You have my Sword, and my Bow, and my AXE

It’s a different world when you begin to practice what you research.

I’ve read books on medieval swords, fighting, and design evolution from softer Bronze blades through stronger Iron and finally Carbon Steel, but all the research in the world cannot prepare you for when you pick up a real metal sword for the 1st time.

This instrument of surgical precision and finesse is a thing of beauty, and terror when on the receiving end, even in just training. My time with the sword was very short, though my love of it has never faded and I have been fortunate enough to add a few different versions to my personal collection, which includes, amongst others: a Norman Sword, a modern take on the Japanese Wakazishi, a Short Sword which looks like Gandalfs Glamdring (sheer coincidence that this is the case), right down to the runes carved into the cross guard, and a 13thC Lake Neuchatel Arming Sword.

Archery is no different…well, in a way it IS a little different. Different muscles used, same dedication to training to build skill is required. Different muscle groups used in different ways. And both safer and deadlier at the same time.

Safer because you are in a controlled environment. Deadlier as there are fewer legal restrictions on ownership and ranged weapons come with their own advantages and history. It’s much more open and easier to access than medieval sword fighting, with more opportunities to progress.
Swords have always fascinated me. Their simplistic looks hide a complex design and have been used both in combat and as symbols of authority for years.

In a modern world dominated by bullets and bombs, these iconic weapons still retain a spiritual hold over us that is hard to shake.

From movies such as Conan, Lord of the Rings and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, to Pirates of the Caribbean and Deadpool, the classic blade has featured in them all and more.

And, thanks to George Lucas and Star Wars, the blade lives on in the form of the lightsabre, which has a strong and iconic place in a futuristic galaxy far far away.

I mirror these movies and my fascination with the sword never wains with time.

Every time I pick up a sword or a bow, these instruments speak to me on a 1-2-1 basis. I follow in the history of their makers from centuries past. Their design, weight, balance point, draw weight all conspire to speak to me on a spiritual level.

Over the years I have been fortunate enough, through re-enactment groups, to have held: Falchions, Viking sword, Norman sword, Katana, Broad sword, Arming sword, Conan sword, and some polypropylene swords as well as a collection of blades ranging from large to small knifes of various historical origin. I have also shot a longbow (at 25lb draw weight) and practice archery as a hobby with a recurve bow.

And every single time I pick one up I can hear history whispering in my ear. The ghosts of the past echoing their history with every swing and every draw of the bow.

I have also given talks on the history and evolution of the spear, atlatl, and bow with focus on different arrows from Neolithic to modern.

I love history and I love holding historical artefacts, both real and replica. Doing this helps to erase an aspect of time and allows the historical and modern to coexist for a short period. It makes the intangible tangible. And if one thinks carefully about what one is holding, especially if the artefact is genuine, then I try and think about the hand that made it.

Who was this person? What did they see? What was their environment like? How, where and when did they live? How was this implement used and how did they hone the skill to make it? And what happened to them?

When I visited a small church on the Antrim Coast in Northern Ireland, the oldest person was born in the 1600s. I stood there, beside their final resting place, and tried (and failed) to imagine their life, their home, and this ever-changing country that they knew, but which would be a stranger to them now.

And yet some things never change. I know the moon is the same moon that the dinosaurs looked up at, hundreds of millions of years ago, though they seen stars that no longer exist and some that I see now have been born since the time of their extinction. I have walked on rocks older, and younger, than the dinosaurs, and I have literally walked in their footsteps in Fossil Rim in Texas, USA. I have held a meteorite that formed in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter around 1 BILLION years ago.

Somewhere in the world today, someone is unknowingly making footsteps for future generations to find and ponder about us, what I have pondered about the generations that have came before me…

What’s on offer?

What specific fossils and artefacts are on offer? The collection includes the following and most can be seen, and held, at the events:

  • Billion year old meteorite
  • Trilobite 250 – 520 million years old
  • Seeded Tree Fern 300 million years old
  • Belemite (squid bone) 201 million years old
  • Crocodile tooth 145 million years old
  • Utah Raptor Claw (replica) 135 million years old
  • Coprolite (poo) 125 million years old
  • Mosasaur tooth in jawbone 101 million years old
  • Mosasaur tooth and sabretooth herring vertebrae (feeding behaviour) 101 million years old
  • Therapod tooth 100 million years old
  • Grasshopper 100 million years old
  • Ammonite 100 million years old
  • Pterosaur tooth 96 million years old
  • Sawfish tooth 95 million years old
  • Oviraptor Eggshell 75 million years old
  • Saltasaurus Eggshell 70 million years old
  • Libyan Desert Impact Glass 26-29 million years old
  • Megalodon Tooth 23 million years old
  • Whale Ear Bone 12 million years old
  • Dolphin Vertebrae 10 million years old
  • Hand Axe 130,000 – 1,700,000 years old
  • Flint Knife 20,000 years old
  • Neolithic Flint Arrowhead 6,000 years old
  • Neolithic Pottery Fragment 6,000 years old
  • Bronze-age Persian Arrowhead 3,000 years old
  • Viking / Medieval Arrowheads 700CE – 1400CE (replica)
  • Karambits (replica) 1000CE – 2020CE: I have one (a few) designed by Forged in Fire judge Doug Marcaida
  • Norman Sword 1066CE – 1180CE (replica)
  • Musket balls from Siege of Derry 1600 – 1690CE
  • Flintlock Pistol 1700s (replica)
  • Cold .45 Single Action Army 1872 (replica)
  • Winchester Repeating Rifle (mares leg edition) 1892CE (replica)

So as you can see, whilst this list is far from exhaustive, there is something from most time periods throughout history.

Note: all these fossils were bought from www.fossilsforsale.co.uk and the musket balls were bought from Gerry on eBay. Without them I wouldn’t have this collection.