Early Mediaeval Hoards of Iron Items in Slovenia
Early Mediaeval Hoards of Iron Items in Slovenia
Early Mediaeval Hoards of Iron Items in Slovenia
Timotej Knific
National Museum of Slovenia
Preernova 20
SI-1000 Ljubljana
timotej.knific@nms.si
udk: 904(497.4)"653":739
Izvorni znanstveni lanak
Original scientic paper
Primljeno / Received: 2010-03-12
The article discusses four early mediaeval hoards of iron items in Slovenia. The most complex is the hoard
from Sebenje near Bled, which comprises agricultural implements, wood-carving tools, weapons, equestrian
equipment and two bucket handles, while the most uniform hoard is from Gradie above Baelj, in which
equestrian equipment was found. The hoard nd from the Ljubljanica River includes, among various tools,
an axe-shaped bar, which is a solitary nd in Slovenia, whereas in the territories of the Czech Republic,
Slovakia and Poland, this type of bar has been found in great numbers and in many hoards. In the hoard
from Zidani gaber above Mihovo, agricultural implements were predominant (ve sickles and a scythe). The
hoards from Slovenian sites have been dated to the period from the 8th to the 10th centuries.
Key words: axe-shaped bar, Early Middle Ages, hoard, horse equipment, iron implements, tools, weapons
In Slovenia, early mediaeval hoards of iron implements and weapons have been found at
Sebenje near Bled, in the Ljubljanica River, at Gradie above Baelj, and at Zidani gaber above
Mihovo (Fig. 1). The rst discovery was of a hoard of twenty-four iron items at Sebenje. The
landowner found it when attempting to remove a heap of stones in which the hoard was actually
hidden. The items are kept by the National Museum of Slovenia in Ljubljana (Inv. No. S 2341-S
2364), and were analysed extensively by A. Pleterski (Pl. 1).1 The items comprise agricultural
implements (hoe, ploughshare, four socketed shares, two sickles, iron rings), wood-carving tools
(hooked blade, knife, awl, chisel, two wimbles), weapons (two spearheads), horse equipment
(horse-bit, two stirrups) and miscellaneous items (two bent bucket handles). According to
Pleterski, the iron implements and weapons were probably hidden in a natural heap of stones
in AD 820 by a local who was a farmer in peacetime and a horseman in wartime. Pleterski has
linked the event to the anti-Frankish rebellion by Liudewitus, dux Pannoniae inferioris, who was
joined by the subjugated Carniolans living along the Sava River.
The second hoard (in this instance, the term "hoard" is not certain) was found in the
Ljubljanica River during scuba diving. The items were scattered along the river bed over a distance
of two metres. The nd, which is kept by the National Museum of Slovenia, has been analysed by
the author (Pl. 2).2 It is composed of the iron parts of various tools scythe, pickaxe, narrow axe,
hewing axe, awl and an axe-shaped bar (the items are described in the catalogue at the end of
the article). The identical rusty coating that covered the items, as well as the composition of the
85
nd in which cutting tools are predominant and the similarity of their manufacture allow us
to infer that they constituted a whole. Perhaps they were part of a cargo that fell into the water,
although it is more likely that they were buried as a hoard in the river bank, but slid into the
water only recently, when the river cut into the bank. The nd is dated to the 9th century.
During the archaeological excavations carried out by the National Museum of Slovenia
in 1998, a hoard of iron items was also found at Gradie above Baelj.3 It comprised parts of
horse and horsemans equipment: a horse-bit, stirrup, and two spurs (Pl. 3; descriptions given
in the catalogue). There was a stone settlement in Late Antiquity at the top of Gradie, while
in the Early Middle Ages its ruins were probably utilised during the construction of a military
stronghold. The majority of the truly numerous items that can be found all over Gradie can be
dated from the late 8th to the early 10th centuries. Many military items were found lying along
the walls in a distinct layer of charcoal, together with pottery, implements for everyday use and
charred cereal grains, whereas the hoard was buried in a clay layer more towards the centre of
the settlement. The items were found close together, 30 cm deep; the pair of spurs was entangled
with the horse-bit, while the stirrup lay over them only partially (Fig. 2).
3
T. KNIFIC, 1999, 398; on the history of archaeological
research T. KNIFIC, 1999a.
