491013 Single-Edged Knife (Scramasax), Champagne, 600s (iron, copper, and gold foil) by Frankish School, (7th century); Cleveland Museum of Art, OH, USA; (add.info.: The scramasax, a single-edged knife, was a general purpose implement. It could serve equally well as a tool or as a weapon and generally did not exceed 12 inches in length. As with most objects of the Migration period, iron weapons survive as excavated grave goods and tend to be heavily corroded. The grips, now missing, were probably fashioned from wood or bone and silver inlay decorated the pommels (the knob on the hilt, or handle). The ornamental gold foil bands, perhaps from the original scabbards (the cases in which the blades of swords or daggers are kept) have survived relatively intact. guard decorated with two bands of gold filigree between which is a thin band of plain gold with an embossed inscription. ); Gift of the John Huntington Art and Polytechnic Trust; European, out of copyright.

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