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  1. #1
    Contributing Member Aragorn243's Avatar
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    Odd Turkish Garand bayonet

    Picked up this Turkishicon bayonet today because it was cheap and a type I didn't have. Trying to figure out what the parent bayonet is. It isn't a 1935 which is what most of these were made out of. Has 1907 on it and the blade and the pommel do resemble a Britishicon 1907 but the handle and rivets are wrong, not saying the Turks couldn't have replaced those with their own. It doesn't seem to match any Turkish bayonet.

    Could that be a James A. Chapman mark on it, I've never seen one.







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    Advisory Panel browningautorifle's Avatar
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    Looks like an 1907 to me. They got scads at Gallipoli and then modified them to fit whatever they had.
    Regards, Jim

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    Legacy Member twh's Avatar
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    Converted from a Britishicon JAC, James A Chapman, 1907 bayonet

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    Contributing Member Flying10uk's Avatar
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    Would many full length 1907 bayonets have been used as fighting knives? I can't really see it myself but I did see one advertised as such recently. Would have been ok if you could find a soldier with an ultra strong wrist I suppose.

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    Advisory Panel browningautorifle's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Flying10uk View Post
    Would many full length 1907 bayonets have been used as fighting knives?
    I've never seen one portrayed as such. They've always been cut down no matter what they started as, sword or bayonet.
    Regards, Jim

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    Legacy Member Daan Kemp's Avatar
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    Going back to the intention of a bayonet. When you muzzleloader is empty you advanced rapidly through the smoke and the length of the bayonet and musket determined how close the other guy could get to you. This tradition was welded, riveted, bolted, locktited and concreted in European military thinking until after WW1 and then the stock of bayonets determined the speed of a new generation of bayonets. Which happened during and after WW2. Useful for opening tins, chopping wood, prybar, etc.

    However, you knew their intention and what was going to hit the fan when you saw them charging with fixed bayonets

    So never intended to be used in hand to hand fighting, that's why you read about spades and such in fighting in confined spaces. You have to get too close in a melee and use it per individual.

    See the size and shape of bayonets after WW2. Much development and much closer to a multi use tool than putting it on the front of your rifle to stick into somebody else. And the relative fragility and compactness of military rifles makes really active use of a bayonet in that way moot. Makes you get too close to him or her also sticking a blade into you.

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    Contributing Member Flying10uk's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by browningautorifleicon View Post
    I've never seen one portrayed as such.
    1907 Pattern Bayonet / fighting knife - Saracen Exports

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    Contributing Member Aragorn243's Avatar
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    I think that's just something some bubba did and they don't know what else to call it. I see people doing that sort of thing all the time on eBay. If it's been altered, its a "rare trench made fighting knife" when in reality some farmer did it to cut corn stalks.

  13. #9
    Advisory Panel browningautorifle's Avatar
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    I don't believe that either, perhaps this one was used for chopping garden weeds... Lots exist and have a common theme, crossguard is retained and blade is halved and re-pointed. This ain't one...

    It could be revived though as a bayonet if one made the crosspiece again, not so hard to do.
    Regards, Jim

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    Contributing Member Aragorn243's Avatar
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    Oddly enough, after doing a show one time where I had a US WWI bolo knife, one of the guests told me he had one that he had been using to cut corn stalks. He had no idea what it was, brought it the next time I saw him and sold it to me. Nothing altered on it fortunately.

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