Marc Kaden Ridgeway
6 Feb 2012
Atlanta , GA
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Some of you may know that I am a very lucky man. My lovely lady, Stacy, bought me a wonderful Christmas present several years ago, Laird by John Lundemo. This last year or two has been pretty hard on us , and I have had to sell dozens of swords in order to pay bills. Through hard work and sacrifice and the paitience and charity of others, I am grateful to say that we are coming out the other side I hope , with brighter skies on the horizon.
Somehow, in the midst of all this, the ever-resourceful spouse-o-mine managed to find the money to order me a Father's Day Present. A type -H Viking sword by custom smith Rob Miller.
Damn, she gives the best gifts.
Rob has a bit of a queue , and my Father's day gift became a belated New Year's gift... still not bad turnaround on a custom.
I want to apologize in advance , on a Japanese sword review I know exactly how many pictures to take... too many :D , but Euros always confound me... anyway I end up taking 4 to 5 times the necessary photos , and then fall in love with them and can't delete them.
Sorry.
Prepare for tons of redundant photos !
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Historical Overview
Smith : Rob Miller was the vocalist and bassist for a hardcore/crust punk band named Amebix from 1978 to 1987. The band helped create the crust punk sound, and recorded an album on Jello Biafra's (of Dead Kennedys fame) Alternative Tentacles Records. Well, I didn't find this out until recently , but being a former bassist , and a huge Punk fan... and having Dead Kennedys songs on many of my cutting videos it seemed rather serendipidous to me. (My otherfavorite custom maker , John Lundemo , is also a rocker )
Amebix reformed in 2008 and has released a couple of albums. Their latest, Sonic Mass is availiable on iTunes and is an epic tale set to music , that is well worth checking out.
Sword : The pommel configuration is a Peteresen Type H, perhaps the most common configuration on Viking swords. The blade could maybe be classied as a Geibig Type 3 , with a bit shorter than the norm fuller. Both these types saw use in the 8th to 10th century , so I'd say the sword has a plausable claim to histrocity. I don't know why , but I searched for something to quantitavely say was historically inaccurate on this sword. I thought perhaps the fuller and taper... but one only has to look to the original Cawood sword to see a similar taper and fuller length from a similar time period. Then I thought perhaps the pommel size, or the fact that it was one piece , but then I found this information on a Viking history site:
Quote: |
Not only did the size and shape of the hilt components vary in Viking-age swords, but also the construction details. Sword hilts typically had a pommel and an upper guard, although in some instances, the two were formed as a single piece. -Hurstwic.org |
The truth is, I don't know why I searched so hard to find an a historic detail on this sword... I don't even care about historical accuracy... maybe I was just looking for something not to love about it. I didn't succeed.
My friend , DoHo of Yorkshire (aka Dammit Dog Buttdragger aka Sir Humpinstuff) volunteered to help me with the review.
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Specifications
Blade : 31.25 in
Grip : 3 .62 in
Width at Cross : 2.125 in
Width 2 in. from tip : .75 in
Fuller : 19 in. / 1.5 in wide at base
Guard : 3.25 in
Pommel : 2.25 x 1.5
COG : 7 in. from guard
COP : 21.75 in.
Weight: 2lbs. 4 oz.
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