Those are the adventures of Mr. Fimbulmyrk, in bushcraft and blacksmithing, mountainbiking and hiking, reenactment, writing, singing, dancing, stargazing and having a piece of cake and a coffee. Pray have a seat and look around you, but be warned - the forest´s twilight is ferocious at times.
"A rechta Bua hoat a feitl, feia und a schnua", is an old Bavarian and Austrian saying. It translates loosely as "a true boy has a jackknife, fire, and some cordage".
Not long ago it was customary for gents, boys, but also girls and women, not to leave one's home without some basic implements. My grandma always carried a small kitchen knife, a bit of twine and a lighter in her apron dress. My father carried two knives, twine and a lighter whereever he went, even when just going out onto the property, not to mention my grandfather and granduncle and grandaunt.
Pocket knives, contrary to popular beliefs, are actually really old. A knife from Hallstatt shows striking similarities to really modern pruning knives:
(Picture from Österreichisch
es Nationalmuseum)
The knife shown in the picture is dated to the iron age, maybe to the Latène period.
In the Roman empire, there were simple knives like the aforementioned example, but also far more eloquent pieces:
(Copyright by Fitzwilliam Museum, https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/image/media-33274)
The picture shows what is often called a "Roman Swiss Army knife", which is perfectly relateable.
Other examples from the Roman empire offered a single blade, but a no less eloquent handle.
(Picture Copyright by https://coriniummuseum.org/object/1980-109-22-2/)
The knife, which was found during excavations in Bath, offers a rather distinct blade. It could be called a "clip point ", because, well, that presumeably is how it was made.
The word "Feitl", usually referring to a simple knife with no spring or locking mechanism, might refer to Middle High German "viddelen" (to play on a fiddle, to mess about, to tinker). It might also have sexual implications. We will see later on that there are children's culture rituals that might hint of such an implication.
(Picture Copyright by Feitlclub Trattenbach)
Looking at a contemporary example of a typical Feitl from the Trattenbach region in Austria, it bears striking similarities to those examples from Hallstatt and the Roman empire. Even the blade shape is almost identical to the example from Bath. Actually there is a huge number of similar pocket knives from the Roman empire with a more or less eloquent handle, but almost identical blades.
This has something to do with the manufacturing process.
In the video, you can see that the steel sheets are clipped and the edge line is forged (cold) to shape. This method is maybe not the most sound way to do it, metallurgically speaking, to put it politely, but there is no mistaking the fact that it really is economically efficient. We do not know how the Roman knives were forged, but there are few other ways to do it economically efficient than like that, and given that there are a lot of finds from the iron age like that, it is probable they did it in a very similar way.
Which puts the little knife in a very interesting position. There seems to be some kind of continuity from the Hallstatt period to the 21st century. The thing is, quite possibly the use of a pocket knife has not changed too much. It is safe to say, by the way, that it is part of the things that make up human culture.
Assuming that the etymology I postulated is correct and hints of the process of "fiddling with something" or "tinkering", it becomes evident why that might be. It was used for whittling, cutting cordage, making shavings for fire starting, but also for games that hint of an older, maybe folkloristic context.
There are different blade shapes, too.
(Picture Copyright by https://www.momentothek-oberwart.at/detail/4868-herr-rudolf-wagner-erzeuger-des-woadafeitl-warter-feitel)
The knife shown in the picture was made in a different community in Austria, the village of Oberwart, in the year 1954 by one Rudolf Wagner. The handle was made from lacquered horn. The bolster design bears striking resemblance to another kind of Austrian knives, the often quoted "Drudenmesser" variety.
And while the Feitl is obviously an utility knife, the use is not always utilitarian. Several house manuals from the 16th to the 20th century hint of an apotropaeic function of simple utility knives, too. Means, the eloquent knife handles and speciality blades of the Drudenmesser might have not been exactly cheap.
(Picture Copyright by https://www.domquartier.at/hintergrundgeschichte/fraisenkette-und-drudenmesser/)
Often forged and tempered to very specific requirements, some of them sometimes a bit superstitious, the handle made from chamois horn and heavily decorated with inlays, sometimes bone or mother of pearl, silver and brass, a common farmer might have been hard-pressed to afford a knife like that. Instead, there are also a lot of examples that appear to be decorated after buying.
