I call dibs
Art
THE Lemmy community for visual arts. Paintings, sculptures, photography, architecture are all welcome amongst others.
Rules:
- Follow instance rules.
- When possible, mention artist and title.
- AI posts must be tagged as such.
- Original works are absolutely welcome. Oc tag would be appreciated.
- Conversations about the arts are just as welcome.
- Posts must be fine arts and not furry drawings and fan art.
Go ahead and remove that sword, but you gotta live with the curse that comes with it.
TFW you grab the sword but the Skellington grabs it too
FUS!
Skeleton flies across the dungeon.
This sword was unearthed in a family grave in Nördlingen, Bavaria, in June 2023. It's an Achtkant-type (octagonal) bronze sword.
Oh, so that's where I left it.
What prevented it from rusting or otherwise degrading? And what's the smaller thing to the right that looks like a pocket knife?
Edit: Here's an article that doesn't answer my questions but has more info.
some skellingtons are really anal retentive about blade care
I found the website below to try to find info on viewing it possibly and I wanted to know what they learned from further examination. I couldn’t find anything but I also only looked in your link, the Bavarian state office of the preservation of monuments website, and the one I found where I copied this bit from.
https://www.heritagedaily.com/2023/06/well-preserved-3000-year-old-sword-found-in-germany/147628
“Mathias Pfeil, head of the Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments, said: “The sword and the burial still have to be examined so that our archaeologists can classify this find more precisely. But it can already be said: the condition is exceptional! A find like this is very rare!”
Whether the sword was locally crafted or was imported is currently being investigated. There are three main distribution centres during the bronze age for octagonal swords of this type, one in Southern Germany and the others in Northern Germany and Denmark.”
It's not made out of iron.
Yeah curious about the "pocket knife" too.
Not iron, so no rust, but it's bronze so it's copper and tin. I thought that still oxidized and corroded? I suppose the type of soil it was in could prevent that?
Bronze can also be arsenic bronze, as it happens, and it's probably the oldest form of bronze used because it forms naturally.
Apparently it's why Hephaestus and other ancient smith gods are depicted as crippled or deformed, an entire mythological archetype of such in fact, ancient smiths were mostly making arsenic bronze until around 1500 BC and even afterwards when tin couldn't be sourced.
This is almost certainly tin bronze, just a point to keep in mind.
Copper and bronze have a useful property: when the outer layer of the metal oxidizes, it forms a protective covering called a patina that prevents corrosion from penetrating the structure of the item. That's the source of that distinctive green color.
Gotcha, thanks. I've seen at least copper items degraded down, but not sure about bronze.
Yeah I'm astonished it held up this well over a 3000 year period, it would be more typical for it to look like this:

This is from southwest Greece and a similar age. I wonder if the composition of the bronze plays a big part, or if the well-preserved one was buried under unusual conditions.
Yeah, that was really my question. I'm betting something about the soil, maybe in a similar way that peat bogs can preserve organic stuff/bodies.
That's a Leatherman. /s
Glass sword from skyrim
Dibs, hunter weapon.
It would be nice to have some info on this.
And some arrowheads on the left.
Were they excavating an ancient mall-ninja shop?
Either that’s not a 3000 year old sword or that soil is full of preservatives.
Bronze ages very well under certain conditions. The patina is its oxidation and unlike with rust it protects the deeper metal from corrosion.
Another famous example of a nearly as old and beautiful bronze sword:
It’s bronze, so copper and tin. The outer layer patinas and protects the rest.