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Jeffrey Hull wrote:Yes, I recall seeing that. Unfortunately the photo allows us no establishment of scale, it provides nothing else as a metric beside the artifact. So it seems inconclusive, yet possible. It would not surprise me if somebody somewhere had seldomly wielded an early version of longsword in the Norse cultures.
CalebChow wrote:I wouldn't be surprised at all if the Vikings had longswords--the idea of using 2 hands on a sword (meaning, without shield or something in the offhand) probably existed in people's minds ever since swords were first invented.
Whether or not they were used much is another story.
Countless epic warrior-heroes are often depicted to wield ridiculously heavy swords, which *might* indicate 2hand usage. One example is Gilgamesh (historically, a king who lived around 3000 BCE) , whose sword weighed one "talent" which is something between 50 and a 100 pounds, depending on location and time period.
Jeremiah Backhaus wrote:
When looking at materials from around Gilgamesh, remember their metallurgical understandings were somewhat limited. They also used bronze which would throw accurate comparison of weights to the wind.
Egyptian Khopeshes of a similar time frame were made my casting the bronze in sand carvings. This similar process could yeild a heavier sword of smaller size.
-Jeremiah (GFS)
CalebChow wrote:
Based on the look of that sword in the picture, I'd imagine that it belonged to a pretty high-status individual. I read somewhere that swords were primarily for those in higher ranks in Viking/Norse societies, so who knows? Maybe it's only the champion or king that used the longsword.
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