The original Trattenbach Feitl was none too shabby, either, though. They were, as opposed to other contemporary pieces, forged from highly refined steel, the so-called "Scharsach" steel, which originally was reserved for weapons, scythes and scissors.
(Picture Copyright by https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Museumsdorf_Trattenbach_Museum_in_der_Wegscheid_14.jpg)
Those knives were of legendary quality and the edge retention qualities must have been quite outstanding. They were sold far and wide, even to the American colonies where they became known as "penny knives".
Have a look at Keith's awesome blog for more info:
Also, there are several videos about these knives in the longhunter period in the American colonies. Look at this example:
These knives were a treasured possession, a staple utility knife and a source of entertainment.
Kids and adults alike in Austria and Bavaria used the knife in several games of blades. In the Trattenbach region there was the game of "Messerln". A half-opened knife was thrown into a wooden chopping block or table or bench from a height of about 50 cm. The one whose knife opened in the process to stand more or less perfectly upright, won. Given the knife is working on friction alone and rather light, this would require technique, a lot of force and finesse, so it was a feat of strength and skills, but also intelligence and coordination.
This doesn't seem in any way special, like many games like that, worldwide, but especially in the Alpine countries. Games like that are, in a way, part of human nature.
In children's culture rituals in the region, the loser of such a game often got the handle of his knife "intersected", together with mocking, satirical rhymes. This might hint of an older ritualistic background. It is, of course, neigh on impossible to say, but one might be able to postulate a ritual of fertility behind the rustic, but somewhat innocent endeavour. And of course, to postulate a continuity reaching back to the iron age is outright silly, for lack of evidence.
The use of even the humblest of utility knives as apotropaion, however, is so well documented for every human culture on earth, that it is almost commonplace. Sigmund Freud also documented the connection between knives and sexual impulses empirically.
The game quite certainly is reserved for boys and young men. But there are also rituals with a "Feitl " documented for girls. One folk custom is to go out in the night of the winter solstice alone, and without speaking a word, and carving a heart into an evergreen tree with the blade of the Feitl. Returning home in silence again, it is said that that the would-be bride sees her future husband in her dreams.
A possible interpretation of the name itself and the action of "fiddling with something" also has some rather rustic sexual connotations. To "fiddle" with a woman is a metaphor for sexual intercourse. Nowadays, the connection to weather rituals in folk customs doesn't seem obvious, but the connection e.g. between rain and the knife seems no longer too far off if you take into account another etymological interpretation. In Nether German there still is the term "fiseln/fisseln/fieseln" which refers to a light drizzle. It derives from Old Nether German and Old High German *fîsil/fithîl, which literally means "penis". The German dialect word "pieseln" is a verb referring to a lighter intensity of urinating, but also to a light drizzle referring to rain. Thing is, Middle High German and Old Nether German *fîthil could become Feitel in Early Modern High German according to Verner's laws of diphtong change. It is of course a rather daft analogy to associate a knife with a penis and a penis with rain or even storm. But even today we call rain names like that in a colloquial or dialect context.
My theory is getting further emphasis by the existence of folk customs like throwing a knife into the storm with the blade towards the wind in a similar manner as in said game. Or into the soil in order to attract rain.
Another custom was to write incantations like AGLA or
SATOR
AREPO
TENET
OPERA
ROTAS
on the blade and to stick it into a roof beam in order to fend off evil spirits like Drak and Trud/Drud or the Tut-Ursel, a spirit akin to the Béan-Sídhe, or, more prosaic, lightning strike.
There are, of course, several more folk customs centered around knives in the Alpine regions, but also the rest of Germany and Austria.
Any Feitl could be an Apotropaion, not only the more specialized "Drudenmesser", and these customs were followed often until the late 20th century.
The cult of Mammon-Satan, aka Miltonesque capitalist society, put an end to a lot of these cultural customs and led to a loss of a whole lot of intangible cultural heritage, in a rather prosaic way. Of several hundred manufacturing sites in Trattenbach, only two still produce the original Trattenbach Feitl on site, and they honestly work to rather modest standards of quality. But in 2015 the process was somewhat slowed, or, hopefully, even halted. The manufacturing process is now part of the intangible cultural heritage of the UNESCO which is a beacon of hope, so to say.
