«All that glitters is not gold» - broadaxes with brass banded hafts from the late Viking age Traditionally, the sword was regarded as a weapon of personal prestige and a symbol of the privileged landowning elite. The axe, on the other hand, was a farming tool and symbolic of the landless but free men that went into service under this privileged elite. These men were called housecarls (ON: húskarl). As the Viking age drew toward its end, the axe seemed to gain a higher status as a weapon of prestige in the shape of two-handed broadaxes (dane-axe). Their elongated edge but thin and light body made them a fearsome and formidable weapon. Six broadaxes with haft bandings of copper-alloy have been identified in the archaeological collection at th...
It is often assumed that blacksmiths and ironworkers in Viking Age occupied important roles in their...
The Denain Museum (Nord) owns a sword hitherto erroneously dated from the Roman period. It is actual...
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Research about viking age swords is nothing new but for a long time the main focus have been differe...
Shield bosses – offerings and symbols – Rituals, cosmology and power in Iron Age ScandinaviaThe Sout...
Votive Finds from the End of the Bronze-Age.In 1954 the Prehistoric Museum received a bronze Hallsta...
The Viking Age (800–1050 A.D.) is also called the “Silver Age”. Despite the fact that no silver mine...
Vikingtidens begynnelse settes ofte til angrepet på Lindisfarne i England rundt 793. Dette er starte...
Anglo-Saxon swords or the L-type swords in England and ScandinaviaThis article discusses the L-type ...
The main goal for this Master thesis is to compare the Bronze Age culture from Southern Norway with ...
Viking Age Swords from Telemark, Norway. An Integrated Technical and Archaeological Investigation pr...
This essay discusses the development of swords in the southern region of Sweden, Skåne. It attempts ...
I have written this essay because of my interest in Bronze Age warfare and the finds regarding to it...
This article presents and discusses the use and itineraries of inset lead weights from Norway and th...
Denne studia av yngre jernalders graver med smedutsyr i Hordaland tek opp debatten om «smedgraver» o...
It is often assumed that blacksmiths and ironworkers in Viking Age occupied important roles in their...
The Denain Museum (Nord) owns a sword hitherto erroneously dated from the Roman period. It is actual...
&n...
Research about viking age swords is nothing new but for a long time the main focus have been differe...
Shield bosses – offerings and symbols – Rituals, cosmology and power in Iron Age ScandinaviaThe Sout...
Votive Finds from the End of the Bronze-Age.In 1954 the Prehistoric Museum received a bronze Hallsta...
The Viking Age (800–1050 A.D.) is also called the “Silver Age”. Despite the fact that no silver mine...
Vikingtidens begynnelse settes ofte til angrepet på Lindisfarne i England rundt 793. Dette er starte...
Anglo-Saxon swords or the L-type swords in England and ScandinaviaThis article discusses the L-type ...
The main goal for this Master thesis is to compare the Bronze Age culture from Southern Norway with ...
Viking Age Swords from Telemark, Norway. An Integrated Technical and Archaeological Investigation pr...
This essay discusses the development of swords in the southern region of Sweden, Skåne. It attempts ...
I have written this essay because of my interest in Bronze Age warfare and the finds regarding to it...
This article presents and discusses the use and itineraries of inset lead weights from Norway and th...
Denne studia av yngre jernalders graver med smedutsyr i Hordaland tek opp debatten om «smedgraver» o...
It is often assumed that blacksmiths and ironworkers in Viking Age occupied important roles in their...
The Denain Museum (Nord) owns a sword hitherto erroneously dated from the Roman period. It is actual...
&n...