I'm just happy we have some bronze age content. Would love a primer on bronze age swords.
@jwg728 ай бұрын
Definitely. There's that weird one without a real tip. There are the Dussack shaped ones. There are the long 'rapiere'. There are one's with forward swept quillions. It is wild.
@hendrikvanleeuwen91108 ай бұрын
Couldn't agree more. Bronze was topic d'jour on sword tube channels a few years back. Look back over old videos of schola gladiatoria, skalligrim, lindybeige, Tod's Workshop, and Thegn Thrand(the usual suspects, lol). There is a lot of good bronze age content if you dig.
@B..B.8 ай бұрын
Sea people's entered the chat
@HipposHateWater8 ай бұрын
The Bronze Age was like the 00's cellphone scene--there were just so many wacky and wild experimental forms never (or at least rarely) seen since.
@neilcampbell93838 ай бұрын
Any chance of an interview with Neil Burridge? 👍🤔👍
@maasbekooy9018 ай бұрын
He's got some very good points here
@stateofchrysalis54838 ай бұрын
Ha.
@LuxisAlukard8 ай бұрын
"The quill is mightier than the sword!" No, wait....
@markthomason97238 ай бұрын
I would like to see a discussion of the rapier and other blades found with the 400-year old remains of the Theodul Glacier Man, a find starting in 1984 and recently finally presented as a complete set on display. They look to be things Matt would know about and be interested in.
@hraefn18218 ай бұрын
Hmm...a rapier, fencing dagger, flintlock (or wheel lock or doglock) pistol and silver coins? Was this a highwayman? A fiendish rapscallion? A nefarious rogue? XD
@markthomason97238 ай бұрын
@@hraefn1821 All of those were suggested, but the polite consensus has become a well-to-do merchant on an interesting trade route that in part went over the glacier as it was then. They think they found remains of his three donkeys he used to carry that trade (but not trade goods). However, this could very well be overly polite. However it may be, I think the overall collection of blades is fascinating, and I'd love to hear Matt's thoughts.
@hraefn18218 ай бұрын
@@markthomason9723 Sounds very "highwayman-y" to me. XD The assortment of weapons is...interesting. That is to say, homie was armed to the teeth. XD
@robertfaucher37508 ай бұрын
YES!!! A CARPS TOUNGE!!! *the crowd goes wild* sorry its just i never see anyone talking about these and its really really hard to find info on em online. Bronze swords are something im really interested in.
@Oldtanktapper8 ай бұрын
Definitely need some more love for the Bronze Age, that’s pretty much where it all started for swords as we know them today.
@robertfaucher37508 ай бұрын
@@Oldtanktapper I wanted to make him a carps tongue but he already has one
@FullFNCode8 ай бұрын
So "just the tip" has a long history.
@shootthatmonkey8 ай бұрын
*LONGER* than you think
@steemlenn87978 ай бұрын
Well, you only need the tip in to create lasting consequences.
@franciscusvdlouw54368 ай бұрын
Aah what's the point
@knight_lautrec_of_carim8 ай бұрын
Ah I was hoping the Katzbalger gets a mention with its wierd rounded tip.
@zetareticulan3218 ай бұрын
Chinese Warring States period swords had some pretty interesting shapes.
@mauricioromero-bastida48358 ай бұрын
The model 1898 Argentinian cavalry sword also has a Prosser quill tip although the blade, of german manufacture, is thinner than that in the video. Seems that such blade type remainded in use in the continent long after it dissapeared in Brittain.
@CAP1984628 ай бұрын
When I hear Prosser, I think immediately of Mr. L. Prosser the direct male descendant of Temujin. Sadly the only evidence of his noble forebear was a fondness for woolly hats and occasional hallucinations of hairy men on horses laughing at him.
@kaoskronostyche99398 ай бұрын
Yet another excellent discussion. Thank you.
@christopherdriscoll66288 ай бұрын
I have a custom sabre where I had it made with clipped the tip so it is still online for the thrust. The false edge near the tip is also sharp. It has a amazing thrust for curved sword.
@EricBjarndyr8 ай бұрын
This technology reminds me of 3rd century ad celtic swords and spears: a diamond ridge all to the tip of the blade, and flat wide edges on each side. Great videos thanks!
