Avar-Age Polearms and Edged Weapons. Classification, Typology, Chronology and Technology

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Edged Weapons 161


half of the 6th century and still saw burials during the 7th century,15 such


as Vereşmort,16 Noşlac17 and Brateiu 3.18 Only ten spathae were found in


Transylvania (18.86%).


The examples from Transdanubia do not prove continuity, since they


appeared in the second half of the 6th century (demonstrated by tripartite


belt-sets) without local predecessors,19 and therefore the ethnic identification


of these cemeteries is of some question. The use of spathae continued during


the 7th century, the latest of this type being the examples of Tiszafüred (fig.


59/1) which date to the second third of the 7th century.20


The spathae thus played a significant role among the close-combat weapons


of the Early phase, although their use was limited to areas of the Avar Qaganate


settled by Germanic peoples or rather a population related to the Merovingian


culture.


Double-edged swords are extremely rare during the Late phase, and appear


mostly of western origin: their blade is broad, symmetrical and has a fuller


on it (fig. 60). These swords differ from the early spathae, since these exam-


ples from the 8th century always have iron crossguard and pommel. Only four


late spathae are known from the Avar-age Carpathian Basin. A double-edged


sword with a short, straight and wide crossguard and a flat, triangular pommel


made of two pieces, was found in grave No. 124 at Želovce (fig. 60/1).21 A similar


double-edged sword was found in grave No. 3 at Wien–Liesing (fig. 60/2),22 its


crossguard being short and wide, and its pommel flat and triangular.


15 For Transylvanian Gepidic cemeteries: (Kovács 1913; Kovács 1915); their interpretation:
(Bóna 1978, 123–170; Bóna 1986a, 162–164; Horedt 1985, 164–168; Harhoiu 2001, 110–120).
16 Grave No. 5, 13, 16 (Roska 1934, 125, Abb. 4/D; 128, Abb. 4/C; 129, Abb. 4/B).
17 Grave No. 6, 17, 21 and 43 (Rusu 1962, 275).
18 Grave No. 85, 214 and 218 (Nestor – Zaharia 1973, 193–201; Bóna 1986a: 171, 182; Bârzu 1986,
89–104; Bârzu 1991, 211–214; Kiss 1992, 65).
19 According to István Bóna the use of Lombard cemeteries ceased in 568 when the
Lombards left for Italy (Bóna 1984, 309), although much new evidence suggests continuity
of the Lombard population in Pannonia during the second half of the 6th century, like the
golden spatha button of glass inlay from Fenékpuszta–Pusztaszentegyházi-dűlő (Müller
1999/2000, 345) and the Weihmörting type belt-sets of grave No. 34 of Szentendre (Bóna
1974, 122. 62–63; Menghin 1983, 359) and grave No. 65 of Pottenbrunn (Stadler et al. 2003,



  1. Abb. 3).
    20 Éva Garam (1995, 424) dated the beginning of the use of this cemetery to the Early phase,
    in the middle of the 7th century.
    21 Čilinská 1973, 57, Taf. XXII/16.
    22 Mossler 1948, 222.

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