• The
Sæbø sword, a 9th-century type C sword found in 1825 in a barrow at Sæbø in
Vikøyri, in Norway's
Sogn region. The sword is notable for its blade inscription, which has been interpreted as
runic by
George Stephens (1867), which would be very exceptional; while Viking Age sword hilts were sometimes incised with runes, inlaid blade inscriptions are, with this possible exception, invariably in the Latin alphabet. • One of the heaviest and longest extant swords of the Viking Age is dated to the 9th century and was found in
Flå, now kept at
Museum of Cultural History, Oslo, with a total length of , a blade length of , and a mass of . • Sword of Saint Stephen: A 10th-century sword of Petersen type T with a walrus-tooth hilt with carved
Mammen style ornaments. On display as the coronation sword of Hungarian king
Saint Stephen in the
Treasury of St. Vitus Cathedral, Prague. • Lincoln sword (
River Witham sword): A sword dated to the 10th century, with a blade of German/
Ottonian manufacture classified as a Petersen type L variant (Evison's "Wallingford Bridge" type) and hilt fittings added by an Anglo-Saxon craftsman, was recovered from the
River Witham opposite Monks Abbey,
Lincoln in 1848. Peirce (1990) makes special mention of this sword as "breath-taking", "one of the most splendid Viking swords extant". The Lincoln sword is also remarkable for being one of only two known bearing the blade inscription
Leutfrit (+ LEUTFRIT), the other being a find from
Tatarstan (at the time
Volga Bulgaria, now kept in the Historical Museum of
Kazan). On the reverse side, the blade is inlaid with a double scroll pattern. • The
Sword of Essen is a 10th-century sword preserved at
Essen Abbey, decorated with gold plating at the close of the 10th century. • The
Cawood sword, and the closely related Korsoygaden sword, are notable in the context of delineating "Viking Age swords" from derived high medieval types; these swords fit neatly into the "Viking sword" typology, but Oakeshott (1991) considers them derived types dating to the 12th century. ==See also==