@allmachtsdaggl51098 ай бұрын
A thinner blade might penetrate deeper but it makes a smaller wound and therefore has less impact on the targeted body.
@CDKohmy8 ай бұрын
The Prosser tip reminds me of the Korfu kopis.
@Redeye3083508 ай бұрын
Was it a good cutter? I imagine anything with a pronounced spine is going to create drag when cutting through a target
@DrCool2388 ай бұрын
This channel is one of my favorites. It reminds me of the History Channel of yore, only over topics that I am already very interested in! Keep up the great work!
@IceniBrave7 ай бұрын
Awesome to see Neil Burridge getting some love here. Would be brilliant to get him on the channel 👀
@tylermycka8 ай бұрын
The Wilkinson 1845 light cavalry saber has a similar design philosophy. It’s a subtly curved sword that straightens out in the final 6ish inches for better thrusting. In my opinion, it’s the ultimate cut and thrust one handed weapon, particularly so when on horseback.
@pinarppanrapir94898 ай бұрын
There's also the type 2 falchion, which were mentioned on previous videos
@frickomode35478 ай бұрын
experimental 19th century french carps tongue swords is a really interesting tidbit, would love hear more about that and maybe other weird obscure 19th century experiments too
@gregewing39168 ай бұрын
How were the pipe back/quill tip blades made? Is the "pipe" forged from the blade or a separate piece forge welded on? I would guess it was forged in place, in particular for the quill tip.
@andreweden94058 ай бұрын
The Pattern 1796 is an absolutely fantastic zombie weapon!
@ericvanvlandren89878 ай бұрын
Great video Matt. I would love your opinion about the yatagan style blades in relation to this cut/thrust question. To my untrained eye they seem to be a clever compromise and might perform acceptably at both. Thoughts?
@raics1018 ай бұрын
I think he covered that in an older video, and that was the conclusion, you get the chopping power of a forward curved sword but you can also thrust well. I heard Yatagan blades were pretty fashionable in the west for a time, mostly as a trophy but some were pretty enthusiastic about the blade shape even though it came a bit late to make a big impact in the military.
@JohnGilbert-l5l8 ай бұрын
How well dpes it cut ? I imagine the pipe back spine 1 cm behind the edge stops the sword from cutting very well. Does it ?
@JohnnyGoble-oi8ie8 ай бұрын
I really like this sword. Very cool.
@blakebailey228 ай бұрын
somewhat related, but I think the langseax has a really interesting blade shape
@iota-098 ай бұрын
One of my favorite bladeshapes
@JKLynar8 ай бұрын
Was the yataghan not just such a compromise ? Mainly asking because of the widespread sword bayonet applications.
@PhilippBrandAkatosh2 ай бұрын
While you were talking i had an idea i called it halberd-sword because it would be a sword with a spear tip but also on it´s backside a spike instead of a curve would that work ? That way, it could cut trust and Pierce
@JimmyTownmouse8 ай бұрын
Does the clipped point 1796 have the same blade thickness near the point as the standard hatchet point, or did they leave any extra meat for stiffness?
@ianwinter5148 ай бұрын
how well does the quilltip pass through targets with that crosssection?
@silverjohn60378 ай бұрын
It wouldn't have been as effective at piercing through chain mail but against unarmored targets? It doesn't look any wider than the head of a boar spear.
@PJDAltamirus04258 ай бұрын
Probably wouldn’t flex much as all through thick clothing or padded and that was essentially the best people were wearing. This is 1800s, if was extremely for people to wear something as minimal as metallic helmet and chest protection
@Zbigniew_Nowak8 ай бұрын
Clever, but the problem is that the thicker part of the metal is close to the edge at the front. This means it will act as a "stopper" that will make it difficult to cut deep into the target.
@KuLaydMahn8 ай бұрын
I'm guessing that ideally you would be aiming your cuts a little further down the blade. Between 1/2 - 3/4?
@tiltskillet70858 ай бұрын
The extra weight at the tip would seem to give it some extra chopping power it wouldn't have otherwise, but ideally cuts would still be made further back on the blade.
@slimetank3948 ай бұрын
True, but you can't have it all. Personally, it's a good compromise for a dual purpose blade
@brianm16848 ай бұрын
Cuts aren't made at the tip, they are ideally made at the point of resonance. Easy to find on a flexible blade. It's usually ~1/3 down from the tip. Top heavy swords I assume would be closer to the tip.
