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Nathan Robinson
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PostPosted: Tue 30 Sep, 2014 11:26 am    Post subject:         Reply with quote

#20: An Exceptional Viking Sword with Gold and Silver Inlaid Blade and Hilt, early 10th century

With double-edged blade of gradual taper; inlaid on both sides in gold and silver with decorative patterns, one side bearing a gradually tapering geometric-architectural design in five stages and the other bearing a gradually tapering palmette design. The hilt comprising down-curved cross guard, sturdy tang and five-lobed pommel riveted to the upward-curving upper guard; the cross-guard, upper guard and pommel all inlaid in silver with decorative knotwork and tracery and in gold with dots.

Overall length: 94 cm (37"); Blade length: 80.6 cm (31.75")

This rare Viking sword, the hilt of Petersen Type O, has a cross-guard with decorative devices reminiscent of those on one of the three swords that were found in the rich ship burial of about 900 at Hedeby in Denmark when it was subsequently excavated in the 1950s. More of these ‘rabbit ear’ or ‘knotted rope’ characters may be found on three of the ‘Hiltipreht’ group of swords, namely one in the Wallace Collection, London (Inv. No. A456), the Ballinderry sword in the National Museum of Ireland, Dublin (Inv. No.1928.382) and the example from Malhus in the Trondheim Museum, Norway (Petersen, Abb.89).

The credentials of this prestigious weapon are further enhanced by the decoration upon the blade. On one side there is a palmette design of inlaid silver with traces of gold that is very similar to that on a fragmented blade from the River Bann in Ireland and illustrated in Bøe. This should be compared with the inlay on a sword from the Waal near Nijmegen (Oakeshott, Records of the Medieval Sword, p.47). On the other side, the inlaid precious metals may well represent a schematic plan view of a building, as is believed to have been intended upon another silver inlaid sword illustrated and described by Ewart Oakeshott (Records of the Medieval Sword, pp.28-29). This is certainly not a ceremonial weapon, as is indicated by the hefty tang, the robust blade and the array of battle nicks along the blade. To the Viking Warrior, his sword represented his very life and was among his most treasured possessions. The nature of this close and powerful partnership between warrior and weapon may best be demonstrated by an extract from an Estonian Viking Epic which asks,

“Who can separate a man from his sword? One is worth nothing without the other.”

Swords with sound reputations in battle and other fine qualities would be handed down from father to son and generation to generation. They could be looked upon as having a unique character and personality of their own and many were deemed to possess even magical qualities. The Norse Sagas record notable numbers of swords that were ancient heirlooms, either extracted from burial-mounds of dead warriors for further use or family weapons literally handed down for generations. Swords committed to the ground, sometimes for more than a century, would have required some degree of protection and may well have received a coating of animal fat before being wrapped in sheepskin, where the naturally occurring lanolin would protect against corrosion.

In Norse literature, especially in the vast body of Skaldic poetry, swords (as well as byrnies, axes and spears) are given striking and evocative names, called Kennings (meaning the name by which they were known, or “kenned”). Kennings such as: ‘Byrnie-Biter’, ‘'Leg-Biter’, ‘Viper’, ‘War Snake’, ‘Keen’, ‘Long and Sharp’, ‘Serpent of Blood’, ‘Odin’s Flame’, ‘Widow Maker’, ‘Ice of Battle’ are recorded. There were many reasons why a sword was named and therefore regarded as special. It could be the presence of a decorated hilt or of inlaid devices upon the blade, the excellent balance of the weapon in the hand or simply the sword's reputation as being sturdy, reliable and effective. The quality of our sword coupled with its fine decoration mean that we can be certain that during its active life it possessed these enhancing features and that it would undoubtedly have been named.

