Never seen one with a bugle which leads me to believe it's some kind of signal unit. Very common during this era to use bugles and whistles for communication. I have a pre war German Lionshead sword that is set up for a whistle attachment. Early American swords had whistles on them too.
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Pre WW1/WW1 Lion Head Damascus Presentation Sword
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IMO it is a gift sword from v. S to von Mayer as it says s/l. which would be seine lieben (or my dearest friend). The horn could very well signify Jaeger battalion in this case JB 12, 13 (Kgl. Sächsisches 1. Jäger-Bataillon Nr. 12 and Kgl. Sächsisches 2. Jäger-Bataillon Nr. 13) or possibly Schützen-(Füsilier-)Regiment „Prinz Georg“ (Königlich Sächsisches) Nr. 108 as they also used the hunting horn. All three are Royal Saxon units which would make sense as there is the coat of arms of the Kingdom of Saxony on the guard.
Kick ass sword!Last edited by kaiserwilhelm2; 08-04-2017, 04:24 PM.
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Originally posted by kaiserwilhelm2 View PostIMO it is a gift sword from v. S to von Mayer as it says s/l. which would be seine lieben (or my dearest friend). The horn could very well signify Jaeger battalion in this case JB 12, 13 (Kgl. Sächsisches 1. Jäger-Bataillon Nr. 12 and Kgl. Sächsisches 2. Jäger-Bataillon Nr. 13) or possibly Schützen-(Füsilier-)Regiment „Prinz Georg“ (Königlich Sächsisches) Nr. 108 as they also used the hunting horn. All three are Royal Saxon units which would make sense as there is the coat of arms of the Kingdom of Saxony on the guard.
Kick ass sword!
Great pick up!
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