@sitrilko8 ай бұрын
Hi Matt, will you be doing test cuts with a Prosser-quill tip sword?
@-RONNIE8 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video ⚔️
@WhatIfBrigade8 ай бұрын
How well do pipe backed blades cut? Seems like the pipe would get stuck in bone.
@erichusayn8 ай бұрын
How do those 1796 from windlass with your input compare to the original antique ones? I know that my cold steel one is way off compared to originals.
@DAMelerine8 ай бұрын
Love my 1827 Royal Navy sabers. I am curious why the naval pipebacks retained the yelman when the regulation models came along, while the infantry and cavalry didn't.
@AnoNYmous-bz2ef8 ай бұрын
Hmm why not go with leaf shape? Good mass + slight recurve should aid in the cut Tapered spear point should aid in the thrust probably won't be as nimble as a dedicated thruster, a pain in the ass to make a sheath for, and hard to sharpen the edges but...
@Benjanuva8 ай бұрын
The biggest problem I see is one of balance. For a thruster, you generally want a nimble tip with the weight toward the hand. For a cutter, you generally want the weight toward the tip. The rapier and saber are both optimized weapons for their respective ends of the spectrum, and I honestly don't see how you can square the two without losing what makes each good.
@icebear55548 ай бұрын
Just discovered you recently while looking for sword reviews. Just subscribed. Cayyou recommend which Side Sword you’d recommend to purchase. I had the Kingston side sword on hold but was very unhappy with how loose it got after you cut just a little with it. Thanks!!
@level98bearhuntingarmor7 ай бұрын
That clip point 1796 looks awesome
@0rimus8 ай бұрын
Wooo! The Osborn Gunby! Yay!
@ignarskjolvjentski78098 ай бұрын
Finally Mr. Easton addresses the age old penetration problem!
@frederikebling59278 ай бұрын
Interestingly enough, the german M1889 cavalry saber seams to have the "Prosser quill tip" as well. Which is way later than the british examples mentioned. Poor old germans always getting overlooked. :-D I was just looking at the LKChen chinese Beiyang sabers, which are modeled after the german M1889, and I was really irritated seeing that same tip I just saw in your video. Thank you very much for all the good content you provide.
@tulsatrash8 ай бұрын
Maxor made a two-part incorrect summary of ULTRAKILL. Matt Easton makes summaries of swords. They are not the same but I enjoy them both.
@jonathonfrazier66228 ай бұрын
Celtic leaf-shaped blade. Best of both worlds.
@BuffordEvans8 ай бұрын
Matt I’ll ask the question on lots of folks minds Is there a possibility of the OG geometry or a Prosser geometry in the works where your endorsed windless line is concerned?
@MrTryAnotherOne8 ай бұрын
@Matt: Could you cover "legendary / historical" swords - more specifically the chinese 'Sword of Goujian'. Not sure if this was ever brought up.
@drboris018 ай бұрын
Is the Prosser quill tip blade the inspiration for the famous but very short lived Elcho bayonet?
@thechroniclesofthegnostic71078 ай бұрын
Yup, clothing makes the *biggest* difference. But of course--just like a broadhead arrow blade used for hunting--a wide sharp blade can still actually be better for thrusting attacks too. Against flesh and bone, IF sufficient for penetration, it will nevertheless cause much, much more hemorrhage and related damage. It still comes down to not just context, but the best *guess* as to the context one will most *likely* face. Do people where you're at wear heavy clothing and/or are capable, before battle is joined, to throw on heavy clothing/armor... or not? (And, despite any best/reasonable guess about what you'll face... given enough fights in history, one can always get unlucky enough to have guessed wrong. ;) )
@nickdavis54208 ай бұрын
A replica of the clip-point 1796 would be amazing
@FelixstoweFoamForge8 ай бұрын
Interestingly enough, I've got an Osbern 1796, with a fairly pointy end. As Osbern split with Gumby in about 1808, it's " possible" that mine was used in the peninsular or india. (Equally likely it could have been used by a yeomanry or militia junior officer stuck in the uk). That said, it's a very nice sword and as soon as I finish cleaning all the crud,- including hammerite on the grip!-off it, I'd like to try some tameshigiri with it.
@bobrobinson15768 ай бұрын
Osborn & Gunby.
