Small Seax Knife, Damascus Steel Blade and Scabbard
A replica of a utility knife from the Viking Age. It has a bone hilt and a seax shaped blade forged out of damascus steel. Suitable for carving, skinning and preparing food. The blade is not sharpened.
The knife comes with a brown cowhide scabbard with belt loop.
The terms Damascus steel or damascene designate a compound steel forged out of two or more different types of steel. It is named after its birthplace, the Syrian city of Damascus, a former stronghold of the patterned steel production. As common practice, a harder high carbon steel and a milder low carbon steel are repeatedly forge welded and folded together. The high carbon steel ensures a higher hardness, a better temperability and longer lasting edge retention, whereas the milder steel confers greater blade flexibility and tensile strength. This procedure, which arose in a time where steel qualities were often low and inconsistent, enables to combine the positive attributes of the various steel grades.
Besides, the different shadings generated by the varying carbon content of the alternating layers engender strikingly beautiful patterns, such as the twisted motif called Torsion Damascus pattern or the Rose Damascus pattern. Undoubtedly, these unusual patterns partly explain why inherent magical properties were attributed to the damascus steel blades of the Middle Ages. Such a damascene sword blade is for example depicted as a bloody worm or a poisonous snake in the Edda.
Details:
Overall Length: approx. 19.5 cm
Blade Length: approx. 10 cm
Blade Material: Damascus steel, 128 layers
Hilt Material: animal bone
This is an original ULFBERTH® product.