Actually, the use of the knife should also become part of that protection.
What gives me some hope, is that young knifemakers in Austria start to discover the topic, too, without trying to compete for cheap price policies from abroad.
(Copyright by https://www.kalderum.com/product/87-damaszenerstahl-feitl-alle-verkauft)
Examples like that might be close to the original image of the original standards of quality, before they became "penny knives ".
The culprit is, on one hand, this is a knife that really prominently shows the cultural relevance of simple utility knives as an everyday item, but also as a part of our humanity and culture. On the other hand, this is also humbling, because this is, what people carried, who were depending on their tools to a much higher degree, than we modern couch-potatoes can even imagine. With but a knife like that, flint and steel and a bit of twine, the boys of these times were able to brave the mountains. And maybe it often was making all the difference between thriving and death.
I do have a lot of fun researching the topic, a right rabbit hole, and maybe that is not the last you have read about it here...😉
Today, a parcel from Sweden arrived. With a good old thing in it, an old Frost's Mora knife, one with the old laminate steel and an early plastic sheath, maybe from the 50s or 60s.
Now I certainly do not need to lose a lot of words about Moras as such, but it was somewhat of another eye-opener again. Moras are made to be tools for house, garden and the wilderness. I mean, real wilderness, not forest economy parks. They have been used by people for expeditions worldwide and came out begging for more. Which doesn't come as a surprise, because an expedition might take a year or maybe two at most, but they were "designed" for years and years and decades of farm use. I set that "designed" into quotation marks, well, because I am not quite sure if you can talk about a conscious act at all. If you need to find roots of the design, you might be not too far off with Frost-Erik Ericsson, who, after working four years in the US as a lumberjack, returned home to his hometown in Sweden in 1891. There, he founded a fabrication of timber wedges, axes, sledges and knives for the use in the forests.
And if we are quite honest to ourselves, even as accomplished "bushcrafters", we cannot even imagine the level of skill these lumberjacks possessed. I obviously do not mean any offence by that, since I explicitly do not exclude myself from that. We do not even know most of the things they did even around the homestead. They could built an entire farm only with an axe, a saw, some other tools and a knife, and fact is, they did. Scandinavian museums are full of artifacts they made that way. If you want to get an idea of what actual "bushcraft" looks like you might want to watch this vid: https://youtu.be/FtHyqcwWVPs?si=-q7MFUXWCfi-87yf
It is original footage from the beginning of the 20th century, recorded in Finland to keep these skills alive. This must have been, more or less, the stuff Frost-Erik Ericsson had to do with a knife as a lumberjack on a daily basis. It was that commonplace that noone would even had mentioned it. He might have been using some kind of Puukko or other utility knife, and might have developed his own ideas what his knife should or should not do. If you look at Scandinavian knives from that time period, you see that they are all quite similar. This is not altogether surprising, of course. For one, the founders of the knife industries in Mora were all more or less related, and have, in spite of competition, always maintained friendly relations. Second, if you really use your knives for that kind of work, there is something nearing an ideal form to accomplish function. For instance, the handle of the Mora is comfortable in all basic Slöjd hand positions. Look at this series to get my meaning:
So, maybe it is not quite correct to talk about a design, as in something someone came up with, but more of the product of an evolutionary process.
As I said, Moras are made to be tools, to be used and, sometimes, abused. In the Mora knife community, there is a thing we all know, the so-called "barn Moras". Typically found in some shed or barn, often with big dents and hammer marks on the spine, a lot of them rusted and dirty and neglected.
The one I got is one of the better ones, but it was no exception. Part of the tip was missing, and the tip was deeply rust-pitted and had some dents, albeit no big ones.
Thing is, I wasn't in a good mood, and to be honest, a bit disappointed. But since I did not spend a huge amount of money on the knife, I thought, well, the milk's spilled anyway, why not try out something if it is that fooqued oop anyway? So I went to our pile of beautiful rocks and picked a sandstone, poured myself a cuppa coffee and used that rock to grind away.
One cuppa later, the tip was restored. Most of the worst pitting was gone, and the biggest dents removed. With some random sandstone.
I brought out the water stones then and started to work on the blade in earnest. But fact is, the blade already cut alright after sharpening with a rock. Some freaking random rock.
I gave it some love with a Japanese water stone up to 3000 grit.
