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

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Edged Weapons 233


on the midline. Most of the hilts of Avar edged weapons are positioned on the


midline of the blade.


The hilts of Avar sabres were usually straight, the only exception being that


found in grave No. 3 at Cicău-Szelistye, the hilt of which forms an angle of 15


degrees with the midline of the blade.243 The straight hilt is the main differ-


ence between Avar and early Hungarian sabres, since the hilts of sabres from


the 10th-11th centuries were usually curved towards the edge of the blade.


Sword hilts could be decorated in various ways, and mostly ended in a pom-


mel or oval covering. Hilts were decorated with special rivets, among them


ring-pendants. The hilt could be covered with gold, silver or copper alloy sheet:


this decoration will be described in order from the end of hilt to the blade.


2.1.1 Ring-pommel (‘Ringknauf ’ in German)


Ring-pommel swords were weapons characteristic only of the Early phase, with


no examples known from the Middle or Late phases. Ring-pommel swords are


characterised by a ring at the end of the hilt, and are in German terminology


referred to as ‘Ringknaufschwert’.244 Although ring-pommel swords of the Avar


Age can be single- or double-edged, their form, decoration and suspension is


uniform (fig. 85).


Archaeological research on the Avars in the Carpathian Basin had already


begun to investigate these weapons as early as the first half of the 20th cen-


tury. Dezső Csallány attempted to create an inner division of the Early phase


using these ring-pommel swords (known as the Csengele type): he regarded


ring-pommel swords as later than swords with P-shaped suspension loops.245


The first of these ring-pommel swords was found in Kunágota, although the


function of the gold sheets, and therefore the form of the sword itself was


only reconstructed by Gyula László relatively late (almost 100 years after its


excavation).246 Ring-pommel swords played a significant role in the research


of Avar society: the swords from Bócsa (fig. 85/5) and Kecel decorated with


gold sheets are regarded as the qagan’s gift and status symbol.247


243 Winkler – Takács – Păiuş 1977, 270–271. fig. 4/1.
244 Voß 2003, 19–22.
245 Csallány 1939, 139–140.
246 The reconstruction of the gold-foils on the Kunágota find became possible by the dis-
covery of the ring-pommel swords of Bócsa and Kecel in 1935. Gyula László first studied
the iconography of the Byzantine box-fittings (László 1938), and reconstructed the sword
based on the form of the Csengele-sword (László 1950).
247 László 1955, 231–232. 235.

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