Explore the captivating tale of the Castile Swords, lost for centuries after the Battle of Castillon in 1453. Join archaeologists as they delve into the mystery of these medieval weapons, their origins, and the enigmatic circumstances of their discovery in the Dordogne River. Uncover the historical significance, unique features, and ongoing intrigue surrounding these relics. From the legendary battlefield to the auction rooms, witness the epic journey of the Castile Swords and unravel the secrets buried in the depths of history.
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A secret horde lost for centuries not gold not silver but steel The Mystery of the occasion sword group is ongoing end of a war the last battle to be fought a final stand to be made the Battle of castiana is absolutely catastrophic for the English
The wreck of an army armor weapons swords any more bits the investigation of an enduring mystery a forgotten treasure undisturbed undiscovered until now swords of Castiel [Music] the Medieval World the fifth to the 15th century Tim Sutherland is one of Britain’s
Most experienced archaeologists he and a team of Specialists try to understand medieval life by exploring the realm of the medieval dead we have a classic view of the storybook medieval life we don’t hear the stories about the common man trying to keep his family alive
Archaeologically speaking we can now focus in on the medieval dead people you can’t help almost look through their eyes thinking what did they see how did they die thank you this story is one of the most remarkable in the world of arms and armed
Truly epic in scope from a medieval Battlefield to The Prestige sale rooms of the 21st Century and in between all the plot twists a thriller writer could imagine except it all really happened for more than four decades it’s created a trail of rumor and guesswork hearsay and intrigue
Now we’ll delve into that world we’ll examine the clues the stories the facts and the extraordinary sequence of events behind the mystery of the swords of Castile [Music] 100 kilometers north of Bordeaux an exhibition was held in the chateaued upon called laguero
Mayonage the Hundred Years War the catalog showed a photograph of a Medieval sword [Music] of the sword’s origin almost nothing was said other than it was from somewhere in France to people outside the international world of arms and armor it was just another old sword
Another piece destined for sale to a museum or collector do those in the know it was a big deal but if it wasn’t really much known up to that point it was the following year [Music] the world famous Christie’s sale rooms in Geneva a Prestige auction on the 26th of April 1977
Featured a selection of Highly collectible antique arms and armor there was no doubt what the star items were not one but seven medieval swords I first became aware of them when appear to sale and Christie’s in Geneva and um and obviously though some of them were were fairly Tatty and
Corroded some were in in pretty good condition I think we’re catalogous a group of medieval swords from the same site the same site in fact as the one that chateaued upon but where no one would say
A few years later an arms and armor expert wrote about the find and he hinted that he knew something the general area of the Fine Place is known though for reasons of security its location may not be disclosed over the following Years yet more swords were sold by auctioneers across Europe
Switzerland Germany London all was said to be from the same place still unknown many years later The Insider expert explained the secrecy over the find sight in the first years of the Fine’s existence no mention of the actual Fine Place was allowed it
Was merely stated that it was somewhere in France however by the end of the 70s this rigid secrecy had been relaxed a little for some of us knew where the place was we kept silence though for obviously someone or some Authority was anxious less treasure Seekers should come looking for more
Only a few people were truly in the know but antiques arms and armor expert David Oliver had contacts in the trade he was able to work out approximately where the swords had come from Through the Grapevine one became aware that there were as it was first suggested a meal that came
From the last major battle of the Hundred Years War and that didn’t trig castion I thought there was a big battle at early on I think prior to cast the answer that was possibly from early on and then just back the process of elimination we eventually discovered that they were actually from
Castion not far from Bordeaux in Southwest France on the dordoyne river the swords were from Castile over the years many more have come up for auction there was a there was a time that there were a number of them were appearing regularly in in Christie sales yeah
One every few months as it were it’s now thought as many as 80 swords were recovered there’s no other medieval Battlefield with so many swords supposedly associated with it then Castiel the swords of Castiel such a large number of them of course they become part of
This Legend they add considerably to something which is already dramatic just by because of the people involved the event and its historical importance they are almost like sort of icing on the cake they just make it even more remarkable the story has captivated collectors historians
