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Gilding on European Medieval Swords
On Oct 5 I made a presentation at the New England Bladesmith's Guild Ashokan Sword Seminar. The theme for the weekend was 'Gilding the Lily' and in keeping with that I decided to share some results from an X-Ray Fluorescence survey of my collection completed shortly before the Pandemic that I will also share here now. This technology allows nondestructive detection of heavier elements on or near the surface of an object.
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Oakeshott type XV - Fourteenth Century
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Gilding over the forte and hilt elements is not unexpected in this timeframe. I have had concerns about the authenticity of this sword that I have had over a quarter of a century, so you can imagine how pleasing it was to find a feature invisible to the naked eye that a forger would have had no motive to put there.
The yellow-orange marks on the orientation sheet denote areas where gold was detected. |
Oakeshott type Xa - Eleventh Century - +INNOMINEDOMINI+
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Swords from this era are generally regarded to have been austere plain steel and are rarely encountered in other than excavated condition.
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Oakeshott type X - Tenth to Eleventh Century - +ULFBERHT+
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In this timeframe very attractive overlay work in silver, copper and rarely gold may be found on hilts particularly from Viking infested lands. The brazil nut pommel suggests a more southerly origin for this example and would not be expected to feature such decoration.
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WOW
Hey Lee. These are your swords??? You own an ULFBERHT?
This is where the name of the forum comes from? I've often wondered. Thank-you for letting me see these. |
Yes, indeed, even a blind squirrel occasionally gets a nut and after 40 years of seeking there may even be a small stash.
The website did start out especially focused on European Medieval swords. A lonely focus. Daydreaming at a particularly irrelevant (to me) lecture at a professional conference, I developed a desire to advise aspiring collectors that there was a wide variety of exciting artifacts worthy of their attention. |
The main resource page is a bookmark I found through the Sir Clisto pages, so many decades ago.
I have studied here since. A jewel. |
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- Mark |
This is excellent. The kind of use of technology that takes us away from having to speculate, based upon other finds. Glad that your first sword turned out to be genuine. Love the shape - Oakeshott isn't my thing but it reminds me of the Wallace Collection late C14th A460 which I got my hands on a few months ago.
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