Large Pictures 1 Chapter 11.3 |
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Here are some replicas of old pattern welded swords. They were
made by master smith Patrick Barta. This link leads to a huge picture. | ||||||
From left to right:
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From left to right:
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The time line of Danish bog treasures or war booty sacrifices.
"Defined dates" means that a radio carbon analysis
or some other quantitative analysis like dendrochronology has been done. Undefined dates means that I have found relatively precise dates somewhere but without a clear reference to how they were obtained. Different places are often treated as groups; this is indicated by a certain color. The "Vimose 3 group", for example is dark yellow and includes Thorsbjerk and Porskjær. Some places belong to two groups. Archaeologists like to define certain periods, like B1a, B1b, and so on; they are given relative to the normal time scale. The major non-Roman cultures / ethnities / tribal entities are also given. While the Merovingians ruled the "South", the "North" experienced the "Vendel period" (There are no "Vendels", however). All these cultures were into pattern welded swords. The Vikings came after the "Vendel period"; they are outside the scale of the drawing. |
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The "common" classification of swords from about 0
AD - 500 AD and mostly found in Northern Europe, e.g. in Danish Bogs, Scandinavia, Poland, ... (the "Barbaricum). Refer to the main text for the abbreviations. |
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A map of (Northern) Europe, defining some terms and showing where swords of the "Canterbury-Kopki" type had been found. | ||||||
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Typical hilts during certain periods. | ||||||
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A rather badly corroded part of a sword from the Nydam treasure. | ||||||
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Percentage of sword type within a certain time period. The color gives the type, the length of the lines the percentage assigned to a certain time slot. The position of the lines on the time scale is more or less arbitrary within the proper time slot(s). | ||||||
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An excellent overview ot the patterns found on swords from Danish bogs These swords are from around 150 AD - 400 AD; see the picture right above. All except the ones with red names were fond in Illerup Ådal Details to some of these sword in this link. |
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Here are two large versions of the "Illerup" sword with an incrustation of the god Mars: | ||||||||
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We can see that the blade is indeed riveted to the tang and that the incrustation is rather not from (pure) copper but possibly from two metals, one being brass (?). In particular, however, it becomes very clear that the cutting edges were made from faggoted steel. It also appears that the part containing the figure consists of homogeneous iron or steel that was welded to the main blade. | ||||||||
Plate VI "Damascened Swords of Iron 1 (Nydam)" in Engelhardt's 1856 book | ||||||||
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Plate VII "Damascened Swords of Íron 2 (Nydam)" in Engelhardt's 1856 book | ||||||
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Some objects form Vimose 2 (around 70 AD - 150 AD) | ||||||
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Some finds from Thorsbjerg | ||||||
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Drawings of Alemannic swords form the Sindelfingen area; mostly from 550 AD - 700 AD | ||||||
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Critical Museum Guide: Landesmuseum Schleswig-Holstein in Schleswig, Germany
11.3 Pattern Welding 11.3.1 Background to Pattern Welding
11.4.2 Blades of Viking Era Swords
Sword Polishing and Revealing the Pattern / Structure
11.3.3 Evolution of Pattern Welding
11.3.2 More to Pattern Welding
Illerup Swords with Special Patterns
Northern Sword Types of the First Millennium
Käthe Harnecker and Wootz Blades
11.6 Japanese Swords 1.6.1 The Myth and the History of the Japanese Sword
Mythology of Wootz Swords: Cutting a Stone
© H. Föll (Iron, Steel and Swords script)