Literature:
From Viking to Crusader, (Exhibition Catalogue, Copenhagen, 1992), entry 171
Oakeshott, R.E. and Peirce, I. G., ‘Hiltipreht! Name or Invocation’, in Park Lane Arms Fair Catalogue, No. 12 (1995), pp. 6-11
Bøe, J., Norse Antiquities in Ireland (Oslo, 1940), pp. 83-85. Davidson, H.R. Ellis, The Sword in Anglo-Saxon England (Woodbridge, Suffolk), 1994
Petersen, J., De Norske Vikingesverd (Oslo, 1919)

Copyright © Peter Finer



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An Exceptional Viking Sword with Gold and Silver Inlaid Blade and Hilt, early 10th century

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Nathan Robinson
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PostPosted: Tue 30 Sep, 2014 11:36 am    Post subject:         Reply with quote

#21: A Fine Viking Sword with a Hilt Inlaid with Silver and Copper, 10th century

in excavated condition, with broad blade cut with a wide shallow fuller over almost its entire length on each face, robust iron hilt comprising thick cross-piece of tapering rectangular section, the inner and outer faces inlaid with silver rows of triangles top and bottom, formed of very fine close-set lines, framing silver diamonds of contrasting flecked pattern also retaining traces of copper inlay, two-stage pommel formed of a thick elliptical bar inlaid en suite with the cross-piece, and the upper portion of lobated form decorated with close-set vertical lines inlaid in silver and also retaining traces of copper inlay (the inlay incomplete)

Blade length: 85.5 cm (33.7")

A sword of very similar form was found in a lake near Sørborg Castle, Denmark and is now preserved in the Nationalmuseet, Copenhagen. See I. Peirce 2002, pp.106-107. A further sword with pommel of ‘cocked hat’ form and inlaid with silver and copper in a closely related style is preserved in the Universitetets Oldsaksamling, Norway, accession C23127, see I. Peirce, op.cit, plate VII.

Copyright © Sotheby’s



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A Fine Viking Sword with a Hilt Inlaid with Silver and Copper, 10th century

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Kai Lawson





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PostPosted: Tue 30 Sep, 2014 2:52 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

I wonder about the complete authenticity of both the silver-hilted guy with the horn grip, and the triangular decorated 'Finnish' sword with the Celtic Cross. The blade on the Cross sword looks real enough, but I've never seen inlay so close to the edge on such an early sword in Europe (not that I've seen many inlays). There also seems to be something funky about the horn grip itself, but I can't quite put my finger on it... maybe I'm off base here.
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Tim Lison




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PostPosted: Tue 30 Sep, 2014 3:28 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

The majority of these look like fakes to me. I'm in the "not an expert" category but something just looks *off* about a lot of these swords.... The inlay on a few looks like it was done by the same person to me as well. I suppose the people at Bonham's and Peter Finer's know more than me, but some of these look rather amatuerish... And to see so many unique examples of viking swords all gathered together for sale at one time...doesn't this ring some alarm bells?
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Nathan Robinson
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PostPosted: Tue 30 Sep, 2014 4:28 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

Tim Lison wrote:
And to see so many unique examples of viking swords all gathered together for sale at one time...doesn't this ring some alarm bells?


These were not all in one place or at one time. They were never gathered together as one group. These items have been on the market and changing hands for 10-20 years.

The 21 images shown here have references cited ranging from The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Wallace Collection, The Rothenburg Collection, Bonhams, Peter Finer, Sotheby's, Christie's, Herman HIstorica, etc.

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Tim Lison




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PostPosted: Tue 30 Sep, 2014 5:16 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

Nathan Robinson wrote:
Tim Lison wrote:
And to see so many unique examples of viking swords all gathered together for sale at one time...doesn't this ring some alarm bells?


These were not all in one place or at one time. They were never gathered together as one group. These items have been on the market and changing hands for 10-20 years.

The 21 images shown here have references cited ranging from The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Wallace Collection, The Rothenburg Collection, Bonhams, Peter Finer, Sotheby's, Christie's, Herman HIstorica, etc.


Ahh. Thanks for the clarification. It makes them a little more plausible then. I still think alot of them look like bunk...
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Craig Peters




PostPosted: Tue 30 Sep, 2014 5:39 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

How often do you find evidence of reddish rust on known genuine Viking or medieval swords? My natural feeling is to be suspicious. In this set of swords, #16 is a good example of what I am referring to.

