Categories
Well I thought it was neat!

‘Rusty lump’ turns out to be 2,000-year-old silver dagger used by Roman soldier By Laura Geggel

Until it was restored, it kind of looked like a chicken finger.

An illustration of the Roman dagger, sheath and belt.

An illustration of the Roman dagger, sheath and belt. (Image credit: Elif Siebenpfeiffer)

Archaeologists in Germany were “lost for words” after the discovery of a 2,000-year-old silver dagger. The weapon was found in its sheath in the grave of a Roman soldier who once fought against the Germanic tribes.

The dagger was so corroded, it took nine months of sandblasting and grinding before the sharp, 13-inch-long (35 centimeters) weapon was restored, at which point researchers were easily able to remove it from its richly decorated sheath.

The find is unusual, given that “it was not the normal practice for Roman soldiers to be buried with their military equipment,” said Bettina Tremmel, an archaeologist at the Westphalie Department for the Preservation and Care of Field Monuments in Germany, who specializes in the Roman Empire and took part in the excavation with the University of Trier.

An intern with the Westphalie department, 19-year-old Nico Calman, discovered the dagger and sheath, as well as the remains of the decorated leather belt, during an archaeological dig at Haltern am See (Haltern at the Lake), a town in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia, in April 2019.

During the Augustan period, from 27 B.C. to A.D. 14, Haltern was home to a Roman military base, known as “Hauptlager,” or “main camp.” Archaeologists have known about the site since 1900, making the newfound discovery of the dagger all the more surprising, Tremmel said.

The Roman soldiers stationed at the base weren’t terribly successful. Three Roman legions (large military units of about 5,000 men each) were wiped out during the defeat of the Roman general and politician Varus by the Germanic tribes in A.D. 9. Not too far from the base is a cemetery, where Roman soldiers and their families were buried.

It was there, in this cemetery, that Calman discovered the corroded dagger.

“The discovery of the dagger was emotional. We were lost for words,” Tremmel told Live Science. “Imagine: Though thousands of Roman soldiers were stationed in Haltern over almost 15 years or more, there are only a few finds of weapons, especially complete and intact ones.”

Image 1 of 10

When it was first discovered, the corroded dagger and sheath looked like a chicken tender.

When it was first discovered, the corroded dagger and sheath looked like a chicken tender. (Image credit: LWL/Josef Mühlenbrock)

The “chicken finger”

Researchers excavated the dagger and other artifacts in a large earthen block.

Researchers excavated the dagger and other artifacts in a large earthen block. (Image credit: LWL/Jens Schubert)

Excavation block

An X-ray of the dagger showed its rich design.

An X-ray of the dagger showed its rich design. (Image credit: LWL/Eugen Müsch)

Dagger and sheath X-ray

An X-ray of the block showed the remains of the belt.

An X-ray of the block showed the remains of the belt. (Image credit: LWL/Eugen Müsch)

Belt X-ray

The 2,000-year-old dagger and sheath.

The 2,000-year-old dagger and sheath. (Image credit: LWL/Eugen Müsch)

Amazing design

The restored dagger and sheath. Both are decorated with red glass.

The restored dagger and sheath. Both are decorated with red glass. (Image credit: LWL/Eugen Müsch)

Sharp weapon

Nico Calmund and fiber restorer Eugen Müsch examine the dagger.

Nico Calmund and fiber restorer Eugen Müsch examine the dagger. (Image credit: LWL/C. Steimer)

Teenage discoverer

The dagger shone after its restoration.

The dagger shone after its restoration. (Image credit: LWL/C. Steimer)

Dagger restored

LWL-Roman expert Bettina Tremmel (left), LWL cultural department head Barbara Rüschoff-Parzinger, LWL restorer Eugen Müsch and LWL chief archeology Professor Michael Rind present the Roman dagger.

LWL-Roman expert Bettina Tremmel (left), LWL cultural department head Barbara Rüschoff-Parzinger, LWL restorer Eugen Müsch and LWL chief archeology Professor Michael Rind present the Roman dagger. (Image credit: LWL/C. Steimer)

The team

The Roman soldier would have put the dagger in its sheath and hung it from a belt.

The Roman soldier would have put the dagger in its sheath and hung it from a belt. (Image credit: LWL/Eugen Müsch)

Dagger, sheath and belt

Tremmel immediately got in touch with restorers in Münster, who came to Haltern and excavated the “rusty lump” of a dagger from an earthen block, she said.

After the dagger was X-rayed, CT scanned and restored, archaeologists marveled at the dagger; its handle is inlaid with silver and decorated with rivets, and the iron blade has “deep grooves on either side of the midrib, a pronounced waist and a long tapering point,” Tremmel said.

The iron sheath is lined with linden wood and decorated with red glass, silver, niello (a black mixture, often of sulphur, copper, silver and lead) and red shiny enamel. Rings on the sheath were used to hang the dagger from a belt, which was also found in the grave.

The dagger was likely wielded by a legionary infantryman, an auxiliary infantryman or an officer known as a centurion, Tremmel said. However, daggers weren’t the main weapons used by the military.

“The dagger was a formidable weapon to have as a backup should the sword be lost or damaged,” she said. “The penalties for loss of equipment were so severe, there was every incentive for a soldier to keep a tight grip on his helmet, sword and dagger.”

It’s a mystery why this individual was buried with a dagger. Perhaps the owner was a Celtic or German native. Unlike the Romans, members of those tribes were often buried with their weapons. Or maybe the person was Roman, but wanted the dagger to be included in the burial, Tremmel said.

The only other known Roman military belt, dagger and sheath discovery was in a small Roman military camp in Velsen, in the Netherlands. In that case, a Roman soldier was thrown into a pit during a military conflict with the Germans in 28 B.C.

Originally published on Live Science.

 

 

 

 

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *