Description
Carried by officers and NCO=s (non-commissioned officers) in the time of early standing armies, as well as by palace guards, the partizan and spontoon were largely symbols of rank and used as a guide to form troops on. However, they were sometimes used in combat as a last ditch weapon, often while protecting the regiment=s colors. This example with symmetrical forged steel head, featuring broad 7 1/2” blade with pronounced medial ridge, a pair of upturned lugs, a pair of down-turned lugs, and central flamboyant lugs. There is also a pair of smaller upturned lugs. Base turned with two round knobs and octagonal ferrule with two short langets; attached to later black-painted round-section shaft. Later textile tassel of red silk and gold metallic thread. Length of metal 15 1/2” (39.4 cm), overall 85 3/8” (212 cm). Price includes shipping in the contiguous USA, the cost of which has doubled since Covid!








 Austro-Hungarian Pandur Hunting Hanger, Mid-18th C
				
					Austro-Hungarian Pandur Hunting Hanger, Mid-18th C					 French M1777 Flintlock Cavalry Pistol
				
					French M1777 Flintlock Cavalry Pistol					 Caribbean Pattern Bilbo Broadsword, ca. 1700
				
					Caribbean Pattern Bilbo Broadsword, ca. 1700					 North European Broadsword, ca. 1630
				
					North European Broadsword, ca. 1630