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Bronze Age sword

Bronze Age swords appeared from around the 17th century BC, in the Black Sea region and the Aegean, as a further development of the dagger. They were replaced by iron swords during the early part of the 1st millennium BC.

Bronze Age swords from Central Europe, c. 17th century BC

From an early time the swords reached lengths in excess of 100 cm. The technology to produce blades of such lengths appears to have been developed in the Aegean, using alloys of copper and tin or arsenic, around 1700 BC. Bronze Age swords were typically not longer than 80 cm; weapons significantly shorter than 60 cm are variously categorized as short swords or daggers. Before about 1400 BC swords remained mostly limited to the Aegean and southeastern Europe, but they became more widespread in the final centuries of the 2nd millennium BC, to Central Europe and Britain, to the Near East, Central Asia, Northern India and to China.

Predecessors

 
18th century BC Khopesh, Shechem, West Bank; blade decorations with electrum inlays

Before bronze, stone (such as flint and obsidian) was used as the primary material for edged cutting tools and weapons. Stone, however, is too brittle for long, thin implements such as swords. With the introduction of copper, and subsequently bronze, knives could be made longer, leading to the sword.

Thus, the development of the sword from the dagger was gradual, and in 2004 the first "swords" were claimed for the Early Bronze Age (c. 33rd to 31st centuries), based on finds at Arslantepe by Marcella Frangipane, professor of prehistory and protohistory of the Near and Middle East at Sapienza University of Rome.[1][2][3] A cache of nine swords and daggers was found; they are made of an arsenic-copper alloy. Among them, three swords were inlaid with silver.

These are weapons of a total length of 45 to 60 cm which could be described as either short swords or long daggers. Some other similar swords have been found in Turkey, and are described by Thomas Zimmermann.[4] An exceptionally well-preserved example, similar in construction to the Arslantepe swords, was discovered in 2017 in the Venetian Monastery of Lazarus.[5]

The sword remained extremely rare for another millennium, and became more widespread only with the closing of the 3rd millennium. The "swords" of this later period can still readily be interpreted as daggers, as with the copper specimen from Naxos (dated roughly 2800 to 2300 BC), with a length of just below 36 cm, but individual specimens of the Cycladic "copper swords" of the period around 2300 reach a length up to 60 cm. The first weapons that can unambiguously be classified as swords are those found in Minoan Crete, dated to about 1700 BC, which reach lengths of more than 100 cm. These are the "type A" swords of the Aegean Bronze Age.

Aegean

The Minoan and Mycenaean (Middle to Late Aegean Bronze Age) swords are classified in types labeled A to H following Sandars (1961, 1963), the "Sandars typology". Types A and B ("tab-tang") are the earliest from about the 17th to 16th centuries, types C ("horned" swords) and D ("cross" swords) from the 15th century, types E and F ("T-hilt" swords) from the 13th and 12th. The 13th to 12th centuries also see a revival of the "horned" type, classified as types G and H.[6] Type H swords are associated with the Sea Peoples and were found in Anatolia (Pergamon[7]) and Greece. Contemporary with types E to H is the so-called "Naue II" type, imported from south-eastern Europe.

Europe

 
Swords found together with the Nebra sky disk, ca. 1600 BC. Typologically, these swords are of the "Sögel" type, but their shape and decoration[8] shows influence of the "Hajdúsámson-Apa" type found in Hungary.[9]
 
Typical "Naue II" type "Griffzungenschwert" indicated by No. 4

One of the most important, and longest-lasting, types of prehistoric European swords was the "Naue II" type, named for Julius Naue who first described them and also known as "Griffzungenschwert" or "grip-tongue sword". It first appears in c. the 13th century BC in Northern Italy (or a general Urnfield background), and survived well into the Iron Age, with a life-span of about seven centuries, until the 6th century BC. During its lifetime the basic design was maintained, although the material changed from bronze to iron. Naue II swords were exported from Europe to the Aegean, and as far afield as Ugarit, beginning about 1200 BC, i.e. just a few decades before the final collapse of the palace cultures in the Bronze Age collapse.[10] Naue II swords could be as long as 85 cm, but most specimens fall into the 60 to 70 cm range.

