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  2. Japanese sword mountings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_sword_mountings

    Mounting for a sword of the itomaki no tachi type with design of mon (family crests). 1600s. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. The tachi (太刀) style koshirae is the primary style of mounting used for the tachi, where the sword is suspended edge-down from two hangers (ashi) attached to the obi. [5]

  3. Macuahuitl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macuahuitl

    They have swords of this kind – of wood made like a two-handed sword, but with the hilt not so long; about three fingers in breadth. The edges are grooved, and in the grooves they insert stone knives, that cut like a Toledo blade. I saw one day an Indian fighting with a mounted man, and the Indian gave the horse of his antagonist such a blow ...

  4. Daishō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daishō

    Daishō mountings with ice crack pattern design. Edo period, Designated as Important Mounting, The Japanese Sword Museum. The daishō (大小, daishō) —"large and small" [1] —is a Japanese term for a matched pair of traditionally made Japanese swords worn by the samurai class in feudal Japan.

  5. Sverd i fjell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sverd_i_fjell

    Sverd i fjell (English: Swords in Rock) is a commemorative monument located in the Hafrsfjord neighborhood of Madla, a borough of the city of Stavanger which lies in the southwestern part of the large municipality of Stavanger in Rogaland county, Norway.

  6. Westford Knight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westford_Knight

    "Westford Knight" is the name given to a pattern, variously interpreted as a carving, a natural feature, or a combination of both, located on a glacial boulder (also known as the Sinclair Rock) in Westford, Massachusetts in the United States. It is the subject of popular or pseudohistorical speculation on Pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact ...

  7. List of mythological objects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mythological_objects

    In Mallory, the sword in the stone is not Excalibur and is not named. When the sword is broken in a fight with King Pellinore, the Lady of the Lake gives him Excalibur as a replacement. At Arthur's death, Excalibur is returned to the Lady of the lake by Sir Bedivere. Sword with the Red Hilt, one of the swords wielded by Sir Balin.

  8. National Treasure (Japan) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Treasure_(Japan)

    Most (109) sculptures are wooden, twelve entries in the list are bronze, eleven are lacquer, seven are made of clay, and one entry, the Usuki Stone Buddhas, consists of a group of stone sculptures. The statues vary in size from just 10 cm (3.9 in) to 13 m (43 ft) and 15 m (49 ft) for the Great Buddhas of Nara and Kamakura .

  9. Hamon (swordsmithing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamon_(swordsmithing)

    A 13th century sword by Masatsune with a straight-edge hamon A 13th century sword by Nagamitsu, with a notare midare hamon that is wavy along the blade but straight approaching the tip. A 14th century sword by Kunimitsu 14th century sword by Masamune, with a wavy hamon. China was the first country to produce iron in Asia, around 1200 BC.