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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 January 2012
Attention was drawn recently (Antiq. Journ. xxi, 1941, 158–61) to a sword of derivative Viking type depicted on an effigy in Furness Abbey, Lancs. The effigy is one of a group of related late thirteenth- and early fourteenth-century monuments, of which the majority are recorded from Co. Durham. Another sword of this form has since come to notice in a similar context. The freestone effigy on which it appears is preserved in the Priory Church of Cartmel, which lies some ten miles to the east of Furness Abbey.
page 30 note 1 A unique transitional form, in which the lacing of the lower scabbard-mount has given place to a ring linking the mount to the belt, can be seen on the brass of Sir Robert de Setvans, d. 1306, at Chartham, Kent.