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Viking Objects

Reproduction Viking Age Sword

A reproduction of the sword found in Grave 511 at Repton. The hilt is made of wood laths wrapped in tabby weave textile strips. The scabbard is made of two wooden laths, lined with trimmed sheep fleece, and covered in an oak-stained, stitched, calf-leather cover. The strap slide is copper alloy and inserted under the leather. The sword belt shown with the scabbard is based on the sword belt from Grave 511 at Repton.

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Viking Objects

Sword Pommel (NARC-E7AAF4)

An  Anglo-Scandinavian copper-alloy sword pommel classed as a Petersen L type VI.  The design is a fusion of Anglo-Scandinavian and Anglo-Saxon fashions. In many cases the design of the sword pommel is the only method of identifying the possible type and date of the sword it was attached to.

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Viking Designs

Drawing of an Urnes-Style Mount

A drawing of a cast copper alloy sword fitting with Urnes-style decoration.

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Viking Objects

Sword Pommel (LEIC-9158C3)

The pommel is probably a late development of Petersen’s type X which encompases transitional to medieval forms. Copper-alloy pommels with this basic shape are rare but not unknown in Viking Age Europe with a reasonably close example from Lough Derg, County Tipperary, in the National Museum of Ireland. The symmetrical Ringerike-style engraving is very similar to decoration commonly found on stirrup-strap mounts of the eleventh century.

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Viking Objects

Sword Hilt or Top Guard (DENO-87124F)

A copper-alloy hilt or top guard from an early medieval, possibly Viking, sword or dagger.

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Viking Objects

Sword Fitting (1985/225-13)

This is the lower guard of a sword that may have been a Petersen Type H sword with triangular pommel. This style of sword is the most common type found in Norway and accounts for approximately 25% of those found in Ireland. It was found about 760mm from an iron sword blade in Mound 7, along with iron nails and a fragment of a possible iron spur.

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Viking Objects

Sword (1989-59/7113)

This Viking Age sword was found in Grave 511 at Repton where the invading Viking Great Army had their winter camp in 873/4. When it was found, the sword had traces of a wooden scabbard attached to the rusted blade. Analysis showed that the scabbard was lined with fleece and covered in leather. The grip was wooden and covered in a woollen textile.

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Viking Objects

Scabbard Chape (DENO-527092)

The decoration on this chape consists of a central human figure, with openwork apertures defining it, and a zoomorphic mask below.

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Viking Objects

Scabbard Chape (NLM-5BD697)

The incomplete openwork tongue-shaped front plate of this chape is decorated with at least six asymmetrical apertures and resembles similar chapes with ‘Birka Falcon’ decoration.

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Viking Objects

Decorative Sword Mount (WMID-2FF927)

A cast copper alloy sword mount with English Urnes style decoration which could have been used on the sword pommel. Pommel mounts developed over time from simple rounded or triangular pieces of metal to more stylized multi-pronged designs. They could be decorated with various inlays or gilding. Pommel mounts are often the only indicators for attributing swords to typologies and, therefore, dating them.

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Viking Objects

Scabbard Chape (NLM-6C0242)

This possible scabbard chape fragment is very damaged but the reddish tint is often characteristic of Anglo-Scandinavian metalwork

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