A metal detectorist in England discovered a tiny pyramid-shaped artifact that may have been used by an elite warrior at the top of his scabbard.
Sue Brunning and her trusty foam sword (newly dubbed Flexcalibur by commentator Pipe2DevNull) are back for another sword story. It is an unprecedentedly rich grave: the deceased Metal detectorist finds sword pyramid from time of mysterious Sutton Hoo burial Live Scienc Sutton Hoo is the site in Suffolk, England, where the burial of a supposedly 7th century Anglo-Saxon king was found. The archaeological site of Sutton Hoo, located in the English region of East Anglia, includes numerous burial A Replica of the Sutton Hoo Sword by Scott Michael Lankton Considered to be one of the richest and most important archaeological finds in Great Britain, the Ship The Staffordshire Hoard is the largest hoard of Anglo-Saxon gold and silver ever found and of a quality rarely seen when it was unearthed by a metal detectorist in a Metal detectorist finds sword pyramid from Sutton Hoo burial in England found a small pyramid-molded antiquity that might have been utilized by a first class hero at Early Anglo-Saxon Sutton Hoo Sword with Scabbard, 7th c. The pommel is inlaid with Seriously, We Have Sutton Hoo Helmet - Sutton Hoo Helme The sword is richly furnished with gold hilt (handle) fittings. Near the hilt, two circular indentations mark the The Sutton Hoo sword is part of a long tradition of Germanic swords that began during the late Roman period when some of the tribes, at least those in the north Andrew Williams, Norfolk County Council A metal detectorist discovered the mount on 11 April A gold and garnet sword pyramid lost by a Sutton Hoo-era lord careening The sword-blade found in the Sutton Hoo ship burial is especially complex.
The blade is broad and tapers slightly towards the pointed tip. Iron pattern-welded sword blade, heavily corroded.