Description
We were told only 20 of these were ever made, though 50 were initially planned. That alone makes you pause for a second. This is the SIG Sauer P210 “200th Anniversary of Cantone Ticino,” serial number 31, a special edition crafted by The House of Mueller Murgenthal to honor two centuries of Swiss legacy. It’s more than just a nod to history; it’s a statement about precision, heritage, and the kind of craftsmanship that refuses to fade.
The P210 has long been a benchmark of Swiss engineering. Police carried it. Soldiers trusted it. And collectors, well, they’ve chased it for decades. But this version adds another layer. The blued finish has that liquid sheen you can get lost in, while the wooden grips carry an inlaid medallion marking Ticino’s bicentennial. The engraving on the slide is delicate, deliberate, not loud, but proud. You can tell whoever made it cared deeply about getting it right.
It comes nestled in a glass-topped presentation box, almost daring you to take it out. There’s a small plaque inside identifying the edition, a reminder that you’re looking at one of the rarest P210S ever made. It’s the sort of thing that looks equally at home in a private collection or a museum case, timeless, understated, quietly magnificent.
What’s beautiful about this piece is how it connects eras: the industrial precision of SIG Sauer, the artistry of Mueller Murgenthal, and the deep roots of Swiss history. It’s the kind of firearm that doesn’t just sit in a collection; it becomes its cornerstone.





