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1st January 2022, 06:03 AM | #1 | ||
Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Room 101, Glos. UK
Posts: 4,152
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Since there was no illustration of the Spanish Notch:
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A picture is worth a ....aw, you know... My 'Fowler' Bowie with the 'Spanish' notch: I suspect it is just a traditional decorative feature, much like the cho or kaudi on a khukuri, which also has a 'nobody really knows why' reputation. I have other bowies with various 'spanish notches'. I'll add a thought that they were the starting point for sharpening. Which looks like the reason for the very plain notch on my smaller "gambler's" bowie at the bottom. Last edited by kronckew; 1st January 2022 at 06:15 AM. |
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4th January 2022, 02:22 PM | #2 | |
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Join Date: Dec 2019
Location: Eastern Sierra
Posts: 392
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Quote:
I personally have always found the choil more of a nuisance than a help especially if the distal end of the notch doesn't slope towards the point. That said I have been told that large choils are used with big knives to allow fingering the blade to help with delicate tasks. I have heard, and maybe read it on this site as well, that specially shaped choils on some knife patterns help with tasks that are regionally common. I always wondered if the cho didn't start that way, or maybe it is just a linga. The first example seems to somewhere between all three a notch, a choil, and decoration. I am sorry not to have my own illustrations. I delayed this post almost a week and realized I would never publish it if I waited on pictures any longer. |
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13th January 2022, 10:42 AM | #3 |
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Join Date: Apr 2015
Posts: 143
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Interesting discussion about the hook. I myself have a Dutch cavalry officers saber model 1813. This one also has this strange hook (see pictures).
A few years ago there was a large auction of 556 Dutch trooper swords and sabers from the Rijksmuseum depot. This included one curious saber with two semicircular recesses on the tip. Years ago, this collection of sabers from the museum's depot was extensively researched and described by the Dutch researcher G Hof. I have attached his report on this strange saber. Since most of you can't read Dutch, I'll summarize it briefly: He describes the blade and scabbard of a light cavalry saber No.1. Now you should know that the Netherlands bought a batch of m1796 pattern sabers in England. They arrived in Holland at the end of 1813. Deviating is that a British pattern 1821 light cavalry hilt is mounted on this specific example. According to him, this is not surprising because the Netherlands has conducted tests with, among other things, this type of saber. Unfortunately, Mr. Hof can also find no explanation for the strange recess. Because Mr. Hof does not rule out the possibility that it may be a test saber, the semicircular recesses could also have been made for testing in my opinion. |
24th January 2022, 03:46 PM | #4 |
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Join Date: Apr 2015
Posts: 143
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Does anyone have any idea what purpose these semicircular cutouts would have served?
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