After that, I refined the spine line, putting a 90°angle on it in the process.
Without any stropping yet, it now makes lovely curls already, but is in no way maxed out in terms of sharpness. I will also give the handle some love, too, and a new paint job. Maybe a leather sheath, too.
What I want to say is, well, I fell for those heebie jeebie magical sorcery knives that make you survive just by carrying them, too. I fell for that batoning scam, too. Even if you have read about my stance on the difference between bushcraft and survival on this blog countless times, well, I am not a stranger to being a fashion victim myself. And it is and was always fun to try out a cool new knife. And feeling yourself like some tough guy.
But fact is, what we think is bushcraft is but a very shallow pond. I do not feel too disgraced and humbled by those old conkers in the Finnish video I shared. Instead, it is sort of a fascinating discovery and a great opportunity to learn.
Moras have always been about sustainability and resource-efficiency, ingenuity and skill, assets that will come in extremely handy in our near future. Not because of some SHTF scenario necessarily, but because they always were. To rediscover those skills is not only a grave matter of survival, but something far deeper. It really brings joy and the feeling that you can make do in a lot of situations. It is no wonder that neo-colonialism and neo-imperialism isn't too fond of tools and crafts. But apart from political musings, ramblings and rants, a Mora is not the next big thing. It isn't something fashionable or exciting. It is not made from some spaceship material.
But it is something that somehow has grown into its shape for hundreds of years, slowly and steadily and humbly. It is more of a natural thing, if that could possibly be in the first.
But it is the same tool those old jätkän used. Means, if you copy what they did, you can safely say you messed up if you don't succeed. 😉😜
Anyway, I really enjoy the journey of this knife, its history, and look forward to the Slöjd I will try to learn with it.
" The law of Germany (German: Recht Deutschlands), that being the modern German legal system (German: deutsches Rechtssystem), is a system of civil law which is founded on the principles laid out by the Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany, though many of the most important laws, for example most regulations of the civil code (Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch, or BGB) were developed prior to the 1949 constitution. It is composed of public law (öffentliches Recht), which regulates the relations between a citizen/person and the state (including criminal law) or two bodies of the state, and the private law, (Privatrecht) which regulates the relations between two people or companies. It has been subject to a wide array of influences from Roman law, such as the Justinian Code the Corpus Juris Civilis, and a to a lesser extent the Napoleonic Code. " (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_Germany)
Is what Wikipedia, quite neutrally so, says about the origins of the German judicial system.
On a recent audition on the novelty offensive weapon act that is currently pushed forward by "centre left" political forces in Germany, Association Of National Criminal Investigators interns stated a connection of the current judicial system with the Third Reich. (https://www.bdk.de/der-bdk/was-wir-tun/aktuelles/brauchen-wir-ein-schaerferes-waffengesetz), which I had to learn that it is quite a historical commonplace.
Mr. Winkelsdorf also declared the entire offensive weapon act a failure and implied responsibility of diverse political agendas for the fact.
That said, given the Nazi regime was, by international law and consensus, declared and, categorically speaking, righteously so, defined as criminal, and given its judicial system was still not evaluated and defined as keeping its validity, there have to be reasons for it.
Let us not get too much over the top about it and keep some realism: Of course it would be a bit impractical to overturn every single law just because the villains also used it. Murder is still murder, in every single human society and culture worldwide. There are nuances, of course, but the young Republic of Germany had a lot of other pressing issues to tend to at the time.
The other aspect, however, is a really dark thing that lies at the core of the many problems we are faced with today. The rise of nationalism worldwide is a symptom of it.
Relating to the works of Professor Dr. (PhD) Eckart Conze, Marburg 2024, concerning the biography of Alfried Krupp, a German Entrepreneur and Nazi, it becomes evident that the Nuremberg courts might have missed something. Alfried Krupp, who was sentenced for his role as a sponsor of the SS even in the Republic of Weimar, actively sponsored and promoted former SS officials into the judicial system and political positions even after his time in prison (Conze 2024). And that was just one example of heads of big corporations and high finance with a more or less Nazi background influencing political forces in the Federal Republic of Germany. To check my own bias, I also looked up other areas of the judicial system. Another example of a symptom of Nazi ideology still in effect was the institutional discrimination of people of diverse gender and homosexual persons. As late as 1990, homosexuality in Germany was criminalized.