Swords from the Nordic Bronze Age appear from ca. the 17th century BC, often showing characteristic spiral patterns. The early Nordic swords are also comparatively short; a specimen discovered in 1912 near Bragby, Uppland, Sweden, dated to about 1800 to 1500 BC, was just over 60 cm long. This sword was, however, classified as of the Hajdúsámson-Apa type, and was presumably imported. The Vreta Kloster sword discovered in 1897 (dated 1600 to 1500 BC) has a blade length (the hilt is missing) of 46 cm.[11]

A typical variant for European swords is the "leaf shaped" blade, which was most common in North-west Europe at the end of the Bronze Age, on the British Isles in particular. The "carp's tongue sword" is a type of bronze sword that was common to Western Europe during ca. the 9th to 8th centuries BC. The blade of the carp's tongue sword was wide and parallel for most of its length but the final third narrowed into a thin tip intended for thrusting. The design was probably developed in north-western France, and combined the broad blade useful for slashing with a thinner, elongated tip suitable for thrusting. Its advantages saw its adoption across Atlantic Europe. In Britain, the metalwork in the south east derived its name from this sword: the Carp's Tongue complex. Notable examples of this type were part of the Isleham Hoard.

The Bronze Age-style sword and construction methods died out at the end of the early Iron Age (Hallstatt D), around 600-500 BC, when swords were once again replaced by daggers in most of Europe. An exception is the xiphos from Greece, the development of which continued for several more centuries.

 
Antenna swords of the Hallstatt B period (c. 10th century BC), found near Lake Neuchâtel (in Auvernier and Cortaillod; Laténium inv. nr. AUV-40315 and CORT-216, respectively)

The "antenna sword", named for the pair of ornaments suggesting antennae on its hilt,[12] is a type of the Late Bronze Age, continued in early iron swords of the East Hallstatt and Italy region.[13]

China

Sword production in China is attested from the Bronze Age Shang dynasty, from roughly 1200 BC. The technology for bronze swords reached its high point during the Warring States period and Qin dynasty (221 BC – 207 BC). Amongst the Warring States period swords, some unique technologies were used, such as casting high-tin edges over softer, lower-tin cores, or the application of diamond shaped patterns on the blade (see the Sword of Gou Jian). Also unique for Chinese bronzes is the consistent use of high-tin bronze (17-21% tin), which is very hard and breaks under excess stress, whereas other cultures preferred lower tin bronze (usually 10%), which bends instead. China continued to make both iron and bronze swords longer than any other region; iron completely replaced bronze only in the early Han dynasty.[citation needed]