One sword that is strongly suspicious to me is the Peter Finer sword #20. The lack of a fuller is highly atypical, and the general appearance of the blade feels off.

Also, would you Nathan, or anyone else, be willing to post a new topic on signs of artificial aging, preferably with high quality colour images? I don't know what to look for and I don't recall a forum thread on the subject.
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Nathan Robinson
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PostPosted: Tue 30 Sep, 2014 5:44 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

Craig Peters wrote:
How often do you find evidence of reddish rust on known genuine Viking or medieval swords? My natural feeling is to be suspicious. In this set of swords, #16 is a good example of what I am referring to.


I wish I knew the answer to this. It makes me wonder, too. Having said that, however, I remember quite a bit of reddish-brown color at the Wallace Collection. The sword in #8 is quite reddish brown and that has been confirmed by scientific study by Alan Williams as being from the Viking Age period.

It's also worth noting that many of these images might not represent the color one would see "in person" as the photography for many of them was just piss-poor. Photographs also tend to bring out artifacts that are otherwise more subtle in person.

Your question is a good one and I'd like the answer, too!

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Nathan Robinson
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PostPosted: Tue 30 Sep, 2014 5:48 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

Craig Peters wrote:
Also, would you Nathan, or anyone else, be willing to post a new topic on signs of artificial aging, preferably with high quality colour images? I don't know what to look for and I don't recall a forum thread on the subject.


Really, that's part of the reason that this topic was posted. I made it to start the conversation on the subject. I mentioned that in the original post.

I'm not knowledgeable enough about the subject to make a new topic that shows specific dubious examples and specific reasoning for them being questionable. There's been some great discussion on these swords on our Facebook page that discusses such details. I posted this here to encourage the community here to discuss it and perhaps seed a topic like you're suggesting. Of course, people would need ot participate and add content for that to happen. We'll see.

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J. Nicolaysen




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PostPosted: Tue 30 Sep, 2014 6:39 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

So are viking swords, or swords from this era at least, any more or less likely to be fakes than swords from other eras?

I guess that more recent swords might have a better provenance, while older swords are more rare altogether. Perhaps there is a sort of confluence of factors that make these swords "fake-able." Too bad, I think some of these are really quite nice, though I have even less of an eye than the esteemed gentlemen speaking in this thread.
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Bryan Heff




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PostPosted: Wed 01 Oct, 2014 3:36 am    Post subject:         Reply with quote

Nathan Robinson wrote:
#8: Sword, Scandinavia, 9th century or 10th century

Wallace Collection A.456

Length: 76.5 cm (30.12")
Width: 5.4 cm (2.13")
Weight: 1.14 kg (2.5 pounds)

Incised mark: “HLI”

History:
Possibly E. Juste; comte de Nieuwerkerke; Sir Richard Wallace, August 1871.

Literature:
Capwell, Tobias, 'Masterpieces of European Arms and Armour in the Wallace Collection', London: The Wallace Collection, 2011, p. 26
Mann, Sir J. G., Wallace Collection Catalogues: European Arms and Armour Volume II, London: The Trustees of the Wallace Collection, 1962
Norman, A. V. B., Wallace Collection Catalogues: European Arms and Armour Supplement, London: The Trustees of the Wallace Collection, 1986

http://wallacelive.wallacecollection.org/eMus...detailView

Copyright © Trustees of the Wallace Collection


What are the little holes on either end of the cross on #8?

The church is near but the roads are icy. The tavern is far but I will walk carefully. - Russian Proverb
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Harry Marinakis




PostPosted: Wed 01 Oct, 2014 9:29 am    Post subject:         Reply with quote

#1 is my favorite
Spectacular thread, Nathan
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Nathan Robinson
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PostPosted: Wed 01 Oct, 2014 11:21 am    Post subject:         Reply with quote

J. Nicolaysen wrote:
So are viking swords, or swords from this era at least, any more or less likely to be fakes than swords from other eras?

