Kid Discovers Ancient Sword
Innlandet County Municipality
Six-year-old Henrik Refsnes Mørtvedt found this ancient sword on a class trip.
You never know what treasures are lurking under the ground. When a 6-year-old named Henrik Refsnes Mørtvedt discovered a half-buried metal object, it turned out to be a sword that was made more than 1,000 years ago.
Henrik, who lives in Norway, found the sword while walking through a field with his 1st-grade class this past April. The students were trying to find rocks for an art project. Spotting the metal in the ground, Henrik had two thoughts. One was, “What if a tractor drives over the metal, and its tire is ruined?” The other was, “What if this is some kind of important object?”
“This part stuck out,” Henrik later told Hadeland, a Norwegian newspaper, pointing to the sword’s handle. “It was rust and dirt. So I thought I would pick it up and see what it was.”
That’s when the full object was revealed. It was a sword with a single-edged (sharp on only one side) blade called an enegget. Henrik’s teachers decided to call some archaeologists, scientists who study objects from the ancient past.
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
Vikings were from a region called Scandinavia. Henrik found the sword in Hadeland, Norway.
Experts believe the sword was made some time between the years 750 and 850 CE, at the beginning of the Viking Age. The Vikings were a group of people from a part of northern Europe now known as Scandinavia. They are best known as warriors who invaded many parts of the world. Their weapons included swords like the one Henrik discovered.
The area of Norway where Henrik found the sword is called Hadeland, which means “land of the warrior.” Many objects from the Viking era have been found there.
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
Vikings were from a region called Scandinavia. Henrik found the sword in Hadeland, Norway.
Archaeologist Øystein Lia believes the sword belonged to someone who was important within Viking society.
“It was most likely owned by a man, a free landholding individual and a significant [important] warrior,” Lia told Fox News Digital. “He may also have served as a military advisor to a local Viking chieftain.”