Anglo-saksi-miekka, Fetter Lane, 700-luku

  • 550,00€
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This gorgeous one-handed Saxon sword is based on the surviving components of an original artefact - the upper part of a sword grip and pommel excavated during construction works on Fetter Lane, London (hence the name), and donated to the British Museum in 1893. The extremely well-preserved, beautifully detailed original find made of gilded silver is an absolutely unique piece of Middle Anglo-Saxon history, still on display at the British Museum in London today. Owing to its construction, shape and intricate ornamental motifs, this finely crafted masterpiece is historically placed in the late 8th century and believed to have been the prestige weapon of a wealthy warrior or nobleman of Germanic descent.

As the blade of the actual archaeological piece is missing, a classic Dark Ages blade (broad, straight, double-edged) was chosen for this highly detailed Fetter Lane sword reconstruction. It is made of Damascus steel* and features a broad fuller that runs almost its entire length on both sides. The parallel edges are unsharpened. The richly decorated hilt is cast from brass. It is composed of several parts riveted together (just like the original) and closely recreates the fine designs of the museum piece. The pommel cap is made of a domed central element flanked by three smaller lobes and beaded wire patterns on each side. The pommel bar and the guard have both the same three-part layout and feature diagonal ribbing and an intermediate tin-plated brass layer. The grip is densely and intricately adorned with different motifs of intertwined leafy plants/tendrils and animals on either side (whirling serpents on one side and a bird- or eagle-like creature on the other).

This early medieval single-handed sword comes complete with a brown wood-and-leather scabbard with wooden suspension loop (max. belt width 5 cm) and brass throat and chape.