@FelixstoweFoamForge8 ай бұрын
@@bobrobinson1576 typo!
@arnijulian62418 ай бұрын
You can always forge weld a spike on the end of the blade. Crude & simple but was done more often then people think.
@PJDAltamirus04258 ай бұрын
The orc battle falchion is esssentially this. Bjorn did a video on it, scary efficient , scary brutal. Kinda sluggish for its size but if you have a large shield , that doesn’t matter as much . The only thing I think would is if the front quill on was down swept for potentially punching and blind edge grabbing but that could infer with using the back edge for thinks
@arnijulian62418 ай бұрын
@@PJDAltamirus0425 I was referring more to the 1d type from the Elmslie typology or similar. Spike on a falchion were not as common as on two handed swords like grand falchions. Faussart's being technically a short pole arm though most mistake for a sword often had a reinforced spike on the end. Imagine visually a mixture of a elongated butchers knife & Falchion scaled up with a 2 to 3 foot handle on a 3 to 4 foot blade. Effectively a Fauchard & falchion amalgamation as Faussart works as a short lance or large sword. Faussart is a rather practical weapon most forget even existed. I'd pick it any day over a long sword or most any other 2 handed sword.
@arnijulian62418 ай бұрын
@@PJDAltamirus0425Mind of all the blades I own I'd pick my 13Ib hog/carcase splitter if I had no idea what I was facing. I like a big hacking chopper over thrust or slashing blades personally as lopping bits of the opponent should never be understated. a man will fight back with cuts or a something stuck in them but they can't fight back if no limbs to offend with. Much prefer a Kopis/falcata or Kukri to all the more popular blades. I do like my kukri i forged as nipper with uncle Goopta, no relations but it is more tool though a perfectly useable weapon. Put a war pick on the back of hog splitter & I doubt much could sustain against it. I'd be shocked if no one in the middle ages did it as combining the 2 would not be difficult.
@PJDAltamirus04258 ай бұрын
@@arnijulian6241 Has someone found an example of a two handed falchion? I thought it is only speculated based on period artwork.
@arnijulian62418 ай бұрын
@@PJDAltamirus0425Go to France or Germanies museums as 2 handed falchions & seperate but similar faussart are not a southern European or British thing. Most arms & armour people are familiar with is from the royally armouries as the photography is much better organised & categorised. Italians are sort of a mix bag when it coms to documenting museum inventory but I suspect that is mainly due to limited funding. The Venice arsenal had 2 handed falchion dated to 1490 last my mother went. My failed health has not permitted me long travel in the last 4-5 years. 2 handed falchions exist but are much rather then 2 handed double edged swords like long swords etcetera but I suspect this is because museum keep the best high status pieces while most falchion if not decorated in cold or something fancy likely got smelted down in history before in the hand of private collectors much less museums that pester private collectors who curate objects better then most museums ironically. My father gets pestered for all our family arms to before the Spanish armada were my lot in part saw of the Spaniards in part as privateers given pardon for their service. You give them these old pieces & they would want to stamp it, polish it to make it look nice & presentable rather then leaving the pieces well enough alone. You can't expect a 1/2 millennia old piece of iron to look aesthetic. My fathers house is like walking back centuries into the British empire! Many complain about his manner, but frankly fvck em! I don't understand why people are so keen on arguing with a ex sergeant & mercenary like my father. Why would you argue with a man & an entire lineage that ended life for the crowns payment. Most of the armaments my father has is very much naval based as our ancestry is basically pirates, clansmen & sailors in general. The Neighbours never liked that I wore a dirk being of partially Scottish descent when in my Cornish or Scottish kilt as a nipper. No wonder we have a generation of truly feckless people that can't get anything done as they can't be trusted with a knife much less anything else. I had my 1st blade from 4 & my 1st air rifle from 7. I hunted since 5 & was instructed in matters of polemology=warfare studies by my grand elders to my father. A butchers apprentice at 10. 3 generations of soldiers instructed me on both my fathers & mothers side. I had a rather unusual youth to most in todays world but I would have had it no other way!
@AlanSmitheeman8 ай бұрын
A sword that is the perfect cutter and stabber? A lightsaber is what you want. An elegant weapon for a more civilized age.
@Daveed568 ай бұрын
You see the Quill Back as late as WWI with the German M1898 Quill Back Bayonet.
