Postby JeanryChandler » Fri Nov 04, 2005 8:55 pm
Mr taillebois,
I usually agree with most of your posts, so I'm surprised to read this comment, as it seems to differ with much of the research I've been able to come across in about five years of study on spathology. Best I can determine, from a lot of reading and my own handling of a lot of replicas of every cost range, and a (very) few actual old blades, the edged weapons from the Renaissance on back seem to have been of far better quality (on balance) across the board than any modern reproduction to date.
Yes, the modern steels are more chemically perfect and reliable in terms of the consistency of alloys, certainly when measured by volume, but certainly they understood how to make steel in the Renaissance. Or are you referring to some much earlier period? What you are describing sounds the metalurgy of the La Tene era Celts or the Romans.
My understanding is that by the time the of the Cistercian reforms (12th century IIRC?) around the overwash water wheel, and the resulting technologies such as the barcelona hammer and mill-powered bellows, you did actually had fairly widespread large scale steel and iron production. By the later Renaissance they were even making armor out of tempered steel...
Whatever advantages modern sword reproducers seem to have in terms of homogeniety of their steel (and actually with things like the availability of wootz, for example, on the open market, it's even debatable how much better modern steels really were), lasers for measuring strait lines, or automation in grinding processes, the ancient Masters seemed to have been far ahead in the art of heat treatment and all the other more important subtleties which go into making a truly fine killing blade.
Understandable when you have a direct feedback loop between the makers of these products, and the "consumers" whose lives depended on their quality, (and who in many cases had explicit or de-facto life or death authority over the very artisans who made these items in their employ) i.e. bad swordmakers wouldn't be in business long in "the day" nor would their consumers be delighted by a nice finish and the ability to slice through a plastic bottle or a cardboard tube.
Contrary to your opinion, and with all due respect, I'm personally rather disgusted by a certain trend within the sword reproduction and collecting communities who are delighted to have swords seem specialized to perfectly cut through water bottles that they are now claiming they have surpassed the original masters in actual quality of these things as swords.. when meanwhile the simplest tests immediately prove that many of these incredibly expensive uber weapons are incredibly fragile and dainty. (Not that I'm saying you are one of these guys....)
This also when not even 5 years ago they couldn't even get the weight down on the basic ball park of the real thing. Even now you are still seeing a lot of replicas which are 1 - 2 pounds overweight...
Some may feel that the old swords are over fetishized, but I personally think there actually isn't enough respect paid to the real deal. Not that every weapon made before the 19th century was a mastepiece, to the contrary, consistency was undoubtedly less than that of modern factory perfection of making 10,000 toasters exactly the same, but lets put it this way... if there were Leonardos and Michelangelos in the fields of painting and sculpture, there were clearly the equivalent around in some of the ancient sword making houses of Europe.
Jr
"We can't all be saints"
John Dillinger