Lot Essay
The hilt of this sword is clearly by the same hand as the very similar one on a rapier in the Tøjhusmuseum, Copenhagen (No. C 241/42) and a detached cruciform hilt in the Victoria & Albert Museum (M28-1975) formerly belonging to Lord Kimberley. On both of these the central holes in the pommel and circular features on the guard are partly filled by applied silver cherub's heads. Similar heads almost certainly existed on the present sword. The Kimberley sword is accompanied by a by-knife en suite bearing the mark of a London cutler. All three swords have been attributed to Robert South, the English royal sword-cutler
See Claude Blair, 'An English Sword with an Ottoman Blade in the Swiss National Museum - The Hilt and Scabbard' in K. Stüber & H. Wetter, Blankwaffen, 1982, pp. 58-63, fig. 9
See Claude Blair, 'An English Sword with an Ottoman Blade in the Swiss National Museum - The Hilt and Scabbard' in K. Stüber & H. Wetter, Blankwaffen, 1982, pp. 58-63, fig. 9