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Page 126 of 157
  • Nation : German
  • Local Price : £225.00
German 19th Century Infantry Briquet Sabre. Description Slightly curved spear pointed blade, unfullered with false edge. One-piece cast brass hilt with ribbed grip, forward curving quillon with comma-shaped finial and simple knucklebow, domed pommel. Black leather scabbard with brass locket and chape, the locket with oval frog stud, the chape piece partly internal with leather covering, with ball finial on the exposed lower section. Blade 65.5cm in length, the sword 78.4cm overall. The blade is bright with a polished finish, only a few tiny spots of patination and old polishing marks. Its edge is sharp with a number of nicks, its tip is undamaged. The brass hilt is likewise bright with a few spots of patination and a few small dents. The scabbard fittings have a midtone patina with some darker spots and a couple of tiny dents - one slightly larger dent to the chape piece which does not interfere with sheathing and drawing. The leather of the scabbard has a few dents and some cracking on the front face but remains sound overall. Its stitching has opened slightly in the section covering the internal chape, perhaps due to shrinkage, but there are paired brass rivets on either side which help secure the leather so it is unlikely to open any further.
  • Nation : British
  • Local Price : £225.00
British Lee Enfield No. 7 Mk 1 Land Service Bayonet with Black Grips, by B.S.A.. Description Single-fullered bowie knife blade with clipped point, blued for 5mm at the ricasso. Black grips made of Paxolin (resin-impregnated paper, similar to Micarta, and widely used today in circuit boards). Steel Mk I scabbard with steel throat piece and circular frog stud. Hilt and pommel blued. The blade is stamped on one side at the ricasso with &#acute;No 7 MK 1/L&#acute;. The pommel is stamped on one side with a broad arrow War Department mark and &#acute;M47A&#acute;, indicating manufacture by the Birmingham Small Arms Company (B.S.A.), specifically their plant at Small Heath, Birmingham, which was assigned the dispersal code M47A during WW2. The flat of the hilt on the blade side and the frog stud of the scabbard are both stamped with a broad arrow. The penultimate model of bayonet designed for the Lee-Enfield No. 4 rifle and Sten Mk 5 submachine gun, the No. 7 was an attempt to produce a bayonet that was equally useful as a utility/fighting knife and a mounted bayonet, by way of an innovative rotating pommel which contains the locking mechanism. 330,000 were produced between 1944 and 1948, but doubts about the rigidity of the mechanism under stress and its high cost of manufacture meant that the No. 7 was largely passed over for the simpler No. 9. The bayonet designed for the ill-fated EM series of experimental bullpup service rifles was essentially a strengthened No. 7. The grips of these bayonets vary in colour due to different materials and formulations used to produce these early composite materials, but are generally red, shading towards brown in some examples. Black grips are a known variation and I have so far seen them predominantly on examples by B.S.A., and occasionally by Elkington “ they are interchangeable parts however, so could readily have been swapped between bayonets of whatever make. Some claim the black grips were intended for parade use or were for specific units e.g. the Guards, and I have indeed seen examples chromed and with parade frog, but former British Army armourer, collector and author Peter Laidler attests that both &#acute;black and brown paxolin grips were issued under the same part number and it really was just pot luck as to whatever colour came through the Ordnance system. It was nothing to do with whatever unit they were issued to&#acute;. This would seem to confirm that there was no differentiated role intended for the black version, it was simply a variation of the same product. Perhaps those found in parade order were selected at the unit level for that role for purely aesthetic reasons, not as a matter of policy. Laidler also notes that black grips seem to be scarcer in civilian collecting today than they were in military service at the time, so there may be survivorship bias at work.
  • Nation : British
  • Local Price : £225.00
British No.7 Land Service Bayonet. Poole 1948. #2511002. This is a scarce blackened blade variant of the British No.7 Mk1/L, Land Service Bayonet.These bayonets were made for use with the Sten Mk V sub machine gun. Originally, they were also intended for the Lee Enfield No.4 rifle but subsequently were only issued with this rifle for parade purposes as a result of live-fire incidents in which rounds connected with the muzzle ring.The No7 Mk 1 Land service bayonet was designed in 1944 and a total of only 330,000 were produced. The design was perfected by the Wilkinson Sword Co., who produced 1,000 bayonets in 1944 and subsequent production was carried out by four others makers from 1945 until 1948. The bayonet’s innovative design with its unique swiveling pommel allowed it to be both bayonet and fighting knife with deep finger grooves in the hilt which is made of resin impregnated cloth called Paxolin.The 207mm clip point blade has a deep single fuller on both sides. The blade is in excellent condition and retains its original blackened finish with minimal scabbard wear. The ricasso is stamped with the bayonet’s designation “No.7 Mk 1/L.” The obverse ricasso bears the date, 1948 and the Poole factory maker’s mark, a letter P inside a circle.The swivel pommel is in perfect working order and retains its original black finish with mild use related wear. The Paxolin grips are in very good condition.The bayonet is complete with its Poole-made No.5 scabbard in very good condition. The round frog stud is stamped with the Poole factory mark.This is a scarce and highly collectable bayonet in great condition.
  • Nation : British
  • Local Price : £225.00 GBP
Georgian 1788 Pattern Cavalry Sabre, Relic.  A 1788 pattern cavalry officer's sabre in relic condition, with a cut down blade and an old repair near ricasso. Manufactured by Runkel. George III monogram still visible."
  • Nation : Swedish
  • Local Price : 2,850 kr
Swedish cutlass m/1747.
  • Nation : -
  • Local Price : 2,850 kr
Rysk svt 1940 bajonett.
  • Nation : -
  • Local Price : 2,850 kr
Sv cutlass m / 1747.
  • Nation : -
  • Local Price : 2,850 kr
Sv cutlass m/1747.
Page 126 of 157