Posts: 11,553 Location: San Francisco
Fri 25 Aug, 2006 2:01 pm
10th Century Viking Sword from the British Museum
Posts: 38 Location: England
Fri 25 Aug, 2006 2:17 pm
Outstanding stuff, Nathan. I've always been a fan of that hilt style. Thanks so much for the pics!
Posts: 411 Location: Göteborg Sweden
Fri 25 Aug, 2006 2:23 pm
Nice to see some color photo's of that sword, i have only the paperback version of the book Swords of the Viking age :)
Thanks Nathan!
Posts: 1,717 Location: Buffalo, NY.
Fri 25 Aug, 2006 3:04 pm
Thanks Nathan!
That's an excellent picture of the iron inlay and gives, I think, a fair picture of the appearance of iron inlay on a polished sword. Verey nice!
Jeremy
Posts: 967 Location: Michigan
Fri 25 Aug, 2006 3:49 pm
Some stats from
Swords of the Viking Age
Overall length: 76.3 cm (30 in) Blade length: 66.6 cm (26.2 in)
Length of cross: 7.7 cm ( 3.03 in) Length of grip: 6.8 cm (2.67 in)
Balance point: 14.6 cm (5.75 in)
It also appears that Ollin Sword Design makes a sword with a very similar hilt, Peterson type Q, but that is much scaled up.
http://www.ollinsworddesign.com/osd-custom-qg5.html
After a bit of hunting I found this thread
http://www.myArmoury.com/talk/viewtopic.php?t=6755&highlight=
which confirms that the Ollin sword was based on this find.
Edited to add another link
Last edited by Dan Dickinson on Fri 25 Aug, 2006 4:04 pm; edited 1 time in total
Posts: 2,160 Location: New Hampshire
Fri 25 Aug, 2006 3:55 pm
Excellent shots, Chief .... nice work !
I know, ".....and don't call me Chief " ;-) Mac
Posts: 267 Location: Buckinghamshire , England
Fri 25 Aug, 2006 4:12 pm
Nice shot, here is mine along along with a strange warhammer that caught my eye.
Regards,
Will
Posts: 11,553 Location: San Francisco
Sat 26 Aug, 2006 1:03 pm
I have split off the posts regarding the two-handed poleaxe to
their own topic because this topic about a 10th century Viking Sword.
Posts: 267 Location: Buckinghamshire , England
Sat 26 Aug, 2006 1:40 pm
Nathan Robinson wrote: |
I have split off the posts regarding the two-handed poleaxe to their own topic because this topic about a 10th century Viking Sword. |
Sorry about that Nathan. Right back on topic in regards to the viking sword, I have never seen one with so much taper. Is this unusual or have I simply not seen enough viking swords?
Will
Posts: 9,570 Location: Dayton, OH
Sat 26 Aug, 2006 2:38 pm
William M wrote: |
Sorry about that Nathan. Right back on topic in regards to the viking sword, I have never seen one with so much taper. Is this unusual or have I simply not seen enough viking swords?
Will |
Some Viking swords did taper more than others. At least some of the taper on this one looks like decomposition/wear. If you look at the top edge, you'll see that the distance from fuller to edge changes toward the tip. It looks like the edge has either rotted away or been honed away at least a little to create the illusion of more taper.
Posts: 1,606 Location: Chicago, Illinois
Sat 26 Aug, 2006 11:49 pm
This sword has always been one of my favorites. I was the customer for OlliN Swords reproduction of it. It's called the Lough Gur sword. The fittings seem like they would be very uncomfortable, but it actually feels pretty sweet with the handshake grip. I'm posting pics of the repro, no inlay on it and it was scaled up to fit an adult's hand.
Posts: 8,310 Location: Montreal,Quebec,Canada
Sun 27 Aug, 2006 3:51 am
Tim;
Yes that was the first thing I was thinking when Nathan posted the museum pic.
I remember seeing your sword and liking it a great deal: I'm seriously considering some custom project with OlliN when my current projects are finished. Not sure what yet ?
This type of grip pommel sort of forces you to use the handshake grip and the T shape should lock the sword in the hand even with a looser relaxed grip: A relaxed grip being a good thing for cutting as long as one doesn't loose the sword.
I would think that this IS the design intent.
A long time ago I made a handle for an "antenna " type sword using an old bayonet when I was reading up on bronze age swords and discovered then the usefulness of this pommel type. ( Even wider with the "antenna " style. )
I certainly ruined a perfectly good bayonet :blush: But this was around 1970 and you could get these bayonets for $20.
I don't even want to know what the value would be today and hope I didn't destroy something rare ! I wouldn't want to use one of these for a D.I.Y. now that I know better.
Posts: 110 Location: Madison, WI
Mon 28 Aug, 2006 3:59 pm
Jean Thibodeau wrote: |
I remember seeing your sword and liking it a great deal: I'm seriously considering some custom project with OlliN when my current projects are finished. Not sure what yet ? |
Thank you very much, Jean!
Best,
Matt
Last edited by Matthew Grzybowski on Mon 28 Aug, 2006 6:38 pm; edited 1 time in total
Posts: 110 Location: Madison, WI
Mon 28 Aug, 2006 4:11 pm
..
Last edited by Matthew Grzybowski on Mon 28 Aug, 2006 6:40 pm; edited 1 time in total
Posts: 8,310 Location: Montreal,Quebec,Canada
Mon 28 Aug, 2006 5:14 pm
( Edited / deleted as it was too off topic. )
Last edited by Jean Thibodeau on Wed 30 Aug, 2006 7:40 am; edited 2 times in total
Posts: 9,570 Location: Dayton, OH
Mon 28 Aug, 2006 5:17 pm
Keep it on topic, folks.
Discussing custom projects is best handled privately anyway.
Posts: 8,310 Location: Montreal,Quebec,Canada
Mon 28 Aug, 2006 5:24 pm
Sorry, will continue through P.M. & e-mail. :blush:
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