Yarm helmet

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Yarm helmet
Yarmhjalmen.png
Drawing of the Yarm helmet in undamaged condition, without hypothetical aventail
MaterialIron
Discovered1950s
Yarm, near Stockton-on-Tees, England
Present location Preston Park Museum

The Yarm helmet is a circa 10th-century Viking Age Anglo-Scandinavian helmet that was found in Yarm in the North Riding of Yorkshire, England. It is the first relatively complete Anglo-Scandinavian helmet found in Britain and only the second relatively complete/intact Viking helmet discovered in north-west Europe.

The helmet was discovered in the 1950s by workmen digging pipe trenches in Chapel Yard, Yarm, near the River Tees. Research led by Chris Caple of Durham University, and published in 2020, established that the helmet dates to the 10th century. [1]

It is on display at the Preston Park Museum in Stockton-on-Tees. It is on loan from Yarm Town Council. [2]

Yarm helmet drawing with a hypothetical enclosed aventail with loose front Yarmhjalmen (hjalmbrynja).png
Yarm helmet drawing with a hypothetical enclosed aventail with loose front

The iron helmet is made of bands and plates, riveted together, with a simple knop at the top. Below the brow band it has a "spectacle mask", [2] a guard around the eyes and nose forming a sort of visor, which suggests an affinity with earlier Vendel Period helmets. [2] The lower edge of the brow band is pierced with circular holes, where a mail curtain or aventail may have been attached. [2]

The only other near-complete Viking helmet is the Gjermundbu helmet in Norway. Other helmet remains exist, such as the Tjele helmet fragment from Denmark, the Lokrume helmet fragment from Sweden, and a fragment from Kyiv. [3]

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gjermundbu helmet</span>

The Gjermundbu helmet is a Viking Age helmet.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bedale Hoard</span> Treasure hoard found in North Yorkshire, England

The Bedale Hoard is a hoard of forty-eight silver and gold items dating from the late 9th to early 10th centuries AD and includes necklaces, arm-bands, a sword pommel, hacksilver and ingots. It was discovered on 22 May 2012 in a field near Bedale, North Yorkshire, by metal detectorists, and reported via the Portable Antiquities Scheme. Following a successful public funding campaign, the hoard was acquired by the Yorkshire Museum for £50,000.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gevninge helmet fragment</span> 6th or 7th century artefact

The Gevninge helmet fragment is the dexter eyepiece of a helmet from the Viking Age or end of the Nordic Iron Age. It was found in 2000 during the excavation of a Viking farmstead in Gevninge, near Lejre, Denmark. The fragment is moulded from bronze and gilded, and consists of a stylised eyebrow with eyelashes above an oval opening. There are three holes at the top and bottom of the fragment to affix the eyepiece to a helmet. The fragment is significant as rare evidence of contemporaneous helmets, and also for its discovery in Gevninge, an outpost that is possibly connected to the Anglo-Saxon epic Beowulf. It has been in the collection of the Lejre Museum since its discovery, and has been exhibited internationally as part of a travelling exhibition on Vikings.

Elisabeth Munksgaard was a Danish historian and from 1962 until retiring in 1990, the assistant Keeper in the Department of the Prehistory of Denmark at the National Museum of Denmark.} She was "Denmark's acknowledged expert" on art from the late Iron Age and Viking Age.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lokrume helmet fragment</span> Decorated fragment from a 10th-century Viking helmet

The Lokrume helmet fragment is a decorated eyebrow piece from a Viking Age Swedish helmet. It is made of iron, the surface of which is decorated with silver and niello that forms an interlaced pattern. Discovered in Lokrume, a small settlement on the island of Gotland, the fragment was first published in 1907 and is in the collection of the Gotland Museum.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Broe helmet</span> Iron Age helmet

The Broe helmet is a decorated iron helmet from around the Vendel Period. Discovered around 1904 in a cremation grave in Broe, a farm on the Swedish island Gotland, it was located alongside other items including fragments of shields, weapons, bridles, and game pieces. Due to its extremely fragmented condition, only an incomplete reconstruction of the helmet is possible, but it appears to have been an example of the "crested helmets" that flourished in England and Scandinavia from the sixth through eleventh centuries.

References

  1. "Britain's first ever Viking helmet discovered". BBC News. 9 August 2020. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Britain's first ever Viking helmet discovered". Preston Park Museum. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
  3. Ian Harvey (22 December 2016). "The only surviving example of a complete Viking helmet in existence". thevintagenews.com. Retrieved 1 October 2017.

Bibliography