Wyniki wyszukiwana dla hasla oak sih6 oak sih6 38 Figurę 38. Close-up of the hilt of Fig. 37 and of the beast s head. The grip is, of couoak sih6 58 1095, where Pope Urban II proclaimed the Crusade which fired the imagination of die whooak sih6 Type X, or very narrow, as in Type XI, or broad and not very long, as in Type XII, and so oak sih6 ?>* \A ę, -.V‘;t>*° A^ »A A^° ,svco^>Voak sih2 24 24 Figurę 20. Two distinct types oflong sword from the Kragehul bog in Dcnmark, c.oak sih1 73 73 verv broad blade and a very narrow fuller and a rea- ^ ■» sonable amount of taper tooak sih7 139 rewarding study of the sword. The sword - which should not bc studied mereJy as an arc39378 oak sih3 75 it is with thcse soldiers that we arc immediately concerned. So I come to William43036 oak sih 7 9 Figurę 3. A sword of the second half of the 15th century which has alwavs seemed t44071 oak sih 8 100 So; we may infer a sword carried in one way or another-on the right of the saddl50234 oak sih 5 97 Swords of these dimensions, then, may legitimately bc considered to be two-handcroak sih 4 regions of the medieval world, the sword of a knight or samurai was the supremę badge of hoak sih0 12 Figurę 6. Iron sword and bronze scabbard, circa 300 B.C., from a bog at Lindholmgard, Doak sih8 20 Figurę 16. A pattern-welded blade, c.650-700, from a Viking grave in South Finland. (Heoak sih9 21 The most outstanding technical characteristic of these swords is the "pattern-weldoak sih3 25 father s sword was put into his grave. It was his and had served him well when his lifeoak sih4 26 Finally, I have said that these swords are rare, precious, and beautiful. Rare and precoak sih5 27Chapter 4Odin s Flame Many and varied were the types of swordhilt used by the Vikings; moak sih2 34 Figurę 34. INGELRII sword, c. 950. Formerly in mv own collectioii. This J &oak sih4 36 succcssors have much in common, as art forms, with the severe purity of thc Chinese porWybierz strone: [
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