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  2. Scabbard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scabbard

    Scabbards were historically, albeit rarely, worn across the back, but only by a handful of Celtic tribes, and only with very short lengths of sword. [10] This is because drawing a long, sharp blade over one's shoulder and past one's head from a scabbard on the back is relatively awkward, especially in a hurry, and the length of the arm sets a ...

  3. Szczerbiec - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Szczerbiec

    Szczerbiec is a 98 cm-long (39 in) ceremonial sword bearing rich Gothic ornamentation, dated to the mid-13th century. [8] [9] It is classified as a type XII sword with a type I pommel and a type 6 crossguard according to the Oakeshott typology, [6] although the blade may have changed its shape due to centuries of corrosion and intensive cleaning before every coronation.

  4. Weapons and armour in Anglo-Saxon England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weapons_and_armour_in...

    The sword and scabbard were suspended from either a baldric on the shoulder or from a belt on the waist. The former method was evidently popular in early Anglo-Saxon England, but the latter gained popularity in the later Anglo-Saxon period. For example, the Bayeux Tapestry only depicts the use of belts for sword carrying. [45]

  5. Chape - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chape

    The scabbard "chape" is labelled 10. Scabbard chape from the St Ninian's Isle Treasure Illustration of the Thorsberg chape showing the runic inscriptions on both sides. Chape has had various meanings in English, but the predominant one is a protective fitting at the bottom of a scabbard or sheath for a sword or dagger (10 in the diagram). [1]

  6. Arms of Skanderbeg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arms_of_Skanderbeg

    The sword and scabbard of Skanderbeg are currently on display at the Kunsthistorischen Museum in Vienna, Austria. According to Dhimitër Frëngu, Skanderbeg's scribe and one of his biographers, the first sword was curved (In the original Italian: una scimitarra storta), with a sharp edge and elegantly made of Damascened steel.

  7. Museum Worker Finds Medieval Sword While Swimming in a ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/museum-worker-finds-medieval-sword...

    The Military Museum said it may exhibit the sword in December A museum worker who was swimming in a Polish river two years ago discovered a sword dating back as far as the 9th century, officials said.

  8. ‘Excellently preserved’ cache of Roman swords used 1,900 ...

    www.aol.com/excellently-preserved-cache-roman...

    A cache of “excellently preserved” 1,900-year-old Roman swords have been unearthed in a cave near the Dead Sea by archaeologists in Israel.. The swords were likely seized and hidden by rebel ...

  9. St Ninian's Isle Treasure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Ninian's_Isle_Treasure

    The brooches show a variety of typical Pictish forms, with both animal-head and lobed geometrical forms of terminal. Two of the scabbard chapes and a sword pommel appear to be Anglo-Saxon, probably made in Mercia in the late eighth century; one has an inscription with a prayer in Old English. Gifts were often exchanged between Anglo-Saxon and ...

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