Gillingsværdet

Gillingsværdet udstillet på Yorkshire Museum.

Gillingsværdet er et angelsaksisk sværd, der blev fundet af en skoledreng i floden Gilling Beck, i Gilling West i North Yorkshire i 1976. Det er dateret til slutningen af 800-tallet eller begyndelsen af 900-tallet.

Sværdet er 83,8 cm langt og tveægget. Håndtaget er dekoreret med sølv.[1]

Klingen måler 70 cm fra parerstangen. Den er 5,2 cm bred ved håndtaget og bliver gradvist smallere. Bladet har en lav blodrille i hele længden, og der er rester af damascering i overfladen. Pommelen er dekoreret med bånd af sølv, som matcher de fem bånd på håndtaget.[2]

Sværdet er udstillet på Yorkshire Museum.

Referencer

  1. ^ "Collections Highlights: The Gilling Sword". Yorkshire Museum. Hentet 5. oktober 2018.
  2. ^ Watkin, J. R. (1986). "A late Anglo-Saxon sword from Gilling West, N. Yorkshire" (PDF). Medieval Archaeology. 30: 93–99.

Medier brugt på denne side

Gilling Sword - diagonal - YORYM 1977 51.JPG
Forfatter/Opretter:
Photographed by: York Museums Trust Staff
, Licens: CC BY-SA 4.0
Iron blade with five silver bands on grip and silver plaques on pommel. Two edged blade, pattern welding, pommel decorated with silver plates with geometric decoration, five silver bands in grip, grip missing. Elaborate pommel with large central lobe topped with a circular button below which is a silver band decorated with vertical lines, on both sides of the lobe there are small plaques with a geometric circular design. Running vertically on the shoulders of the pommel either side of the lobe are two thin silver bands decorated with horizontal lines. The shoulder beyond these are concave and curve to meet another silver band which runs along the top of the upper guard, again decorated in a geometric pattern. The tang is visible through the silver bands that remain from the grip - which too bear the geometric pattern - between there it can be seen to reduce steeply in size as it reaches the pommel. The guard is thick but short, curving at an angle similar to that of the pommel it is slightly deformed on one arm. The blade by the hilt is black and reasonably intact, it still holds a sharp edge, and the cutting edge is chipped as well as corroded. The condition of the blade becomes worse toward the tip and the wide shallow fuller or plane which runs along the blade becomes obscured in the damaged portion, the blade is also reasonably loose in its hilt.