86
Fig. 2. Gradie above Baelj, equestrian equipment hoard during excavation (photo: J. Hanc).
Sl. 2. Gradie nad Baeljem, ostava s konjanikom opremom tijekom istraivanja (foto: J. Hanc).
The fourth hoard of iron implements was found in 1999 at Zidani gaber above
Mihovo. It was excavated by an archaeological team from the Dolenjski muzej/Museum of
Lower Carniola in Novo mesto and the National Museum of Slovenia. The team received
information from a metal detector that an iron long-handled pan was shallowly buried on
the western slope below church ruins from Late Antiquity. During the professional removal
of the pan, a hoard was discovered in its immediate vicinity; the items lay buried 25 cm deep,
one atop the other (Fig. 3) in humus soil above a settlement layer from Late Antiquity. The
hoard consisted of ve sickles (one of them fragmentary), a scythe, a billhook, an axe, a nail
and a club-shaped object (Pl. 4; descriptions given in the catalogue).4 The items are kept by
the Dolenjski muzej/Museum of Lower Carniola. The partially researched ruins of the Late
Antiquity hilltop settlement at Zidani gaber have been dated to the period from the 5th to the
early 7th centuries. This was initially also the period to which the hoard itself was dated, but
its more detailed study has indicated that the dating could be extended to the 10th century.
4
P. BITENC, T. KNIFIC, 2001, 49, Cat. No. 140; D. BREAK,
Z. GREGL, 2002, 94-97, 171, 172, Cat. No. 186.
87
A possibility of its dating to later centuries has also been suggested by other, rather scarce,
nds, randomly discovered in the area of the Late Antiquity settlement.5
The most complex of the hoards from Slovenian sites, in terms of their composition, is the
hoard from Sebenje (Pl. 1), while the most uniform is from Gradie above Baelj (Pl. 3). The
rst includes items used during various activities (warfare, agriculture, trade), while the second
consists only of riding equipment (which were therefore most probably used, with regard to the
site, during warfare). The only weapons, i.e. two spearheads, were part of the Sebenje hoard (Pl.
1: 13, 14). The larger of the two, given its socket ornament (Pl. 1: 14), is a characteristic and
widespread Carolingian weapon, and on the basis of several comparisons with winged and nonwinged spearheads, is dated to the end of the 8th and rst half of the 9th centuries. In Slovenia,
numerous examples are known from the Ljubljanica River.6 Similar spearheads have often been
found in border areas of the Frankish kingdom, e.g. in the north in Saxony,7 and in the southeast
in Croatia, Austria and Hungary.8 In contemporary hoards in Bohemia and Slovakia, spearheads
5
T. KNIFIC, I. LANGUS, Z. MILI, 2003; iron belt
terminal, unpublished, NMS, Inv. No. S 3272.
6
T. KNIFIC, 2009, 138, 139, Fig. 137, Cat. No. 91 (coauthor P. Bitenc).
88
7
8
are fairly rare items.9 Among ninety-two Eastern European early mediaeval hoards of iron tools
and weapons, thirteen are known to include spearheads; these often occur together with axes
that are particularly the narrow specimens dened as battle axes, which can be inferred from
the axes found in numerous contemporary warrior burials.10 The axes from the Ljubljanica
River and Zidani gaber are also narrow, but as no warrior grave with an axe has been found in
Slovenia, they are classied as tools for the time being.