I guess that more recent swords might have a better provenance, while older swords are more rare altogether. Perhaps there is a sort of confluence of factors that make these swords "fake-able." Too bad, I think some of these are really quite nice, though I have even less of an eye than the esteemed gentlemen speaking in this thread.


Please note that this topic did not say that the swords here are fakes. There are several shown that are 100% authentic. It said that there are some questions on some of them that I'm inviting others to discuss.

There are a lot of fakes for all eras, but math would dictate that the older items have a smaller number of extant samples and are likely to have a larger percentage of non-authentic pieces in the group than later examples.

There's a whole flood of "medieval" swords available for sale lately that are simply not real. There's been a ton of katana swords for decades that are not real. There's just as many "bronze age" swords and other items that are very clearly not real out there for sale. It's really a big problem.

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Nathan Robinson
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PostPosted: Wed 01 Oct, 2014 11:21 am    Post subject:         Reply with quote

Bryan Heff wrote:
What are the little holes on either end of the cross on #8?


No idea. Maybe somebody else knows?

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Jeffrey Faulk




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PostPosted: Wed 01 Oct, 2014 12:34 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

Regarding #8's mysterious holes:

The thoughts that occur to me in no particular order:
--Some form of decorative insert or rivet that has since fallen or corroded out.
--Rivet holes for old-fashioned golden 'sandwich' layers? Like on a Migration Period sword?
--Someone at some museum drilled them to hang the sword up.
--(Vaguely serious, probably unrealistic) some form of religious symbol?
--(Also probably unrealistic) Some way of making the friend-bond where you tie the sword to the scabbard so it cannot be drawn? It strikes me that this would be a fairly secure way of doing so, where you have thongs fixed to the scabbard and then inserted upward through these holes and knotted together. However there has never really been much actual evidence of the fridbond apart from a few sagas, so...
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PostPosted: Wed 01 Oct, 2014 2:16 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

I've seen #16 in person. The color is more of an even, dark brown with no active rust. The proportions and construction seem to be good and the irregular oxidation pattern is difficult to mimic with most accelerated aging techniques.
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Carl W.




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PostPosted: Wed 01 Oct, 2014 5:25 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

Nathan - Thank you for posting these.
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Nathan Robinson
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PostPosted: Thu 02 Oct, 2014 1:52 am    Post subject:         Reply with quote

Bryan Heff wrote:
Nathan Robinson wrote:
#8: Sword, Scandinavia, 9th century or 10th century

Wallace Collection A.456

Length: 76.5 cm (30.12")
Width: 5.4 cm (2.13")
Weight: 1.14 kg (2.5 pounds)

Incised mark: “HLI”

History:
Possibly E. Juste; comte de Nieuwerkerke; Sir Richard Wallace, August 1871.

Literature:
Capwell, Tobias, 'Masterpieces of European Arms and Armour in the Wallace Collection', London: The Wallace Collection, 2011, p. 26
Mann, Sir J. G., Wallace Collection Catalogues: European Arms and Armour Volume II, London: The Trustees of the Wallace Collection, 1962
Norman, A. V. B., Wallace Collection Catalogues: European Arms and Armour Supplement, London: The Trustees of the Wallace Collection, 1986

http://wallacelive.wallacecollection.org/eMus...detailView

Copyright © Trustees of the Wallace Collection


What are the little holes on either end of the cross on #8?


The Wallace Collection Catalogue, Mann/Norman, 1962/1986 has this info in it. It mentions the holes but does not specify what they are.

Quote:
A456 Sword

POMMEL, formed of two layers, the upper divided into five lobes, the underside of the lower part is pierced with two holes; short straight QUILLONS, roughly square in section and rounded at the ends; small holes are sunk at either end similar to those under the pommel. The sides of the quillons are matted with fine close-set vertical incisions, possibly for taking a silver overlay. Incised on the forward face of the quillons are the letters HLI: Grip missing. The BLADE is broad, double-edged and has a shallow hollow along the middle on both sides nearly to the point, and bears traces of ornament or of an inscription, down the center.

