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The Sword in Anglo-Saxon England - Its Archaeology and Literature (Paperback, New edition)
Loot Price: R706
Discovery Miles 7 060
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The Sword in Anglo-Saxon England - Its Archaeology and Literature (Paperback, New edition)
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Donate to Against Period Poverty
Total price: R716
Discovery Miles: 7 160
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The Sword is closely associated with all that was most significant
in a man's life in the Anglo-Saxon world: family ties, loyalty to a
lord, the duties of a king, the excitement of battle, the
attainment of manhood, and the last funeral rites. Hilda Ellis
Davidson explores the revelations of archaeology, methods of
sword-making, and references in Anglo-Saxon poetry and Old Norse
sagas to reveal a past where the sword was of supreme importance,
as a weapon and as a symbol. She restores a vital dimension to Old
English literature, and endows those few surviving swords in
museums with a real glamour and magic. She shows that for a fuller
understanding of Anglo-Saxon poetry it is important to have due
regard to the warrior culture from which it sprang, and of the
potent part played by the sword within that culture. Much can be
learnt from surviving swords and from the context in which they are
discovered. Careful study of the disposition of swords found in
peat bogs in Denmark, and in graves, lakes and rivers in the
British Isles, yields information on religious and social
practices. The swords themselves, and their decoration, reveal the
technical skill and cultural achievements of the people who wielded
them. To read Beowolf is to be immediately aware of the aura of
magical power the poet vested in the sword, and Hilda Ellis
Davidson's other concern in this book is to look at literary
sources for what they reveal of the quality of a good sword and its
significance in Anglo-Saxon and Viking societies - for Viking
raiders played as important a part as Anglo-Saxon colonists in the
history of early medieval Britain. A survey of the sword in
Anglo-Saxon historical records and poetry isfollowed by an
exploration of descriptions of the sword, and of the parts of the
sword, in Old Norse literature. The real world of the Anglo-Saxons
is brought into dramatic close-focus through this thorough study of
the physical remains and literary memorials of a highly-charged
symbol.
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