The other set of Sebenje hoard nds comprises equestrian equipment: a horse-bit with
straight ends and two stirrups (Pl. 1: 10, 23, 24). Stirrups of this kind are classied as type IAa
Bartokov.11 In Slovenia, fourteen early mediaeval stirrups have been found at nine sites. The
two stirrups from Sebenje can be compared to the hoard nds from Gradie above Baelj, to
other specimens from this site and from the Belica stream that runs below Gradie, as well as
to specimens (presumably) from Stari grad above Celje. The most numerous comparisons for
stirrups of this kind come from modern Slovakia and the Czech Republic, where the state of
Great Moravia extended in the 9th century.12 Stirrups are very common nds in hoards of iron
items; in Eastern Europe, they have been found in no less than fteen.13
There are similar comparisons for the Sebenje horse-bit: from four Slovenian sites, ten
(mostly partially preserved) simple bipartite horse-bits with straight ends are known.14 They
are divided into two groups; the non-ornamented example from Sebenje is classied as a
Csorna type horse-bit, as the westernmost specimen of this kind that were distributed over
the territory between the Volga and Dnieper Rivers to the Carpathian Valley.15 They have been
found in graves, settlement layers and hoards dated to the 9th century, but also occur in the 10th
century in graves from the Hungarian period. The Sebenje horse-bit is the only specimen of
its kind from a Slovenian site, where examples of the second group, which have long straight
ends and a star-like cross-section in the central part (Ljubina above Zbelovska Gora, Potela),
are predominant; the horse-bit from the hoard at Gradie above Baelj is another example.16
Horse-bits with a star-like cross-section are characteristic of Frankish and Viking regions from
the 10th and early 11th centuries, but have not been found in the East.17
The hoard from Gradie above Baelj also includes a pair of spurs with long decorated
tangs and triangular ends on both parts of the yoke (Pl. 3: 2, 3). In Slovenia, more than fty
early mediaeval spurs have been found at fourteen sites, about half of them at Gradie above
Baelj.18 As hoard nds, the iron spurs from Gradie are isolated. Otherwise, they have also
been found in graves (Ptujski grad, Brezje above Zree, Puava above Stari trg near Slovenj
Gradec),19 and especially in the area of former hilltop settlements from Late Antiquity (apart
from Gradie above Baelj, at Ajdna above Potoki, and Ljubina above Zbelovska Gora), as
15
10
16
89
well as in the Ljubljanica River.20 If several strap ends and the clamps with which the spurs
were fastened are added to all the spurs found at Gradie above Baelj, the quantity of this
type of equestrian equipment at this particular site is very impressive indeed. Like the other
iron items, parts of spur sets were superbly forged and tinned.21 Fragments of a gilded bronze
spur have also been found, in addition to several gilded luxury items that most probably
belonged to members of the highest social class.22
The third set of hoard nds from Sebenje comprises iron parts of various agricultural
implements: a ploughshare (Pl. 1: 9; A1 Henning type),23 fragments of two sickles with a
serrated blade (Pl. 1: 11, 12; H2 Henning type), a hoe (Pl. 1: 8), four socketed shares (Pl. 1:
1-4), and probably three iron rings (Pl. 1: 5-8), with which the scythe blade was fastened to
the wooden haft. In Eastern European hoard nds, ploughshares are common and have usually
been found (in cross-type correlations) in conjunction with axes, sickles and hoes; socketed
shares, however, are less common, having been found in only a further seven hoards.24 As
a rule, the sickles have serrated, nely incised blades, an early mediaeval characteristic also
common to four sickles from the hoard from Zidani gaber (Pl. 4: 3-6; H2 Henning type),25
with which a (bent) scythe was found (Pl. 4: 10; I5 Henning type),26 while another two scythes
of the same type were discovered (unprofessionally) with a metal detector not far from the
hoard;27 yet another was found in the (assumed) hoard from the Ljubljanica River (Pl. 2: 6).
The hoard at Zidani gaber included a billhook (Pl. 4: 2; G5 Henning),28 while the functions of
the large nail and the club-shaped item are not known (Pl. 1: 1, 7).
Leaving aside the two deformed handles of wooden buckets (Pl. 1: 21, 22), whose metal
parts are common in Moravian treasure troves, the last set of items from the Sebenje hoard are
related to crafts. The tools are suitable for wood-carving (knife, hooked blade, wimbles, chisel,
awl; Pl. 1: 15-20) and together with smithy tools, are common components of iron hoards.29
The hewing axe found in the Ljubljanica River could also have been used for wood-carving (Pl.
2: 3). Two similar axes were found in settlement remains at Slivnica near Maribor, which are
dated from the second half of the 7th to the 9th century.30 The awl was a very versatile tool (Pl.
2: 4),31 while the applicability of the pickaxe-like object is unknown (Pl. 2: 5). The Ljubljanica
hoard also includes an axe-shaped bar (Pl. 2: 1). In Slovenia, it is an isolated nd far from the
territory north of the central Danube, where this type of bar (dated mainly to the 9th century)
has been found in great numbers and in numerous hoards.32
To conclude, the iron hoards from Slovenian sites are well integrated, typologically
and chronologically, into the large body of nds of this type in Eastern Europe, as well
as more widely in the Slavic world.33 It is becoming increasingly clear that through new
P. BITENC, T. KNIFIC, 2001, 96, 97, 101, 103, Cat. Nos.
314-317, 330, 331.
