Wyniki wyszukiwana dla hasla oak sih2 oak 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 sih0 22 One of the earliest surviving poetic references to the regard which a warrior folk gaveoak sih1 23 Hringmael, Graegmael, Waegsweord, Wyrmfah, are reaily untranslatable in a literał senseoak 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 sih6 28 ■• •jrtSi Figurc 24. Type II, circa 850.oak sih8 30 Figurę 27. Type VI, from thc River Thanies. Reading Museum, England. Expossed tang 8cm.oak sih0 32 Figurę 30. Found in Italy; an unusual pommel, but other examples exist, c. 850. (Philadoak sih4 36 succcssors have much in common, as art forms, with the severe purity of thc Chinese poroak sih5 37 Sigridsholm in Swcdcn - Fig. 35) had the words ME FECIT (madę me) following the name, loak sih6 38 Figurę 38. Close-up of the hilt of Fig. 37 and of the beast s head. The grip is, of couoak sih7 were madę of a softer, less carbonized metal. This part was scarf-welded onto the main, teoak sih8 -H Cb H t X F R H e X n? H G X. F - Co ^ł- coH GXf‘RHCX -k!^€X Figurę 41. Silver-inlaid inoak sih6 48 48 Figurc 44. Hilt of a sword from a Yiking grave at Ristiina in S. Finland, latc oak sih7 49 the Wallace sword, and it has the advantage in that, inlaid in iron lctters in the bladoak sih8 Figurę 47. Sword of Typc XI, Nationalmuseet, Copenhagcn, c. 1100. BL: 94cm. Figurę 50. Hiloak sih9 51 what he had seen and done before. Hcnce the fre-quent misspellings, such as (a mild casoak sih1 53 " Whereyou can tfjct tbcm, my lord. Whcn I was in tbat ditcb at Fornbam, I took tWybierz strone: [
4 ] [
6 ]