Posts: 1,606 Location: Chicago, Illinois
Sat 16 Apr, 2011 8:46 am
Organic hilt components on viking swords
Posts: 2,307 Location: Croatia
Sat 16 Apr, 2011 9:53 am
The first one looks metallic, which part of it is organic?
Posts: 1,606 Location: Chicago, Illinois
Sat 16 Apr, 2011 10:58 am
Luka Borscak wrote: |
The first one looks metallic, which part of it is organic? |
Both the pommel and guard are carved from horn. It's a "piast type-t" sword from Poland. The "piast" type hilts were all carved out of horn. It was localized to the region. There are several examples show in Lech Mareks's "Early Medieval Swords from Central and Eastern Europe: Dilemmas of an Archaeologist and a Student of Arms" Link to the book in store:
http://www.myArmoury.com/books/item.8322926243.html
Posts: 119 Location: Reno, NV
Sat 16 Apr, 2011 3:39 pm
Whalebone pommel and guard from two different swords.
http://www.historyofyork.org.uk/themes/viking/viking-sword-pommel
Yorkshire Museum collection - ref. 1979.7.4752
Attachment: 28.04 KB

Posts: 95 Location: Suffolk, England
Sun 17 Apr, 2011 2:31 am
hilt components
Posts: 152 Location: France
Sun 17 Apr, 2011 7:18 am
Hey Tim, once again the guard shown on your number 4 picture is made of bronze, not bone as erroneously quoted in "Viking Hersir" (Osprey)
Posts: 1,606 Location: Chicago, Illinois
Sun 17 Apr, 2011 7:54 pm
Jean Le-Palud wrote: |
Hey Tim, once again the guard shown on your number 4 picture is made of bronze, not bone as erroneously quoted in "Viking Hersir" (Osprey) |
Really!? Too bad...
Posts: 95 Location: Suffolk, England
Mon 18 Apr, 2011 11:34 am
although the polish hilt is metal, as shown by the bone hilts, the hilt wouldnt be too hard to construct in bone, if you can get good enough material!
Posts: 1,606 Location: Chicago, Illinois
Mon 18 Apr, 2011 11:58 am
K J Seago wrote: |
although the polish hilt is metal, as shown by the bone hilts, the hilt wouldnt be too hard to construct in bone, if you can get good enough material! |
I'm not quite sure I understand your post. The Polish hilt is horn, it's the first one. Did you mean the Welsh guard which is actually bronze, pictured last?
Posts: 95 Location: Suffolk, England
Wed 20 Apr, 2011 1:58 pm
im sorry if i have garbled my words, i believed that the image of the hilt on the front cover of
Early Medieval Swords from Central and Eastern Europe: by Lech Marek
is bronze, and that style would be easy to copy onto an organic hilt, i have the book myself somewhere, but cannot seem to find it at the moment to verify, or correct myself as to its material, anyway the original point i was attempting to get across is that most designs in inorganic material could well be attempted and replicated in organics.
Posts: 1,606 Location: Chicago, Illinois
Wed 20 Apr, 2011 10:18 pm
K J Seago wrote: |
im sorry if i have garbled my words, i believed that the image of the hilt on the front cover of
Early Medieval Swords from Central and Eastern Europe: by Lech Marek
is bronze, and that style would be easy to copy onto an organic hilt, i have the book myself somewhere, but cannot seem to find it at the moment to verify, or correct myself as to its material, anyway the original point i was attempting to get across is that most designs in inorganic material could well be attempted and replicated in organics. |
Ahh...OK. I just went back to read the description of the sword once again and Lech Marek is pretty specific about it being horn. I think it's a damn cool sword.
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