Executioner's Sword, late 1600s. Germany, late 17th Century. Steel, wood, brass and copper wire; overall: cm (42 7/8 in.); blade: cm (33 3/4 in.); quillions: cm (8 7/8 in.); grip: 15 cm (5 7/8 in.). Execution by decapitation was generally reserved for the nobility during the Middle Ages and Renaissance. Although the axe was favored in England, for centuries swords were used throughout Central Europe for beheadings. The blades were often etched with moralizing inscriptions and designs representing Justice (as here), the gallows, the rack, or the Crucifixion. By the early 1700s


Executioner's Sword, late 1600s. Germany, late 17th Century. Steel, wood, brass and copper wire; overall: cm (42 7/8 in.); blade: cm (33 3/4 in.); quillions: cm (8 7/8 in.); grip: 15 cm (5 7/8 in.). Execution by decapitation was generally reserved for the nobility during the Middle Ages and Renaissance. Although the axe was favored in England, for centuries swords were used throughout Central Europe for beheadings. The blades were often etched with moralizing inscriptions and designs representing Justice (as here), the gallows, the rack, or the Crucifixion. By the early 1700s swords were no longer used in Europe for executions, but they still functioned as symbols of power. This sword was probably ceremonial for a formal procedure or procession.


Size: 2179px × 3400px
Photo credit: © CMA/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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