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SWORD
Unique ID: LIN-9468E7
Object type certainty: Certain
A copper-alloy sword pommel of 11th century date. The pommel is sub-triangular in plan with a curved base. The sides are steeply curving with a slight break in the slope part of the way up. At the top of the pommel is a small rectangular open collar through which the tang of the blade would have been secured. The pommel is rectangular in cross-section.
Both sides of the pommel are decorated with two inward curving scroll motifs. The interior perimeter of each scroll is openwork, though parts are now closed with corrosion. A pair of engraved lines decorate the curved base on both sides. The base metal of the pommel is reddish-purple in colour with patches of green patina.
The pommel measures 56mm wide, 34mm in length and 14mm deep. The opening at the top measures 9mm by 5mm. The internal opening at the base measures 54mm by 9mm.
This pommel is almost identical to LEIC-9158C3, discovered in Leicestershire.
The curved base and engraved lines hint at the development of this sword pommel from a type with a separate guard. Likewise the steeply curving sides with a slight break in slope part of the way up may reflect the pommel's development from a more lobate form.
The pommel is probably a late development of Petersen's (1919: figs. 124-129) type X, transitional to medieval forms. Copper-alloy pommels with this basic shape are rare but not unknown in Viking Age Europe; there is a reasonably close example from Lough Derg, County Tipperary (in the National Museum of Ireland; Peirce 2002: 140-141) and another from Chetwynd Aston and Woodcote, Shropshire, recorded on the PAS database (HESH-920B71). Although neither of these pommels have complex decoration, the symmetrical Ringerike-style engraving is very like that commonly found on stirrup-strap mounts of the 11th century (Williams 1997: 26-34). Petersen's type X is normally dated to the 10th to 11th centuries, and the decoration dates this particular example to the 11th century.
Class: Pommel
Sub class: Peterson type X
Subsequent actions
Subsequent action after recording: Returned to finder
Chronology
Broad period: EARLY MEDIEVAL
Period from: EARLY MEDIEVAL [scope notes | view all attributed records]
Period to: MEDIEVAL [scope notes | view all attributed records]
Ascribed Culture: Anglo-Scandinavian [scope notes| view all attributed records]
Date from: Circa AD 1000
Date to: Circa AD 1100
Dimensions and weight
Length: 34 mm
Width: 56 mm
Thickness: 14 mm
Quantity: 1
Materials and construction
Primary material: Copper alloy [scope notes | view all attributed records]
Manufacture method: Cast [scope notes | view all attributed records]
Completeness: Complete [scope notes | view all attributed records]
Spatial data
Region: East
County: Norfolk
District: Kings Lynn And West Norfolk
Parish: Tilney All Saints
Restricted 4 Figure grid reference: TF5517
The map has been degraded and provides an approximate location with a degree of random obfuscation.
Grid reference source: From a paper map
Grid reference accurate to a 10 metre square.
Method of discovery: Metal detector
[scope notes]
General landuse: Cultivated land [scope notes]
Discovery dates
Date(s) of discovery: Sunday 1st January 2012
Personal details
Found by: This information is restricted for your login.
Recorded by: Adam Daubney
- [
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Identified by: Adam Daubney - [view all attributed records]
Other reference numbers
References cited
No references cited so far.
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Audit data
Created:
Friday 20th January 2012
Updated: Saturday 17th March 2012


