Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Viking Age Swords from Telemark, Norway: An Integrated Technical and Archaeological Investigation
View through CrossRef
Viking Age Swords from Telemark, Norway. An Integrated Technical and Archaeological Investigation provides a metallographic analysis of 21 Viking Age swords found in the county Telemark in southeastern Norway. The book is the result of a collaboration between archaeologist Irmelin Martens and chemist Eva Elisabeth Astrup. 220 swords have been found in Telemark, and they are a mix of domestic Norwegian and imported European types. The difficulties in determining which ones were made in Norway are complicated by and closely connected to the specific skills Norwegian blacksmiths had mastered with respect to both blade construction and inlay decoration. The metallographic investigations revealed five construction types for sword blades, of which four, requiring different technical levels of smithing, may well have been mastered by Norwegian blacksmiths at that time. Combined with x-ray radiographic studies, the metallographic investigations indicate that new techniques were indeed introduced and disseminated among weaponsmiths during the Viking Age. The findings are also probably representative for the combined total of more than 3000 swords found in all areas of the country. The majority are domestic types, and their great number obviously reflects the organization of sword production and influenced blacksmiths’ social standing.
Title: Viking Age Swords from Telemark, Norway: An Integrated Technical and Archaeological Investigation
Description:
Viking Age Swords from Telemark, Norway.
An Integrated Technical and Archaeological Investigation provides a metallographic analysis of 21 Viking Age swords found in the county Telemark in southeastern Norway.
The book is the result of a collaboration between archaeologist Irmelin Martens and chemist Eva Elisabeth Astrup.
220 swords have been found in Telemark, and they are a mix of domestic Norwegian and imported European types.
The difficulties in determining which ones were made in Norway are complicated by and closely connected to the specific skills Norwegian blacksmiths had mastered with respect to both blade construction and inlay decoration.
The metallographic investigations revealed five construction types for sword blades, of which four, requiring different technical levels of smithing, may well have been mastered by Norwegian blacksmiths at that time.
Combined with x-ray radiographic studies, the metallographic investigations indicate that new techniques were indeed introduced and disseminated among weaponsmiths during the Viking Age.
The findings are also probably representative for the combined total of more than 3000 swords found in all areas of the country.
The majority are domestic types, and their great number obviously reflects the organization of sword production and influenced blacksmiths’ social standing.
Related Results
Viking Art
Viking Art
Viking Art refers to the visual art produced by those of Scandinavian origin or descent, both at home and abroad, during the Viking Age (c. 800–1100). The term refers not to art in...
Viking Metal
Viking Metal
Hardly any traces survive of the music of the Vikings, but considerable effort has been expended in the modern period in attempting to construct music that can represent the Viking...
nachgefragt: Rasmus A. Sivertsen, norwegischer Animationsfilmer
nachgefragt: Rasmus A. Sivertsen, norwegischer Animationsfilmer
Nicole Lohfink hat mit Rasmus Sivertsen über das Genre Animationsfilm, über Norwegens Filmfinanzierung, die Medienlandschaft heute und die Schwierigkeit, mit den vielen Möglichkeit...
Violence as a Lens to Viking Societies: A Comparison of Norway and Denmark
Violence as a Lens to Viking Societies: A Comparison of Norway and Denmark
Comparing Viking Age Norway and Denmark, the article examines the primary proposition that as centers of authority become progressively more robust, violence will be proportionatel...
Archaeological heritage management in the Meuse valley (Limburg, the Netherlands) from a national perspective: aims, methods and results
Archaeological heritage management in the Meuse valley (Limburg, the Netherlands) from a national perspective: aims, methods and results
AbstractNumerous archaeological investigations have been performed along the river Meuse in the Netherlands’ southeastern province of Limburg as part of the major ‘Maaswerken’ infr...
Nordic Laws
Nordic Laws
By the end of the Viking Age, the Nordic region was divided between three kingdoms, all of which still exist in the early twenty-first century, albeit with very different borders, ...
Proizvodnja željeza u kasnoj antici i ranome srednjem vijeku u Podravini – tehnološki aspekti i društveni kontekst
Proizvodnja željeza u kasnoj antici i ranome srednjem vijeku u Podravini – tehnološki aspekti i društveni kontekst
Previous archaeological investigations in present-day Gornja Podravina have created prerequisites for the study of the wider context of iron production in the period of Late Antiqu...
Storms and associated damages in Norway
Storms and associated damages in Norway
Extreme winds account for more than half of Norway’s insurance claims related to natural hazards [1]. Quantifying windstorm-damage relations is crucial to prepar...