Another example were the racist attacks on migrants in 1984, where another form of institutional discrimination of the victims took effect. In context of the contemporary DVU murders, Minister of Homeland Security Hessia, Peter Beuth, played a dubious role in concealing evidence about the case.
Herbert Reul, Minister Of Homeland Security in North-Rhine-Westfalia ordered the clearing of the protest camp of deforestation protesters in the Hambach forest, which led to the death of a journalist. According to NGO Campact e.V., he then was member of the board of RWE corporation then, without his salary being able to be deduced from a concrete business-related activity. (Campact et al). RWE is an energy provider that claimed the Hambach forest in order to mine for surface coal.
Boris Pistorius, now Minister Of Defence, is said to have played a crucial role in the so-called BAMF-Scandal (Federal bureau of immigrant affairs).(Campact, global witness, Anonymous et al).
Please do not get me wrong, I am not claiming that all this is true. I obviously cannot investigate all these political rumours, and of course one would need such an investigation from a neutral position, and I do not claim to be in such a position in the first, and would, secondly, be very, very relieved if all this were just some conspiracy nut's raving. Really, I would give a lot for that.
What do these gentlemen, however, have in common apart from their dubious possible part in these latter events?
All of them tried to push through an even more restrictive offensive weapon act, and have done so for a good decade. In itself, that would be perfectly in line with the democratic obligation of every citizen to promote the freedom of every citizen, even if that means to accept restrictions on your personal freedom. And let me be totally clear about this: In no way do I want to illegitimate this obligation. As I said, I grew up as the son of a deputy law enforcement officer. Obeying the law is second nature to me and I have an intrinsic motivation to do so. And because of that, I would of course accept any restrictions if they secure the democratic rights of my fellow citizens.
But there is one democratic right that is the highest value of democracy: The assumption of innocence by the authorities towards any suspect. It means, every citizen is assumed innocent in case of suspicion. You are not obliged to prove that you are innocent of a crime by default, but the authorities of law enforcement must investigate whether or not you are guilty.
Now these aforementioned gentlemen were crucial in the establishment of so-called "weapon restriction areas", mainly around railway stations and in inner cities. I perfectly understand why someone gets the idea, but there is a very grave problem.
For utility knives, as is the case even in the UK, are exempt from the Offensive Weapon act. Not just that, but they are defined as "useful tools " in the very text of the law and the administrative order for law enforcement personnel. These utility knives, however, are defined as weapons in the weapon restriction areas, therefore supposing a criminal intent for every citizen that carried a pocket knife in a weapon restriction area. The fact is made worse by introducing the possibility to prove your reliability (read: innocence) by buying (!) a "small " weapon license. Thusly indicating criminal intent in law-abiding citizens, an original custom from the Third Reich. Not my idea, but investigated and evaluated by several German Courts of Administration (OGV Berlin, Leipzig, Düsseldorf et al).
The selfsame parameters of the weapon restriction areas (which have been evaluated as antidemocratic by several courts) now should become institutional, and would then no longer be an upturning of the assumption of innocence, or rather, you needed to appeal to the High Court of Constitutional Justice to make any such claim valid, which is neigh on impossible for any citizen of medium or low income.
Plus, law enforcement and political forces actually and explicitly state that it would be desireable to be able to do full body searches without judicial suspicion, which is the original wording of Third Reich officials. Means, you travel through Germany as a businessman, maybe a POC, some huge copper slams you into the wall, while another holds a gun to your neck and strips you naked, and if he finds anything, from a manicure set to a small pen knife, can either put you in the box or leave you be on a whim. We had that already in Germany, we tried that, and it tickled a bit too much for my liking, no thank you.
The fun part comes in when you inquire with political forces about this. You immediately get framed as antidemocratic.
Which is ridiculous, of course, but it comes as no surprise.
If you talk to law enforcement personnel about your reservations and worries about the enforcement of these practices(I do and did), you often get the answer " but it will not affect you, you are not a target person "( quote). What is a target person then? Young people and people of colour or otherwise an obvious migration background is the simple and devastating answer.