India

Swords have been recovered in archaeological findings of the Ochre Coloured Pottery culture throughout the Ganges-Yamuna Doab region of India, commonly made of copper, but in some instances made of bronze. Diverse specimens have been discovered in Fatehgarh, where there are several varieties of hilt. These swords have been variously dated to periods between 1700-1400 BC, but were probably used more extensively during 1200-600 BC (Painted Grey Ware culture, Iron Age India).[14]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Oldest Swords Found in Turkey
  2. ^ Frangipane, M. et.al. 2010: The collapse of the 4th millennium centralised system at Arslantepe and the far-reaching changes in 3rd millennium societies. ORIGINI XXXIV, 2012: 237-260.
  3. ^ Frangipane, "The 2002 Exploration Campaign at Arslantepe/Malatya" (2004)
  4. ^ First Swords uni-kiel.de
  5. ^ "Student discovers 5,000-year-old sword hidden in Venetian monastery". LiveScience. 11 March 2020. Retrieved 25 March 2020.
  6. ^ Shalev, Sariel (2004). Swords and daggers in Late Bronze Age Canaan. Franz Steiner Verlag. p. 62. ISBN 978-3-515-08198-6.
  7. ^ Benzi, Marion (2002). "Anatolia and the Eastern Aegean at the time of the Trojan War". In Franco Montanari, Paola Ascheri (ed.). Omero tremila anni dopo: atti del Congresso di Genova, 6-8 luglio 2000. Edizione di Storia e Letteratura. p. 384. ISBN 978-88-8498-059-5.
  8. ^ "the decorative lines on the sword blades that had initially been regarded as incrustations consisted of pure copper hammered into channels that had presumably already been produced in the casting process. Thus the swords are among the very few Early Bronze Age examples of a true inlay technique outside the Mediterranean world [...] An interesting parallel to these has now been found in a sword from the parish of Vreta Kloster in Östergötland, Sweden." Roland Schwab, Inga Ullén, Christian-Heinrich Wunderlich, A sword from Vreta Kloster, and black patinated bronze in Early Bronze Age Europe, Journal of Nordic Archaeological Science 17, 27–35 (2010).
  9. ^ "Typologically, the swords from Nebra and Vreta belong to the Sögel blades, which copy the shape and decoration of Hajdúsámson-Apa swords [...] Concerning the provenance of the swords, the area between the rivers Danube and Tisza in present-day Hungary and Romania has been suggested, as also the production in present Germany [...] Vandkilde (1996:240) proposed that these swords and daggers of the Sögel and Wohlde type in southern Jutland could have been manufactured locally." Roland Schwab, Inga Ullén, Christian-Heinrich Wunderlich, A sword from Vreta Kloster, and black patinated bronze in Early Bronze Age Europe, Journal of Nordic Archaeological Science 17, 27–35 (2010).
  10. ^ R. Jung, M. Mehofer, A sword of Naue II type from Ugarit and the Historical Significance of Italian type Weaponry in the Eastern Mediterranean, Aegean Archaeology 8, 2008, 111–136.
  11. ^ Museum of National Antiquities (Statens Historiska Museum) inventory number SHM 10419.
  12. ^ "Antennae sword Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster".
  13. ^ Dennis William, The archaeology of Celtic art, 2007, p. 269.
  14. ^ F.R. Allchin in South Asian Archaeology 1975: Papers from the Third International Conference of the Association of South Asian Archaeologists in Western Europe, Held in Paris (December 1979) edited by J.E.van Lohuizen-de Leeuw. Brill Academic Publishers, Incorporated. Pages 106-118. ISBN 90-04-05996-2 (pp. 111-114).

References

  • B. Athanassov, R. Krauß, V. Slavčev, 'A Bronze Sword of the Aegean-Anatolian Type in the Museum of Varna, Bulgaria' in: Horejs and Pavúk (eds.): Aegean and Balkan Prehistory (2012)[1]
  • T. Bader, Die Schwerter in Rumänien, Prähistorische Bronzefunde IV.8 (1991).
  • E. Cline, Aššuwa and the Achaeans: the 'Mycenaean' Sword at Hattušas and its possible Implications. Annual BSA 91, 1996, 137-151.
  • John Evans, The Ancient Bronze Implements, Weapons and Ornaments, of Great Britain and Ireland (1881)[2]
  • B. Hänsel, Bronzene Griffzungenschwerter aus Bulgarien. Prähist. Zeitschr. 45, 1970, 26-41.
  • B. Hänsel, 'Frühe Bronzeschwerter zwischen dem Karpatenbecken und dem Werra-Tal' in: Studia Antiquaria: Festschrift für Niels Bantelmann, 31–39.
  • Imma Kilian-Dirlmeier, Die Schwerter in Griechenland (Außerhalb der Peloponnes), Bulgarien und Albanien, Prähistorische Bronzefunde IV.12 (1993).
  • A. Müller-Karpe, 'Anatolische Bronzeschwerter und Südosteuropa' In: C. Dobiat (ed.), Festschrift für Otto-Herman Frey, Marburger Studien zur Vor- und Frühgeschichte 16 (1994), 431-444.
  • S. Shalev, Redating the "Philistine sword" at the British Museum : a case study in typology and technology., Oxford Journal of Archaeology 7,3 (1988) 303-311.[3][permanent dead link]
  • S. Shalev, Swords and daggers in Late Bronze Age Canaan, Prähistorische Bronzefunde, Franz Steiner Verlag, 2004.
  • N. K. Sandars, The First Aegean Swords and their Ancestry, American Journal of Archaeology 65 (1961), 17-29.
  • N. K. Sandars, Later Aegean Bronze Swords, American Journal of Archaeology 67 (1963), 117-153.
  • P. Schauer, Die Schwerter in Süddeutschland, Österreich und der Schweiz I Prähistorische Bronzefunde IV.2 (1971).
  • R.F. Tylecote, The early history of metallurgy in Europe (1987) [4]
  • H. Wüstemann, Die Schwerter in Ostdeutschland, Prähistorische Bronzefunde IV.15 (2004).