21
. KARO, T. KNIFIC, Z. MILI, 2001.
22
T. KNIFIC, 2007.
23
J. HENNING, 1987, 49-57.
24
F. CURTA, 1997, 253-261; hoards with socketed shares
Cat. Nos. 3, 11, 14, 48, 69, 71, 73, 89.
25
J. HENNING, 1987, 89, Abb. 43; Taf. 40: 30.
26
J. HENNING, 1987, 92, Abb. 43, Taf. 45 (I5 type).
27
P. BITENC, T. KNIFIC, 2001, 50, Cat. No. 141; D.
BREAK, Z. GREGL, 2002, 94-97, 171, 172, Cat. No.
187: 3, 4.
20
90
discoveries hoard items can be more closely linked with cognate items from settlement layers
and graveyards. Still unanswered, however, is one of the key questions: why specically was
only iron selected for these hoards, although silver (eighth- and ninth-century dirhams) was
also buried in those times in Slovenia?34
English translation: Henrik Cigli; English revision: Philip Burt
34
91
width up to 2.5 cm. Dolenjski muzej/Museum of Lower Carniola, Novo mesto (further DM),
Inv. No. A 2730. Pl. 4: 1.
2. Sickle with a serrated, nely incised blade and at handle tang. Blade tip forged into a small
triangular plate. L. 33.5 cm, tang length 13.0 cm, blade width up to 2.61 cm. DM, Inv. No. A
2729. Pl. 4: 2.
3. Sickle with a serrated, nely incised blade. Flat handle tang curved at the end. Blade tip forged
into a small triangular plate. L 30.4 cm, tang length 10.0 cm, blade width up to 2.5 cm. DM,
Inv. No. A 2728. Pl. 4: 3.
4. Sickle fragment with a serrated, nely incised blade and at handle tang. L 26.5 cm, tang
length 13.0 cm, blade width up to 2.23 cm. DM, Inv. No. A 2727. Pl. 4: 4.
5. Flat tang and part of sickle blade. L 15.0 cm, width up to 1.35 cm. DM, Inv. No. A 2725. Pl.
4: 5.
6. Billhook with handle tang curved in the end. L 19.8 cm, tang length 10.5 cm, blade width up
to 2.1 cm. DM, Inv. No. A 2724. Pl. 4: 6.
7. Iron nail with wide forged at head. Stem with square cross-section, curved at the end. L 10.3
cm, head diameter 3.5 cm. DM, Inv. No. A 2723: Pl. 4: 7.
8. Narrow axe with asymmetrical blade. Eye roundish triangular. H 14.6 cm, blade width up to
6.0 cm. DM, Inv. No. A 2726. Pl. 4: 8.
9. Massive club-shaped object with rectangular cross-section. L 27.3 cm, width up to 2.0 cm.
DM, Inv. No. A 2721. Pl. 4: 9.
10. Narrow-bladed scythe. Banded socket bent at the end and forged into triangular point. The
scythe is intentionally bent. L 35.5 cm, blade width up to 2.5 cm, socket length 7.1 cm. DM, Inv.
No. A 2722. Pl. 4: 10.
Proof-reading / Lektura: Barbara Smith-Demo
92
Pl. 1. Sebenje near Bled, hoard of iron implements and weapons (after A. PLETERSKI, 1987, Fig. 42).
T. 1. Sebenje kod Bleda, ostava eljeznog orua i oruja (prema A. PLETERSKI, 1987, Fig. 42).
93
Pl. 2. The Ljubljanica River at Podpe, hoard (?) of iron items (after T. KNIFIC, 2004, Fig. 2).
T. 2. Rijeka Ljubljanica kod Podpea, ostava (?) eljeznih predmeta (prema T. KNIFIC, 2004, Fig. 2).
94
Pl. 3. Gradie above Baelj, hoard of equestrian equipment (Drawings: D. Knic Lunder).
T. 3. Gradie nad Baeljem, ostava konjanike opreme (crte D. Knic Lunder).
95
Pl. 4. Zidani gaber above Mihovo, hoard of iron implements (Drawings: D. Knic Lunder).
T. 4. Zidani gaber nad Mihovom, ostava eljeznog orua (crte D. Knic Lunder).
96
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