Please do not get me wrong. There is the elephant in the room, and it is that a lot of migrants in Germany are not necessarily what they seem to be. Some are violent, some are even terrorists. But I have worked with migrants from many nations. They are, for the most part, just people, neither good nor bad. Their cultural influence can be a really great contribution for a society to stay healthy, when in moderation. For the most part. But of course, they need to learn how things work in another culture. It is not even easy to live in Germany and stay sane in the process for a German. But without someone taking you by the hand and showing you the inner workings, it is neigh on impossible.
In the Third Reich, my grandparents, my mother and father reported, that they were affirmed, the restrictions on Jews and the deportations were none of their concern, because they were not a target person. Until my father, as a "Pimpf " unit leader ripped his rank badge and Cord from his uniform because he refused pointless military exercises as chicanery for his unit and awaited punishment for insubordination. Actually he came out lucky, but only at hair's breadth. He was eleven years old at that point.
This might sound a bit over the top, and hopefully it is not the same thing. I still think that we are very privileged to live in a democratic system where I can say these things. I do not assume that this is all due to some Nazi conspiracy. But if it looks like a duck, smells like a duck, sounds like a duck, and you have looked it up in the great book of ducks and checked and counterchecked it by comparing it to grouse and goose and eagle, there is a certain probability that it is a duck. This situation looks a lot like a duck.
The solution to less crime is social welfare, housing programs, social responsibility, education, violence prevention programs, integration offers for migrants (I worked voluntarily because the project I worked for had no funding, and was living off the woods and collecting bottle refunds, just so you get the picture).
Plus, while I do not want to state a criminal altright background of several political forces in charge, which by the way were a bit... well... let us call it counterintuitive, because a lot of these politicians are rather known for centre-left agendas. But discrimination by law is systemic in Germany, historically speaking, for the reasons e.g. Eckart Conze evaluated. It is a bit of a beacon of hope that it was the Alfried Krupp foundation that actually funded the current research and explicitly states the will to take responsibility for the past. Not every business is fascist or fascistoid, not every politician is a liar. And we still are very privileged to live in a democratic country. But then not every migrant is a criminal, neither is every citizen, and neither is every user of knives or even collector.
What we desparately need is a better culture of community and communication, of solidarity and democracy. We need trustworthy heads of state and less lobbyism and we must realize that neo-colonialism lies at the core of the great many problems we are currently facing.
Phew, not a nice post again, and I have to admit, a bit wanting for decent quotations. Actually it is just a personal view of the topic, which is rather complex, and I would be very relieved, were it all gibberish. But fact is, that unfortunately doesn't look very probable at the moment. It is, to disclaim any political intent, an opinion based upon informed personal evaluation and therefore protected by the first article of German constitution (Grundgesetz).
I really wished I could trust our government again, no irony intended. At the moment, it looks like a matter of survival not to.
You all have read my post about the Knifemaker´s Fair in Solingen Klingenmuseum which I had the pleasure to visit this year again. And as usual a pleasure it was, meeting with old friends and browsing the aisles, apparently making new ones (Hi, Peter, this one´s for you, even if you already know!) and simply relishing in all the new projects by pros and amateurs alike.
But an even higher asset is the museum in itself, for there you can find properly documented and lovingly presented blades from Solingen and all over the world, from Luristan bronze and ancient Persian bronze axes through Celtic swords and long knives up to the medieval ages. The museum therefore is a must-see for anyone seriously interested in the study of blades in history.
I, for one, am still on the track of the so - called "Brackersfelder Knopmetz" (See another post), a short dagger or knife native to the region I live in which is said by many to have legendary metallurgical and artificial properties.
