I've seen A Knight's tale I know what European medievel blacksmiths looked like. They looked like this.
So fair play to them for taking 2 months to sharpen a sword they made for the English army before Agincourt or similar. It's a wonder they had time to do their mascara between the forging and the dysentry..
Tasky, TBH, you're not buying the into the mystique old son. Next thing you'll be telling me Camelia Oil isn't an expensive and cheaply replicated form of metal protection in modern times. And I'll be forced into making up a base and tasteless joke about Prince Charles, Prince Philip and the Sultan of Oman instead. Don't test me now! I'm already formulating one in my mind just in case.
I think it's going to contain a reference to Traditional Ground Nuts.
In the end there is always a market for those with enough wealth to buy prestige from those willing to bow the knee to it. Walk into any grand building and the entrance hall is designed to make you know your place.
It's no different from a Patek Philipp, a high end sports car or a million other examples of how to spend endless amounts of money.
We all know it.
What I mean is, I bet there
is a market for some fella to buy a sword that
actually has been sharpened by hand for two months. I'm not saying it's sharper or better than modern steel. Just that there are people in the world who have enough money they enjoy being played.