@texasbeast2398 ай бұрын
Very bizarre subject matter, this time. Thanks!
@roydenboom8 ай бұрын
7:12 said every man ever
@Braindazzled8 ай бұрын
Speaking of Bronze swords, which most of the comments see to be doing for some reason, Do you know much about the swords of Luristan? They really capture my imagination, and i imagine they were as desired and luxurious as Uhlfbert swords, centuries later. And that bronze fo yours seems like the worlds first colichmarde!
@paulweidler21178 ай бұрын
Is that bronze sword fullered, or cruciform? I cant tell from the video. thanks!
@javierpatag36098 ай бұрын
That Prosser Quill Tip is *_UGLY._* And I *_LOVE_* it. 🥰🥰🥰
@thhseeking8 ай бұрын
Didn't he have a penchant for furry hats and axes above his front door?
@beepboop2048 ай бұрын
"Would you like a cutting sword? Or a thrusting sword?" Yes please
@DevinDTV8 ай бұрын
Saying "yes" there doesn't mean "both". It means "either". Weird epidemic of people not understanding how inclusive "or" works.
@unitIthatmoron8 ай бұрын
Tis a joke mylord @DevinDTV
@beepboop2048 ай бұрын
@@DevinDTV almost as bad as goofs not knowing what memes are. also, AvB is true whether A or B is true, so trivially A v C is true if A is true, and B v C is true if B is true. so, Yes, in conclusion.
@beepboop2048 ай бұрын
@@unitIthatmoron Yes
@censoredterminalautism40738 ай бұрын
Osborn & Gunby saber replica when?
@Cosmoproto8 ай бұрын
The strangest sword tip I've ever seen was at a local museum that displayed an early 19th century saber that had a scalloped edge at the very end. Definitely not any good for thrusting. Unfortunately, it has long since been taken off display and I don't recall any specific details other than it related to the state of Ohio.
@stevenclifton6248 ай бұрын
I love that wonderful, the 19th century was the best time for blade shapes.
@evenjohansen45848 ай бұрын
Wow! Thank you for showing us! I'm for sure gonna use quill-tipped weapons in my DnD campaign!
@equesdeventusoccasus8 ай бұрын
You told me about a guy who practiced full harness fencing, but I cannot remember who that was. Can you please provide me with the channel name again?
@ThugPoetVideos8 ай бұрын
African swords innovate this very well. The Tebu, Mbuun, and Ida blades especially
@alexxu30048 ай бұрын
I still dont know why early g98 bayonet have that quill tip though
@HypocriticYT8 ай бұрын
The 1860 Prussian Fusiliers bayonets had quill tips
@Theduckwebcomics8 ай бұрын
I've seen a few of those around. Never really appealed to me 😅
@kleinjahr8 ай бұрын
That is a cute point.
@whyjay99598 ай бұрын
Interesting that the bronze sword has a narrower section near the grip, thought that was just a modern trope.
@MadNumForce8 ай бұрын
I don't see what competition cutting knives you're referring to. All the ones I know are freaking beastly cleavers ground to a razor thin edge made from crazy space age steels, see what Dan Keffeler do. Anything that significantly deviate from that is suboptimal in performance.
@808souljahxl58 ай бұрын
Reinforced O-kisaki has entered the chat.
@ForlornEncystment8 ай бұрын
The Quill-Tip looks like a backwards yataghan
@ahmadjames1518 ай бұрын
What is the difference between the Indian sword and Arabian sword ?
@bubbagump23418 ай бұрын
"I want a sword, Mr. Gumby." "Owe, I hit my head on the pommel!"
@thhseeking8 ай бұрын
"My brain hurts! My Brain hurts!"...
@dracon5018 ай бұрын
Watch out for the mushroom tip. Billions on men have been made and unmade due to it.
@BogeyTheBear8 ай бұрын
First impression from the thumbnail: "Someone reinvented the yataghan."
@farkasmactavish8 ай бұрын
Take a shot every time Matt says "penetration" and you will die.
@TheWhiteDragon38 ай бұрын
Nah fam, I'm out here getting penetrated every time Matt says "penetration" 😩😩😩
@SkinnyBlackout8 ай бұрын
You'll get penetrated.
@Oldtanktapper8 ай бұрын
I haven’t got the time to count them all, but I think you might die sooner having a drink every time he says ‘thrusting’.