Thusly, I was impressed by the presence of those knives. Left is a dagger that might as well have the looks of the "Knopmetz". How it actually looked, is still a mystery to me. I presume there were two varieties. One, referred to as the "Brackersfelders dehhen" in judicial documents and archives of stock of the time in question, would have been a dagger. For an example of the "Knopmetz", however, look here. The knife in question looks as if it were single-edged, has a "Knop" (pommel) and was often made with precious mountings. The "dehhen" presumeably was double-edged. The photo above shows a "Hauswehr" (home-defence) in the middle and a utility design very common in the North of Germany, albeit with very precious handle materials. The knife to the left is typical of the "Holbein" variety. If you compare it to the "Brackersfelders Knopmetz" in the article you can see several similarities. Crucial to the Knopmetz is therefore:
-a long, small, single-edged blade (whether the long ricasso is characteristical, remains to be examined)
-an ornamental crosspiece
-a pommel (hence the name)
-a special steel alloy which is due to the alloy resulting from the iron ore found in the mines around Breckerfeld, which I estimate as containing iron, a high carbon content, and manganese and silicium. This steel was said to have superior characteristics, to an extent that there was a legal affair in 1490 concerning the faking of the Breckerfeld sigil marker on steel that actually came from the Siegerland region. It is quite obviously stated in the documents in the city archive of Breckerfeld that the Siegerland steel (which was renowned in the entire known world in 1490 for its quality) was inferior by far to the quality of steel smelted in Breckerfeld. Which leads me to the question, what would a bladesmith regard as superior in 1490?
I guess there are two facets of the question. A steel that was at the same time taking a good temper as well as retaining a high amount of flexibility was rare, but since the excellent experimental replica of the Ulfberht swords we can quite safely assume that while the crucible steel smelting process might not be commonplace in the medieval ages, there might have been smiths still knowing the how - to in 1490. Many Frankish swords have been suspected to be made from crucible steel. Refined crucible steel is one way to achieve a blade that is taking a high temper as well as maintaining an amazing amount of flexibility. Having had the privilege to work with historical (pre-1920) tool steel, I can say the mechanical properties are quite amazing and maybe even up to par with the famed Wootz or the Russian or Turmenian Pulad. My theory now is that the Brackersfelders Knopmetz actually was made from a variety of steel that was similar to Wootz. It could be, since Breckerfeld was a Hanse community then, and the Hanse traded throughout Europe and, over small factories in Russia, maybe even from Asia, that the technology was transferred from Russia, if it were not known in the region in the first place. You can find quartzite in the vicinity of Breckerfeld, this might have been used as a cooling medium, and, in the process, added Silicium to the alloy. The iron ore found seems to be often "contaminated" with Manganese, which, when smelted and refined, would make for a steel with properties similar to modern 1.2842 or spring steel. There´s still much to investigate, and there´s a goopd thing!
Eloquent short sword from 1600.
A disc-pommel dagger with a triangular blade.
The blade in good condition.
To the right is a Renaissance sword, a so - called "Cinquedea" or "Ox tongue" for the width of the blade, originally an Italian weapon.
A most eloquent example of a Rondel or "ear dagger", presumeably used in a reverse handle grip with the thumb resting between the two pommel discs.
An unusual example of the "Grosses Messer", a sword popular with German mercenaries throughout the medieval age.
Rapier, "Katzbalger" short sword and left-hand dagger.
Above you can see a utility peasant knife, made from massive steel. Knives like these were cheap and tough and ideally suited for hard working on a farm.
With the strengthening of civilian culture there was also a movement towards table culture. A set of table cutlery from the 17th century.
17th century table cutlery. A royal decree demanded that knives for table use had blunted tips.
Table knives since look this way.
Although here you can see a fine example of a personal wayfarer´s traveling set.
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And another ensemble of sabres and "Grosse Messer".
As I might have illustrated, if you are interested in historical developments of arms and cutlery alike, this is the place;-).
It was some time ago when Mike and Diana dropped by the Bethaus smithy to do some forging with their little one and having a go. It was right fun to work with them, for especially Mike is an accomplished blacksmith himself. We the talked about some plans of theirs to revive an old smithy in the Ennepetal that - alas - burned down some time ago. Now there´s a club to sponsor its revival, and Diana wrote the other day for me to announce they are now online. And here comes the link:
I want to give you some personal ins and outs about this smithy. It is one of the old smithies in the Ennepe valley, an old site of many smithing manufactories, and one of the last upholders of regional smithing traditions. Scythes, machetes and farming tools as knives also were made there. It stands in line with the Krenzer Hammer, another manufactory looking back on a long tradition. The valley is also deeply molded
by blacksmithing and metallurgy. Even the trees tell a tale of a long tradition of crop-change farming, charcoaling and bloomery. In many places you can find slag heaps, the so - called "Sinnerhoopen" and iron oxides and ore which hint to the smelting of the legendary steel for the "Brackersfelder Knopmetz". The smithy burned down some time ago, and those folks are now faced with the challenge to start with zero to rebuild a tradition. It is a very great thing, because this can establish a new tradition. I will contribute as much as I can, and might be the "Brackersfelder Knopmetz" will come to life in their smithy... we will see what the future brings. For now I am quite enthused.
