Viking sword

Viking sword.

Viking swords displayed at the Wikingermuseum in Hedeby.
Type Sword
Service history
In service 732–1066 AD
Used by Norse & various Europeans
Production history
Produced 732–1066 AD
Specifications
Weight avg. 1.1 kg (2.4 lb)
Length 91 cm (36 in) to 100 cm (39 in)
Blade length avg. 74 cm (29 in)
Width 4.4 cm (1.7 in) to 6.2 cm (2.4 in)

Blade type Double-edged, straight bladed, slight taper
Hilt type One-handed with pommel, variable guard

The Viking sword was a weapon of the Viking Age and main type of sword used in Europe during the Viking Age. Although called "Viking sword", this style of sword was not exclusively limited to Vikings and was used by other people.

Morphology

The Viking sword was a weapon of the Viking Age. It was a development of the Roman spatha, evolving out of the Migration Period sword in the 8th century, and into the classical knightly sword in the 11th century with the emergence of larger cross-guards.[1]steel of higher purity and carbon content than its peers in the region that may have been imported in ingot.[2]

Blade length varied from 71 to 84 centimetres.[3] Early examples have single, deep, wide fullers running the full length of the blade.[3] Later examples have multiple narrow fullers.[3] A fuller reduces the weight of the blade without compromising its strength.

All have short single-handed hilts with triangle, lobed or cocked-hat style pommels. Pommels were made of iron and were heavier than on the earlier Migration Period sword.[3]

Ulfberht Variants

See also: Ulfberht

Of the thousands of Viking swords that have been recovered, 171 of them, all made between 800 and 1000 AD, bear the inscription "+VLFBERH+T" or "+VLFBERHT+". Some of these Ulfberht swords were made of remarkably high-quality steel for their day.[4] The steel had very few impurities (or slag), and unusually high carbon content, making it stronger, more flexible, and less brittle than most contemporary steel. Historians suggest that the Vikings made these swords from high-quality steel ingots from Central Asia which they acquired on the Volga trade route, which the Vikings are known to have used from the early-800s to the mid-1000s. Steel of this quality required production in crucibles at much higher furnace temperatures than European blacksmiths of the time were capable of producing at their forges. There was no evidence that Europeans could make crucible steel themselves until the Industrial Revolution 800 years later.[4]

The Ulfberht swords made from this crucible steel would have had superior performance in battle. They were extremely rare and valuable, and would have been prized possessions of the most elite Vikings. Historians suggest that the Ulfberht-inscribed swords that were not made from crucible steel were probably contemporary fakes, trading on the reputation of true Ulfberht swords.[4] However, the exact meaning or origin of the word Ulfberht is unclear. As these swords were made over a 200-year period, it is not possible they were all made by a single craftsman who was signing his work. The cross that appears twice in the inscriptions may be a reference to the Catholic church, as certain church officials of the time included such crosses in their signatures.[4]

in TV and Movies

There was a Nova - National Geographic special done in 2012 about the techniques to make a Viking Sword.

FFI, see: Secrets of the Viking Sword (2012) full (YouTube)
or
Secrets of the Viking Sword (Nova).
A modern-day swordsmith reverse engineers the ultimate weapon of the Middle Ages—a sword both prized and feared. Aired September 25, 2013 on PBS.


See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Viking swords.

References

  1. Oakeshott, R.E. (1996). The Archaeology of Weapons, Arms and Armour from Prehistory to[ the Age of Chivalry. New York: Dover Publications Inc. ISBN 978-0-486-29288-5.
  2. Maev, Kennedy (27 December 2008). "1,000 years on, perils of fake Viking swords are revealed". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Loades, Mike (2010). Swords and Swordsmen. Great Britain: Pen & Sword Books. ISBN 978-1-84884-133-8.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 NOVA, "Secrets of the Viking Sword", http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/ancient/secrets-viking-sword.html

External links