Knotted left-hand dagger ES729....
Knotted left-hand dagger ES729....
Knotted left-hand dagger ES729....
Knotted left-hand dagger ES729....
Knotted left-hand dagger ES729....
Knotted left-hand dagger ES729....
Knotted left-hand dagger ES729....

Knotted left-hand dagger ES729. Handmade by the last swordsman master in Toledo. Unique piece.

Artesanía Morales
ES729
Last items in stock
€4,995.00
Tax included

Transport: Shipment with insurance

Description

KNOTTED LEFT-HAND DAGGER. 16th Century. Handcrafted in carbon steel with an antiqued finish, made by master swordsmith of Toledo, .

It was back in the 16th and 17th centuries. Like a plague of lances and gunpowder, the unstoppable Spanish Tercios marched across Europe. As their fierce reputation spread, the enemies of the crown trembled in fear, waiting to receive the “stroke of mercy” whenever they heard thousands of veteran soldiers thundering in.

Besides lances, swords and harquebuses, one of the weapons that Spanish soldiers always wielded, particularly in most of the clashes in the Spanish Golden Age, was the so-called ‘misericordias’ daggers, also known as ‘vizcaínas’ or ‘quitapenas’. These daggers, made of good iron for a sinister purpose, were intended to relieve the victims of the heavy load of their earthly life.

They are between a knife and a sword in size (with a blade of some 30 cm), and got their sacred name from the way they were used on European battlefields: as a final act of mercy.

Veteran Tercio soldiers would wear one strapped to their backs at about kidney height, to make them easy to unsheathe when needed. They were valued in self-defence and for attacking. These “daggers of mercy”, or main gauche daggers, acted as “auxiliary” weapons to the right hand, which wielded the sword in combat, and gave the stroke of “mercy” to the dying enemy by delivering the final thrust.

CHARACTERISTICS

BLADE. 39 cm long blade, 3.7 cm wide at the ricasso and 1 cm at the point. Completely forged and tempered by hand in carbon steel by the master . Antiqued finish.

The ricasso is engraved on both sides, and on the front side it is inscribed with the words “En Toledo”, to indicate that the dagger was made in this city. Next to the inscription, the master’s touchmark, “AA”, appears with a beautiful engraving at the top. After the ricasso, the blade has undulations on the right-hand side and engravings on both sides, reaching up to the foible, where the blade has two bevels on each side. It is said that these undulations in the blade were soaked in poison to quicken the adversary’s death. For this reason, they were known as “Daggers of Mercy”.

CROSS GUARD AND KNUCKLE GUARD. The cross guard is 29 cm long. It is decorated with finely chiselled designs. The sail-shaped knuckle guard is beautifully fretted and chiselled, featuring fretted knot-shaped fluting on both sides.

GRIP. The grip is made of wood wrapped in copper wire with four inlaid ribs and finished with two chiselled ferrules at the ends. It is threaded on the blade tang.

POMMEL. Solid iron pommel in the shape of a flat wheel with engraving around the circumference and a ball on the tip. It is threaded on the blade tang and riveted to enhance the dagger’s strength.

SCABBARD. Brown leather scabbard made by hand especially for this dagger. It contains two iron pieces: at the top is the “brocal”, or locket, chiselled on both sides and featuring a round button to attach the scabbard to a belt, and a “batiente”, or chape, in chiselled iron covers the point.


Dagger handmade by the last swordsman master in Toledo. Unique piece.
CRAFTSMANSHIP OF TOLEDO. SPAIN.

Product Details

Blade size
39 cm
Total size
56 cm
Weight
948 gr
Total size with cover
58 cm
Ratio
10.40
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