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Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Excavated Sword
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Image © Worcester Art Museum, all rights reserved.

Excavated Sword

Date1150–1175
Mediumiron
Dimensions101.6 × 9.5 cm (40 × 3 3/4 in.), 1 lb, 8 oz (weight)
ClassificationsArms and Armor
Credit LineThe John Woodman Higgins Armory Collection
Object number2014.456
Label TextThis sword dates to the time of the Crusades, when knights were newly established as the warrior class throughout Western Europe and the culture of chivalry was taking shape. Yet despite these developments, swords of this period were much like those of the late Viking Age. Like earlier swords, this one has a straight crossbar; a wide, shallow “fuller” running up the middle of the blade; and a “Brazil-nut” pommel.ProvenanceCarl Claes (Mulhausen, Thuer, Germany) Henry G. Walters (Baltimore, MD). Purchased by Museum on January 12, 1934 from the American Art Association, Anderson Galleries (NYC), lot #410 in the Walters Sale, #4075. Price paid, $17.50, included HAM#s 2036.1-3. Collection transfer from Higgins Armory, January 2014.
On View
Not on view
Solid-hilted bronze sword
Central European
about 1300–900 BCE
Solid-hilted bronze sword
Central European
about 1400–1200 BCE
Sword of Schalenknaupf ("bowl-pommel") type
Central European
about 1000–800 BCE
Central European
late 1400s
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
European
1300s–1400s
Kondo (sickle-sword)
Congo Region, Central African
late 1800s–early 1900s
Ngulu (ceremonial sword)
Congo Region, Central African
early 1900s
Mambeli (short sword)
Congo Region, Central African
early 1900s
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Central European
1500–1550
with Detached Ear Flaps
Central European
1625–1650
Side A
Central European
late 1600s
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
German
1500–1530