The Scottish Dirk
BothI love dirks!! Here is one I made!! So were you just hoping for photos or did you have more to say about them?
We knew what you meant!Bob,
It looks in the above like I spelled targe about 16 different ways!
Lol!
Man, you guys do extraordinary work! Those are some nice looking dirks.
Were these ever military issue, or were they always privately purchased?
The ones shown all display beautiful workmanship, in basic architecture as well as ornamentation. This would lead one to believe that a dirk was a wealthy man’s accoutrement. Have any simpler ones survived? A back issue of the Canadian Journal of Arms Collecting had an article about “gralloching knives” from Scotland. If I remember correctly, these were in between the dirk and the stocking knife in size. I recall that one of the examples shown in the article had a very simple, natural antler handle with about a 7” blade. The blade did not have the degree of finish shown on the dirks above, yet it was nicely forged and had some file work on the back. I’ll try to dig out the article and post a picture if anybody is interested.
Thanks for posting your work, fellows. The quality of workmanship shown by some of our forum members is a continual source of amazement for me.
Notchy Bob
Gus,Notchy Bob,
Perhaps the Illustration you mean is the one I used years ago and copied/pasted here again?
We also have to remember that Biodags (Dirks) were intended as personal defense weapons, not for normal "knife" applications. The 18th century Scots had different designs for their Gralloching (Hunting) Knives. The three knives at left are hunting knives and the two middle ones would still be considered very practical for that use today.
Gus
Gus,
Thank you for your comments and the picture! However, the knife and the images to which I was referring were in The Canadian Journal of Arms Collecting (CJAC), Vol. 11, No. 3 and Vol. 20, No. 1:
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These are obviously the same knives as in the image you posted, but different pictures with slightly different captions. This is from CJAC Vol. 11-3:
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... while this one is from CJAC Vol. 20-1:
View attachment 310655
Both were from articles by James Forman, who I assume also wrote the book that contained the image in your post. This is the first page of the article in CJAC 11-3:
View attachment 310656
The author's thesis in that article was that the gralloch knife was an evolutionary step as well as an intermediate size between the dirk (a fighting knife) and the sgian dubh, which he considered primarily decorative. His contention was that after the Scots were defeated at Culloden, the British Crown attempted to erase their culture, and dirks were evidently outlawed. However, hunting traditions continued, and the gralloching knife in the form he presented developed as both a practical and traditionally-styled tool.
I would like to suggest, though, that the blade on the larger antler-hafted gralloch knife in those images appears to have had a medieval seax in its ancestry.
Mr. Forman's article in CJAC 20-1 was entitled "The Evolution of the Sgian Dubh." The same author penned articles about the "Scottish Regimental Dirk" in CJAC Vol. 25-1 and 25-2, but I don't have those issues and can't comment on the articles.
As always, I appreciate your insight and contributions to the discussion.
Notchy Bob
That’s one heck of a job in itI love dirks!! Here is one I made!! So were you just hoping for photos or did you have more to say about them?
Notchy Bob,Gus,
The author's thesis in that article was that the gralloch knife was an evolutionary step as well as an intermediate size between the dirk (a fighting knife) and the sgian dubh, which he considered primarily decorative. His contention was that after the Scots were defeated at Culloden, the British Crown attempted to erase their culture, and dirks were evidently outlawed. However, hunting traditions continued, and the gralloching knife in the form he presented developed as both a practical and traditionally-styled tool.
I would like to suggest, though, that the blade on the larger antler-hafted gralloch knife in those images appears to have had a medieval seax in its ancestry.
Notchy Bob
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