CourseEight
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Wow, suddenly lots of posts here! As it happens I received the dagger today, and yes has a rather heavy square tang, tapering to a short rount threaded end. Also the hilt is indeed plated. A pity, but nothing Indian here! Still, I'm quite happy with the blade, and what I paid for it. Any further pictures I should take that would help in the identification? Any thoughts on the age? I don't know when threaded tangs were introduced...

Thanks so much for everyone's input!

--Radleigh
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Old 2nd September 2007, 08:52 AM   #3
Henk
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Isn't it a so called plug bayonet? Those bayonets where attached to the old muskets with the hilt in the barrel. This knife has such an appearance.
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Old 2nd September 2007, 04:46 PM   #4
CourseEight
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I thought about its being a plug bayonet, but all the ones I've seen had a bulge in the handle, then a tapering, then the hilt and dagger. The similarity in the look has to do with the way the blade tapers, but the position of the hilt is wrong. See the picture here. I'm thinking both the plug bayonet and my dagger were probably based on the blade design of some polearm, and that's why they look similar?
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Old 6th September 2007, 05:23 AM   #5
tom hyle
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Yeah, a plug bayo would need a tapered butt to wedge into the gun barrel.
The tang nut is what is sometimes known as an ordinance screw; they are found (not exclusively) on military equipment, prominantly bayonet handles, for instance. It is turned with a special "ordinace driver" (not making up this probably obsolete terminology! ).
It leans me toward later 19th/ earlier 20th (in the private message I was picturing a threaded pommel with an emergent tang; that's the factor I think is perhaps more recent...) the blade looks older than that though, and perhaps the grip and upper ferule and pommel are replacements????
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Old 6th September 2007, 05:34 AM   #6
CourseEight
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tom hyle
The tang nut is what is sometimes known as an ordinance screw; they are found (not exclusively) on military equipment, prominantly bayonet handles, for instance. It is turned with a special "ordinace driver" (not making up this probably obsolete terminology! ).
It leans me toward later 19th/ earlier 20th (in the private message I was picturing a threaded pommel with an emergent tang; that's the factor I think is perhaps more recent...) the blade looks older than that though, and perhaps the grip and upper ferule and pommel are replacements????
Thanks for the info. I think it certainly is a strong possibility that the blade predates portions of the handle, since the patina on the blade itself seems quite nice and genuine, as far as I am able to judge such things. Thanks a lot!

--Radleigh
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