External links

  • bronze-age-swords.com (Neil Burridge)
  • by Dr Barry Molloy (2005)
  • (1501bc.com)
  • From Rapier to Langsax: Sword Structure in the British Isles in the Bronze and Iron Ages by Niko Silvester (1995)
  • The Greek Age of Bronze: Swords/Daggers (salimbeti.com)
  • Nordic swords, spirals and the Dorian 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  • The Naue Type II Sword

bronze, sword, appeared, from, around, 17th, century, black, region, aegean, further, development, dagger, they, were, replaced, iron, swords, during, early, part, millennium, from, central, europe, 17th, century, from, early, time, swords, reached, lengths, e. Bronze Age swords appeared from around the 17th century BC in the Black Sea region and the Aegean as a further development of the dagger They were replaced by iron swords during the early part of the 1st millennium BC Bronze Age swords from Central Europe c 17th century BC From an early time the swords reached lengths in excess of 100 cm The technology to produce blades of such lengths appears to have been developed in the Aegean using alloys of copper and tin or arsenic around 1700 BC Bronze Age swords were typically not longer than 80 cm weapons significantly shorter than 60 cm are variously categorized as short swords or daggers Before about 1400 BC swords remained mostly limited to the Aegean and southeastern Europe but they became more widespread in the final centuries of the 2nd millennium BC to Central Europe and Britain to the Near East Central Asia Northern India and to China Contents 1 Predecessors 2 Aegean 3 Europe 4 China 5 India 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksPredecessors Edit 18th century BC Khopesh Shechem West Bank blade decorations with electrum inlays Before bronze stone such as flint and obsidian was used as the primary material for edged cutting tools and weapons Stone however is too brittle for long thin implements such as swords With the introduction of copper and subsequently bronze knives could be made longer leading to the sword Thus the development of the sword from the dagger was gradual and in 2004 the first swords were claimed for the Early Bronze Age c 33rd to 31st centuries based on finds at Arslantepe by Marcella Frangipane professor of prehistory and protohistory of the Near and Middle East at Sapienza University of Rome 1 2 3 A cache of nine swords and daggers was found they are made of an arsenic copper alloy Among them three swords were inlaid with silver These are weapons of a total length of 45 to 60 cm which could be described as either short swords or long daggers Some other similar swords have been found in Turkey and are described by Thomas Zimmermann 4 An exceptionally well preserved example similar in construction to the Arslantepe swords was discovered in 2017 in the Venetian Monastery of Lazarus 5 The sword remained extremely rare for another millennium and became more widespread only with the closing of the 3rd millennium The swords of this later period can still readily be interpreted as daggers as with the copper specimen from Naxos dated roughly 2800 to 2300 BC with a length of just below 36 cm but individual specimens of the Cycladic copper swords of the period around 2300 reach a length up to 60 cm The first weapons that can unambiguously be classified as swords are those found in Minoan Crete dated to about 1700 BC which reach lengths of more than 100 cm These are the type A swords of the Aegean Bronze Age Aegean EditFurther information Military of Mycenaean Greece Offensive weapons The Minoan and Mycenaean Middle to Late Aegean Bronze Age swords are classified in types labeled A to H following Sandars 1961 1963 the Sandars typology Types A and B tab tang are the earliest from about the 17th to 16th centuries types C horned swords and D cross swords from the 15th century types E and F T hilt swords from the 13th and 12th The 13th to 12th centuries also see a revival of the horned type classified as types G and H 6 Type H swords are associated with the Sea Peoples and were found in Anatolia Pergamon 7 and Greece Contemporary with types E to H is the so called Naue II type imported from south eastern Europe Europe Edit Swords found together with the Nebra sky disk ca 1600 BC Typologically these swords are of the Sogel type but their shape and decoration 8 shows influence of the Hajdusamson Apa type found in Hungary 9 Typical Naue II type Griffzungenschwert indicated by No 4 Further information Bronze Age Europe One of the most important and longest lasting types of prehistoric European swords was the Naue II type named