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Post by hertzyinmn on Jan 2, 2024 14:31:03 GMT
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Post by eastman on Jan 3, 2024 1:21:42 GMT
the mark is probably "Eisenhauer" which means it passed the test of cutting a soft iron nail
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mrstabby
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Post by mrstabby on Jan 3, 2024 11:08:02 GMT
found this: looks pretty similar
Can you show a picture of the front of the guard, if it is like this one it should have an emblem there.Cavalry officers saber, 1919, Baden-Württenberger Dragoon regiment, appraised at 350-400€
EDIT: Not it, sorry. But still pretty similar. Blade looks like it is plated, but can't really tell.
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Post by hertzyinmn on Jan 4, 2024 13:13:29 GMT
Thanks I will get some better pics and post them , hopefully by the weekend. Thanks for research
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AndiTheBarvarian
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Bavarianbarbarian - Semper Semprini
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Post by AndiTheBarvarian on Jan 4, 2024 13:53:08 GMT
The Eisenhauer ("Ironhewer") mark officially means the blade passed a wrought iron nail cutting test. Of course no one knows if someone stamped it on blades that didn't.
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Post by madirish on Jan 4, 2024 14:40:02 GMT
Lisel Bruen is "Eisenhauer"....which is a marketing gimmick to market a sword as "highest quality" It is not the maker's name. Dunno what the leather triangle is...it is not an original washer for the sword. The guard and what you show of the blade indicate that it is a Hessian Cavalry Officer's Saber, but the pommel and backstrap are not right. They look like an Austrian 1869 backstrap and pommel......but the guard is not that of an Austrian 1869.
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