Blades, a German and a nice curved Belgian made, one.

stuka f

Well-known member
My finds for today; out of the woodwork. \:D/
When I saw them first I thought both being German, until I opened him at home. Not much time to check it when offered 8) ...
It is all about the curved one. :?
It is nicely etched, even on the side of the blade. And marked A Rongé Liége.
But I can't find what it exactly is, so help is always appreciated.







 
Two nice blades but wil be curious what that curved one will be in the end.have not the slitest clue what this could be
Nice find these two
 
Nice finds and thanks for sharing! I don't have a clue about the blades but police crossed my mind for the curved one.

Regards,

Edwin
 
Remember that the Prussian 1811 Blücher sabre was patterned after the British 1796 light cavalry sabre used by the British Light Dragoons and Hussars. This pattern sword was duplicated in many fashions and by many countries over the years, even by the U.S. Army. The curve on the blade of your sword is more excessive than a normal Prussian Blücher sabre, but that does not mean that it isn't from the same original pattern. I would guess that the sword you have is Belgian military, and probably cavalry or artillery.

John :)
 
The straight saber appears to be a cavalry quill-back combat weapon (that is if that is a rivet through the handle--there should be two). If it is, there might be a unit mark on the basket hilt. More photos please.
 
Thank you all!
The straight saber is a Prussian cavalry 1889 mod.
But no unit markings.
Weather is bad over here, pictures aren't that good.







 
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