for Julius Naue who first described them and also known as Griffzungenschwert or grip tongue sword It first appears in c the 13th century BC in Northern Italy or a general Urnfield background and survived well into the Iron Age with a life span of about seven centuries until the 6th century BC During its lifetime the basic design was maintained although the material changed from bronze to iron Naue II swords were exported from Europe to the Aegean and as far afield as Ugarit beginning about 1200 BC i e just a few decades before the final collapse of the palace cultures in the Bronze Age collapse 10 Naue II swords could be as long as 85 cm but most specimens fall into the 60 to 70 cm range Swords from the Nordic Bronze Age appear from ca the 17th century BC often showing characteristic spiral patterns The early Nordic swords are also comparatively short a specimen discovered in 1912 near Bragby Uppland Sweden dated to about 1800 to 1500 BC was just over 60 cm long This sword was however classified as of the Hajdusamson Apa type and was presumably imported The Vreta Kloster sword discovered in 1897 dated 1600 to 1500 BC has a blade length the hilt is missing of 46 cm 11 A typical variant for European swords is the leaf shaped blade which was most common in North west Europe at the end of the Bronze Age on the British Isles in particular The carp s tongue sword is a type of bronze sword that was common to Western Europe during ca the 9th to 8th centuries BC The blade of the carp s tongue sword was wide and parallel for most of its length but the final third narrowed into a thin tip intended for thrusting The design was probably developed in north western France and combined the broad blade useful for slashing with a thinner elongated tip suitable for thrusting Its advantages saw its adoption across Atlantic Europe In Britain the metalwork in the south east derived its name from this sword the Carp s Tongue complex Notable examples of this type were part of the Isleham Hoard The Bronze Age style sword and construction methods died out at the end of the early Iron Age Hallstatt D around 600 500 BC when swords were once again replaced by daggers in most of Europe An exception is the xiphos from Greece the development of which continued for several more centuries Antenna swords of the Hallstatt B period c 10th century BC found near Lake Neuchatel in Auvernier and Cortaillod Latenium inv nr AUV 40315 and CORT 216 respectively The antenna sword named for the pair of ornaments suggesting antennae on its hilt 12 is a type of the Late Bronze Age continued in early iron swords of the East Hallstatt and Italy region 13 China EditFurther information Bronze Age China Sword production in China is attested from the Bronze Age Shang dynasty from roughly 1200 BC The technology for bronze swords reached its high point during the Warring States period and Qin dynasty 221 BC 207 BC Amongst the Warring States period swords some unique technologies were used such as casting high tin edges over softer lower tin cores or the application of diamond shaped patterns on the blade see the Sword of Gou Jian Also unique for Chinese bronzes is the consistent use of high tin bronze 17 21 tin which is very hard and breaks under excess stress whereas other cultures preferred lower tin bronze usually 10 which bends instead China continued to make both iron and bronze swords longer than any other region iron completely replaced bronze only in the early Han dynasty citation needed India EditFurther information Ochre Coloured Pottery culture Swords have been recovered in archaeological findings of the Ochre Coloured Pottery culture throughout the Ganges Yamuna Doab region of India commonly made of copper but in some instances made of bronze Diverse specimens have been discovered in Fatehgarh where there are several varieties of hilt These swords have been variously dated to periods between 1700 1400 BC but were probably used more extensively during 1200 600 BC Painted Grey Ware culture Iron Age India 14 See also EditBronze Age Europe Haga Kurgan Hassle Yetholm type shields Iron Age swordNotes Edit Oldest Swords Found in Turkey Frangipane M et al 2010 The collapse of the 4th millennium centralised system at Arslantepe and the far reaching changes in 3rd millennium societies ORIGINI XXXIV 2012 237 260 Frangipane The 2002 Exploration Campaign at Arslantepe Malatya 2004 First Swords uni kiel de Student discovers 5 000 year old sword hidden in Venetian monastery LiveScience 11 March 2020 Retrieved 25 March 2020 Shalev Sariel 2004 Swords and daggers in Late Bronze Age Canaan Franz Steiner Verlag