If you could find it in you (or your purse) to contribute to their work, please contact them via their homepage. Thank you!
As you have read in my most recent post, I am currently on the tracks of an animal most shy: The short dagger or knife the small community of Breckerfeld was famous for in the 15th century. It is commonly known as a "Breckerfelder", "Brackerfelder", "Bracherfelder" and referred to as either a "dechen", a "deken", or a "degen", or, more precisely, a "knopmetz" or "knopmes". Please take note that in these times the orthography was not standardised, and the quotas in question derive from juristic documents, and judges have never been famed for their etymological precision, to say the least.;-)
Anyway, the term "degen" hints more towards a longer dagger with two edges or a triangular blade shape commonly used as a weapon, primarily to pierce armour. In the documents in question the weapon is attributed in two cases with having a slender tip, in one case with being old. Since it is attributed, I conclude that it might not always have been that way. Also, an informal information I have got hints towards the knife being short, and used as an allround tool rather than a weapon. I suggest at the moment that the degree of standardization might have been not very high. Since the term "Brekkenfelders knopmetz" also appears in documents explicitly as a common product of trade, I suggest it being a kind of disc pommel dagger. I have the vision, and that has nothing to do with any academic claim, of it being a shorter version of a Scottish dirk, between a dirk and a sgian dhú in length, and it might have had a flat tang, for most of the finds of the region had one, but with a disc pommel at the end. This is a most fascinating topic, and a smithing challenge at that. I would be quite fond to create a knife along the lines of the "Breckerfelder" as a modern utility, maybe even from local steel, and as close to the original as would possibly go, albeit as a legal carry. We´ll see if I´d be able to do a modern version of the knife that´ll still be recognizeable.
But first I must find one, blimey, and it seems there´s no archaeological evidence at all! But the hunt is on, and I like it.;-)
Last weekend I met with Drui for some crafting and some sightseeing:-) in a fascinating city. Marburg, situated in the North of Hessen, certainly is a craftsman´s, artisan´s and philosopher´s paradise. I arrived Friday afternoon and threw my pack on the floor at Drui´s. It was some chatting and then it was off to a scientific archaelogical research report at Marburg University, and it took place in the most astounding chamber I had ever heard a lecture in: The old, medieval part of Marburg University, situated in the upper part of the city. Topic was the uncovering of another grave at the "Heuneburg", an archaelogical site dating back to Celtic times, and quite certainly a crucial find for dating and terming Celtic archaeology. Fascinating. And even on our way we came across a myriad of ancient architectural highlights.
A textbook "green man" masonry piece. The "green man" was said to be a charm to ward off demons, grant prosperity and fertility to a house. Interesting enough, we are talking about a Christian iconography!
A portal carving, supposedly ancient and lovingly restored oak. Maybe a local folk tale?
Forgework. This is ancient. You can tell it by the way the iron is split and forged and also by the structure of the iron, which supposedly is wrought iron.
This is a chart of ancient potters. the potters´ guild was strong in Marburg since the dark ages, and there is a certain brand of pottery typical of the city, painted and glazed brown with handmade décor, as you can see in that chart´s design. Each potter´s trademark décor can be seen there.
Door without words.
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:-) students, tut tut tut:-)...
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Towards the Chrismas Fair!
Decoration on a former guild´s house. This is a blacksmith´s guild sign.
And some blacksmith´s work, eh?:-)
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The masks were meant to fend off Evil.
A view of the castle from the lower city.
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Private Moonvirgin ready for mission Bratwürst and mulled wine...
The old theological faculty...
....looming overhead.
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Gargoyle Special air squad ready for mission:-).
Oi there, she look at me;-)...
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A bit early, but yap, that´s a wish...;-)
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A bad pic of the moon over ancient ruins... An artisan´s house with guild figure "God bless the arts", the inscription says.
It was a fascinating stay with one of the best friends I ever had and supposedly ever will have, with crafting, chatting, making mischief, drinking, having fun, being sad, working together, listening to quality music and walking through a fascinating city, learning and discussing and simply living.