In 1687, nineteen German craftsmen – trained in some of Europe’s most prestigious blade-making traditions – settled beside the River Derwent in County Durham. They chose the location with care. Here, the landscape offered ironstone in the hills, woodland for charcoal, a fast-flowing water to drive grinding wheels, millstone grit for whetstones, and an easy sea route from Newcastle to London. It was, in every sense, a ready-made forge for a new sword-making community.

Sword - German Sword Makers Shotley Bridge S
Sword – German Sword Makers Running Fox – “Shotley Bridg” Inscription – by Paul Heatherington

The reasons behind their arrival in England remain partly veiled. Few contemporary records survive, and the late 1680s were unsettled years. King James II was losing his hold on the monarchy, and the Glorious Revolution of 1688 swept him aside in favour of the Protestant joint monarchs, William and Mary. Fashion, too, played its part: after the austere Cromwellian period, sword-wearing returned to vogue following the Restoration of 1660. Demand rose sharply – but English blades could not compete with the superior weapons forged in Milan, Solingen, or Toledo. The arrival of skilled continental smiths was therefore welcomed both commercially and strategically.

In 1691, the crown granted a Royal Charter for the creation of “a Company for making Hollow Sword Blades in England.” Its dramatic wording asserts that “divers persons who have exercised in their own country the said art…have been prevailed upon to expose themselves even to the hazard of their lives to impart to Our subjects the knowledge of their art and mystery.” The sentiment may be theatrical, yet it conveys the seriousness with which this new industry was regarded. Key to its establishment was Sir Stephen Evance, the London banker appointed Governor, whose influence smoothed the bureaucratic path forward.

German blades of the 15th–17th centuries often bore a small running animal stamp—commonly known as the Passau “wolf.” When the Solingen craftsmen set up at Shotley Bridge, they carried this tradition with them. Thus, Shotley swords frequently display two distinctive marks:

  • a place-stamp such as “SHOTLEY BRIDG” (with spelling variations common), and
  • a running fox device, the English interpretation of the wolf symbol.

The significance of Shotley Bridge has long been recognised by arms scholars. In 1982, G. M. Wilson, Deputy Master of the Armouries at the Tower of London, wrote:

“It is impossible to overemphasise the importance of Shotley Bridge in the history of British sword making, and I am sure that the setting up of a blade industry in the late 17th century did much to stimulate the local iron industry.”

To view examples today, one must travel to the Royal Armouries in Leeds. Four further swords—the Lord Gort bequest—are held by the Discovery Museum in Newcastle. They were once displayed in the Joicey Museum but now rest in storage, awaiting a suitable exhibition.

A quiet village today, Shotley Bridge once stood at the cutting edge—literally—of Britain’s technological and industrial development. The legacy of those nineteen German craftsmen endures not only in the swords they made, but in the industry they stimulated. 

Story and image submission by Paul Heatherington

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