p 62 ISBN 978 3 515 08198 6 Benzi Marion 2002 Anatolia and the Eastern Aegean at the time of the Trojan War In Franco Montanari Paola Ascheri ed Omero tremila anni dopo atti del Congresso di Genova 6 8 luglio 2000 Edizione di Storia e Letteratura p 384 ISBN 978 88 8498 059 5 the decorative lines on the sword blades that had initially been regarded as incrustations consisted of pure copper hammered into channels that had presumably already been produced in the casting process Thus the swords are among the very few Early Bronze Age examples of a true inlay technique outside the Mediterranean world An interesting parallel to these has now been found in a sword from the parish of Vreta Kloster in Ostergotland Sweden Roland Schwab Inga Ullen Christian Heinrich Wunderlich A sword from Vreta Kloster and black patinated bronze in Early Bronze Age Europe Journal of Nordic Archaeological Science 17 27 35 2010 Typologically the swords from Nebra and Vreta belong to the Sogel blades which copy the shape and decoration of Hajdusamson Apa swords Concerning the provenance of the swords the area between the rivers Danube and Tisza in present day Hungary and Romania has been suggested as also the production in present Germany Vandkilde 1996 240 proposed that these swords and daggers of the Sogel and Wohlde type in southern Jutland could have been manufactured locally Roland Schwab Inga Ullen Christian Heinrich Wunderlich A sword from Vreta Kloster and black patinated bronze in Early Bronze Age Europe Journal of Nordic Archaeological Science 17 27 35 2010 R Jung M Mehofer A sword of Naue II type from Ugarit and the Historical Significance of Italian type Weaponry in the Eastern Mediterranean Aegean Archaeology 8 2008 111 136 Museum of National Antiquities Statens Historiska Museum inventory number SHM 10419 Antennae sword Definition amp Meaning Merriam Webster Dennis William The archaeology of Celtic art 2007 p 269 F R Allchin in South Asian Archaeology 1975 Papers from the Third International Conference of the Association of South Asian Archaeologists in Western Europe Held in Paris December 1979 edited by J E van Lohuizen de Leeuw Brill Academic Publishers Incorporated Pages 106 118 ISBN 90 04 05996 2 pp 111 114 References EditB Athanassov R Krauss V Slavcev A Bronze Sword of the Aegean Anatolian Type in the Museum of Varna Bulgaria in Horejs and Pavuk eds Aegean and Balkan Prehistory 2012 1 T Bader Die Schwerter in Rumanien Prahistorische Bronzefunde IV 8 1991 E Cline Assuwa and the Achaeans the Mycenaean Sword at Hattusas and its possible Implications Annual BSA 91 1996 137 151 John Evans The Ancient Bronze Implements Weapons and Ornaments of Great Britain and Ireland 1881 2 B Hansel Bronzene Griffzungenschwerter aus Bulgarien Prahist Zeitschr 45 1970 26 41 B Hansel Fruhe Bronzeschwerter zwischen dem Karpatenbecken und dem Werra Tal in Studia Antiquaria Festschrift fur Niels Bantelmann 31 39 Imma Kilian Dirlmeier Die Schwerter in Griechenland Ausserhalb der Peloponnes Bulgarien und Albanien Prahistorische Bronzefunde IV 12 1993 A Muller Karpe Anatolische Bronzeschwerter und Sudosteuropa In C Dobiat ed Festschrift fur Otto Herman Frey Marburger Studien zur Vor und Fruhgeschichte 16 1994 431 444 S Shalev Redating the Philistine sword at the British Museum a case study in typology and technology Oxford Journal of Archaeology 7 3 1988 303 311 3 permanent dead link S Shalev Swords and daggers in Late Bronze Age Canaan Prahistorische Bronzefunde Franz Steiner Verlag 2004 N K Sandars The First Aegean Swords and their Ancestry American Journal of Archaeology 65 1961 17 29 N K Sandars Later Aegean Bronze Swords American Journal of Archaeology 67 1963 117 153 P Schauer Die Schwerter in Suddeutschland Osterreich und der Schweiz I Prahistorische Bronzefunde IV 2 1971 R F Tylecote The early history of metallurgy in Europe 1987 4 H Wustemann Die Schwerter in Ostdeutschland Prahistorische Bronzefunde IV 15 2004 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bronze Age swords bronze age swords com Neil Burridge The Bronze Age Rapier by Dr Barry Molloy 2005 Reproductions of bronze age swords 1501bc com From Rapier to Langsax Sword Structure in the British Isles in the Bronze and Iron Ages by Niko Silvester 1995 The Greek Age of Bronze Swords Daggers salimbeti com Nordic swords spirals and the Dorian Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine The Naue Type II Sword Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bronze Age sword amp oldid 1144206316, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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