A few years ago I made a reproduction if the Seax of Beagnoth from the British Museum and it was time to revisit this piece and here we are.
The seax is almost certainly 10thC Anglo Saxon in origin and was found in the Thames in the mid 19thC.
The blade is constructed from wrought iron and shear steel and heavily inlaid with different coloured wires on both faces. One face has exclusively geometric patterning in a fairly regular layout and the other side is far more mixed up.....
The released photos and the description do not highlight at all the mixed up nature of the inlays. The 'rune' face has the Futorc alphabet laid out in full, although slightly in the wrong order, some geometric inlay and then the Saxon name 'Beagnoth'. Whether the name is the owner, maker or the blade name is unknown.
Why a warrior of status requires a spelling primer laid out on a blade is of course a mystery, but that is not the end of it.....The description and the photos make it sound like the inlay is of one twisted wire set and is reasonably coherent, but in fact some of the letters have 2 different wire sets within the same letter and from letter to letter the wire sets are different. There is no rhyme or reason to it. Similarly the twisted wire sets that border the lettering and geometry on both sides face in different directions and are of different lengths. Basically the whole thing is a mess.
Which leaves the question of what is going on? To cut the grooves and lay out the piece and prepare this very high status piece for the work is 99.9% of the job and yet they didn't care to pick up the right wire? This mess was deliberate - but why? Perhaps it looks like a mess but there is method in it that we just can't see.
You may also see that this blade is a different shape to the 'original'. This is simply because the original has broken near the angle change on the back and created a very distinctive 'broken back' shape that in fact the original never had. Blade forging was by James Woods.
Anyway I hope you like it.
Tod
I have made a reproduction with a full 'making of process' of this seax before and posted up full threads on this site and you can find both of those here
http://myArmoury.com/talk/viewtopic.php?t=321...t=beagnoth
http://myArmoury.com/talk/viewtopic.php?t=335...t=beagnoth

