Probably Scandinavian, 9th or1Oth century

De Beaumont Catalogue, Pl. V; Viollet-le-Duc V, 365; Boeheim 235-6; taking, European Armour II, 14-15, and Fig. 17, Oakeshott Archaeology of Weapons, 1960, pp.136 and 141.

Provenance: E. Juste? (deax epees anciennes, 1500 fr.; Receipted Bill, 28th April, 1869); Comte de Nieuwerkerke

This sword is one of a group of five with inscribed quillons, four of which were made the subject of a study by Dr. Adolph Mahr, Ein Wilkingerschwert mit deutschem Namen aus Irland in Mannus: Zeitschrift fur Vorgeschicte. VI. Erganzungband, 1928, pp. 240-52. The other four examples are: (2) in the University Museum at Oslo, from Melhus, Norway, signed HLITER; (3) and (4) in the National Museum of Ireland; one of which comes from the Kilmainham and Islandbrictge excavation and is signed HARTOL FR; the other was found in the crannog in Ballindeny Bog in 1928 and is inscribed HILTPREHT. Dr. Mahr refers to a fourth sword ‘aus Frankreich’ inscribed HLITR, but was unaware that it had long since passed into the Wallace Collection. His knowledge of its existence was derived from Petersen, De Norske Vikingesverd, 1919, pp. 109 -10, who followed Lorange (1889), who in his tum only knew of it from the illustration in Viollet-le-Duc, when it was in the Nieuwerkerke Collection; (5) a fifth sword of this group has been described by F. Morawe in Mannus XI, 1929, pp.292 ff. It is inscribed HIFIIF REHT HILTIP REFIT and was formerly in the Zeugha us at Berlin.

The first three letters HLI on one side of the quillon No. A456 am quite distinct the rest of the inscription, which may be as Mahr suggested similar to that on the Oslo sword is not clear. The sword belongs to the type classified by Petersen (op. cit) under Type K, of which he lists thirteen examples, and attributes them to the early 9th century (Laking, European Armour I, pp.14-15, 6Z placed number A456 much too late when he described it as 9th century). Sir Mortimer Wheeler, who refers to this form of sword as Type IV in his London Museum pamphlet London and the I Vikings, 1927 put the date between 850-950 A.D.

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Mark Lewis





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PostPosted: Thu 02 Oct, 2014 8:26 am    Post subject:         Reply with quote

Quote:
Really, that's part of the reason that this topic was posted. I made it to start the conversation on the subject. I mentioned that in the original post.

I'm not knowledgeable enough about the subject to make a new topic that shows specific dubious examples and specific reasoning for them being questionable. There's been some great discussion on these swords on our Facebook page that discusses such details. I posted this here to encourage the community here to discuss it and perhaps seed a topic like you're suggesting. Of course, people would need ot participate and add content for that to happen. We'll see.


I'd also be very interested to see more discussion of this issue. I keep an eye on the auction houses, but wish I had a better eye for detecting probable fakes...

Among the later medieval swords also posted on Facebook recently, I did notice this one from Hermann Historica in 2012:
http://www.hermann-historica.de/auktion/hhm65...at65_a.txt

which had a broken blade when they first sold it in 2006:
http://www.hermann-historica-archiv.de/auktio...at51_p.txt

and in 2008, when Bonhams had it:
http://www.bonhams.com/auctions/15786/lot/134/
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Nathan Robinson
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PostPosted: Thu 02 Oct, 2014 3:36 pm    Post subject:         Reply with quote

Mark, since that 14th century sword is off-topic to this particular topic, I will only comment to say that it was posted on Facebook a couple weeks ago and I've just added your additional information to it. Should you want to discuss this sword or others outside of the Viking Age samples I've put here, go ahead and make a new topic for it. it's a good one. Happy
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