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What she had found was the guard for a Viking sword.
It shows the hilt of a Viking sword.
The Viking sword was the primary weapon of the Viking.
Cawood sword, regarded as "one of the finest Viking swords ever discovered".
There was a loud bang that almost made him jump out of his skin, as a Viking sword struck an upraised shield.
The most famous weapon of the Hersirs was the Hersir viking sword.
In contrast, inscriptions in the Latin alphabet occur frequently on Viking swords.
Although called "Viking sword", this style of sword was not exclusively limited to Vikings and was used by other people.
Viking sword (early medieval spatha)
File:Viking swords.
A Viking sword was discovered at Northside, which is belied to indicate that there was a settlement on the river mouth.
The Viking swords were pattern welded which gave the blade extra strength as the core was made of springy iron and edge of hard steel.
This "Viking sword from Farndon Church," is now preserved in the church vestry."
The Curse of the Viking Sword (Vikingssverdets forbannelse)
Dr. Jan Peterson had previously developed a typology for Viking swords consisting of twenty-six categories.
Wiglaf's Weapon Widget Database of Viking swords.
Mediæval Sword Virtual Museum, which contains close-up images of Viking swords, showing the pattern welding structures.
The house coat of arms incorporates themes from Casey's own coat of arms, with the addition of the crossed Viking swords.
As such they are a continuation of the early medieval "Viking sword", which ultimately derives from the spatha of Late Antiquity and the Migration Period.
Later swords from 600 AD to 1000 AD, like the viking swords, are recognizable derivatives, though they are not truly spathae.
The Viking sword was the primary weapon of the viking and main type of sword used in North Western Europe during the Viking Age.
While the pattern of hilt and blade design of this type might readily be called "the Viking sword", to do so would be to neglect the widespread popularity it enjoyed.
In the center of the column, marching rather sullenly under the unwonted slur of needing protection, the Viking sword- and axe-men straggled along either side of the mule-train.
Its attractions also included a banner of the Napoleonic-era East Prussian National Cavalry Regiment, a Viking sword, copper engravings, household goods, amongst other artifacts.