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Artists

  • ? germanic 8
  • ? northern europe 10
  • ? saxony 6

Copyright

  • ? metropolitan museum of art 93

General

  • ? 1600s 10
  • ? brass 6
  • ? copper 8
  • ? copper wire 8
  • ? counterguard 8
  • ? pommel 7
  • ? quillon block 9
  • ? rapier 9
  • ? recurved quillon 6
  • ? ricasso 9
  • ? ring guard 6
  • ? side view 2
  • ? spherical pommel 6
  • ? steel 9
  • ? sword 29
  • ? thumb ring 9
  • ? turk's head (knot) 6
  • ? vertically recurved quillons 6
  • ? weapon 46
  • ? wire-wrapped handle 9
  • ? wire wrap 9

Meta

  • ? alternative view 10
  • ? incredibly absurdres 104

Information

  • ID: 210
  • Uploader: DEERFRIEND »
  • Date: about 13 hours ago
  • Approver: VeliteAquila »
  • Size: 2.64 MB .jpg (2857x4000) »
  • Source: images.metmuseum.org/CRDImages/aa/original/LC-28_100_2-003.jpg »
  • Rating: General
  • Views: 1
  • Score: 0
  • Favorites: 0
  • Status: Active

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This post belongs to a parent (learn more) « hide
post #206
Resized to 29% of original (view original)
metropolitan museum of art by germanic, northern_europe, and saxony
Original Commentary

Rapier

https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/23041
This post is an alternative_view of post #206.
Description from the Met Museum:
The rapier was the principal civilian sidearm throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Designed for cut-and-thrust fencing of progressively complex techniques, the rapier is characterized by a double-edged blade with an acute point and an elaborate guard for the hand. The guards, usually of iron or steel, were subject to a variety of embellishment. They were engraved, chiseled, gilded, damascened, and encrusted in gold and silver in keeping with fashionable styles.

Rapier blades, invariably of steel, bear a variety of maker’s marks denoting their origin in the two principal centers of blademaking, Toledo in Spain and Solingen in Germany.

Open Access
As part of the Met's Open Access policy, you can freely copy, modify and distribute this image, even for commercial purposes.

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