@lifigrugru63968 ай бұрын
I think i would make a bulge or a more thick area not a spine and more on the backside the blade not in the midle, because make choping harder. To empower trust the last 5 cm would look like the tip by 4 min. I have no idee how nimble would, probably ther tryed it out to. I am only some chair thinkeing "warrior". I have not tried out the bonus/malus, even a real fancing, only childhhod duels.
@andymyers27598 ай бұрын
it's all about context :)
@robertfaucher37508 ай бұрын
I remember Skallagrim doing a video on thrusting testing (hehehe). He found that even Katana thrusted pretty well.
@scholagladiatoria8 ай бұрын
Yeah it depends on the target. They do great against soft targets, but really not well at all against most armour.
@robertfaucher37508 ай бұрын
@@scholagladiatoria but I think that would hold true with most swords that aren't specifically designed to thrust. Wouldn't I want a design that might prevent overpenetration? If my katana goes 15-27 cm into the target do I consider it bad at thrusting? I might restrict that to something that really is quite bad. Love my kukri but a thruster she is not.
@bm17478 ай бұрын
This makes more sense for a theoretical drag race than it does Mario Kart. A) We're all but ignoring the actual gameplay of Mario Kart. (The assumption that you spend most of the game at top speed is hilarious.) B) Boost is objectively more important than either max speed or acceleration. So why even mention MK?
@Tobascodagama8 ай бұрын
You have been Matt Easton, but will you continue to be???
@HobieH38 ай бұрын
Might have solutioned the problem, but they look funny
@ScythianGryphon8 ай бұрын
The best compromise cut and thrust sword is the straight military saber with full flat grind that comes to a fine tip.
@DavidGreen-hp5yq8 ай бұрын
Like most things in life, if it looks good, it will be good. And the oposite it true too... sorry. But, hey, you got out another video!
@0KOrbU08 ай бұрын
Are there any examples of swords that uses materials of different weights, in the construction of the blade, in order to change the balance and optimal cutting point? I would think that you could get a powerful cut and good thrust, if the end of the blade was made from heavier but still strong material, so you could make a heavy tip on a lighter blade, without sacrificing a pointy tip.
@rilke55368 ай бұрын
Why so much resistance over saying something is better that other? 😅
@AlitaGunm998 ай бұрын
I wonder if the shape of that bronze one, at least at first, could have been the result of repeated resharpening after edge damage from use.
@zeprin8 ай бұрын
Where's the GLADIUS? Cut...Thrust...yes both.
@timjackson55558 ай бұрын
You say give your Facebook a like ?? Hows that when you only want students of Hema there_
@CitizenSmith508 ай бұрын
You didn't mention the WW1 Imperial German Model 1898 Pipe Back Sword Bayonet !
@WarblesOnALot8 ай бұрын
G'day, Oz squeakin' up, here... I seem to recall that a year or so ago you were kinda lathered-up about possible Parliamentary activism to outlaw owning, & selling, & training with Swords & "Historical Weapons" - in response to the odd angry Nutter going all "Zorro/Shin-Taro...!" in the Suburban Streets, Malls, or Stupormarkeds..., with a certain degree of worry being expressed concerning threatened loss of livelihood and Stranded Assets... This past month there've been a Rash of Dingbats either going-off (their heads...) and either chopping up Strangers, skewering Bishops in Church on Livestream or ringing the Cops on themselves before getting shot down on the streets. About a week ago I saw an item regarding some Fool waving his Katana through some people in a Suburb of London - killing one before getting themself Terminated. Then there were Politicians bleating about Once again Outlawing Sharp Objects... Because the CitiZenry are now apparently Too Angry, Undisciplined, Immature and Unwise..., to be trusted with a Sharp Stick or a hefty Rock... Least they hurt themself - While attempting to Hurt somebody else who has Perhaps Annoyed them...; But, maybe, Merely To ventilate their Angst..., in the hopes of Feeling better About their own perception of Their situation. Maybe you could do a Video on the State of the Debate...? Such is life, Have a good one... Stay safe. ;-p Ciao !
@aspiringmarauder6668 ай бұрын
Perhaps the pipe back design didn’t remain for long because it is a bit ugly… in my opinion at least.
@duje448 ай бұрын
it looks like copy of turkish sword point, only difference is pipe