And archaeologists ever since it is one of the amazing stories about the medieval period the sores of cassion where did they come from they’re classic medieval fighting weapons it’s uh it’s a fantastic story so it’s a wonderful yarn I think um about how these swords were were discovered
Tim sets out to find out what he can about the swords and hopefully the circumstances of their discovery the swords are now scattered mostly in ones and twos in private Collections and museums across the world but there’s a rare chance to see a group of them displayed together for perhaps
The first time in decades since their finding in several museums and of course when you see them you automatically try to imagine what it was like one finding them but two using them which battle they’re from and so the whole your whole of your mind starts to race
While Tim’s in Paris back in England another of the mysterious blades has suddenly resurfaced in the heart of Knightsbridge in the West End Bonham’s sale rooms another Prestige auction of antiques arms and armor with many alluring items medieval and otherwise for collectors to
Feast their eyes on but even though it’s almost 40 years since the first auction in Geneva the star attraction is once again a casteon sword it’s expected to fetch a high price the same every other one of its fellow swords has done over the intervening decade I can’t remember
Exactly when I first heard about these swords it was probably very early 70s something like that David Nicole like many other medieval historians became intrigued by the story of the swords whenever these swords come up in an auction they’re always the star exhibit because of
The mystery of their find and of course their association with the great battle of Castiel David has worked in the arms and armor trade researching or provenancing items for potential sellers but he’s never till now come across one of the casteon swords I never thought I’d see
Them I never thought I’d handle them I never thought I’d have anything to do with them the day before the sale we were allowed special access behind the scenes it was a chance to see the preparation that goes into such an auction well you’re in the auction house bottoms which
Was established in 1793 and you’re in the sale room which we have based in Montpellier Street in Knightsbridge right in the heart of London and we for some years now we’ve been having sales dedicated to antique arms and armor and we tend to hold between two and three sales a year
As is often the case the sale has come about following the death of a collector many of the items that will be sold are from the estate of just one man be the late owner he was
An American he had a collection it included um two or three medieval saws including the castrin sword David Nicole finally gets the opportunity to see one of the casteon swords for himself Davis so here we have lot 173 the cassion sword that’s coming up in our sale on Thursday that
Is very nice indeed this is a business like well it’s very weird isn’t it the weight is actually not that heavy it’s extremely fine quality and that’s reflected in its its General wildiness and you can imagine it was it was a very useful weapon to use very typical of the type and the
Period very business-like as you see wieldy useful although it has a very or had should I say a very fine Edge it’s actually a very substantial piece of metal and this essentially trapezoid flattened Diamond section yes with a medial ridge running through it absolutely all the way to the tip and
Um extremely beautifully made beautifully made and very rigid I mean that’s going to give you a very substantial Cutting Edge but I would have thought primarily a thrusting weapon I mean this is well to say lethal is a little bit obvious inside
There’s a mark oh there it is it caught the caught my eye caught the light in laser fleur-de-lis that is fascinating somehow appropriate that it should be a fleur-de-lis although the assumption is that these were anglo-gascon from the losing side in the battle
Not necessarily the case but most probably but nonetheless a little French fleur-de-lis lovely interesting to speculate interesting to speculate but that brings up the whole story of the whole question of whether these really are from the Battle of Castile in Paris Tim
Is on his way to see a whole group of the swords yes finally finally getting to see these swords Britain’s royal armories owned several casteon blades and they’ve loaned them out specially for this Prestige auction it has pride of place in France’s Premier arms and armor Museum in the
Heart of leonvaleid in Paris The Muse and there are one or two old friends here too finally we meet it’s the first time these Royal Armory swords have been back in France since their discovery the musee de la mes own castillon sword is the one that
Was exhibited at the Chateau de par the first one the wider world came to know about it is But what about the circumstances of the sword’s discovery is there anything known here in Paris about what happened back then in the dordoin is um This is the foremost military museum in France and yet there’s no record here of the recovery of some 80 swords archaeological relics from a medieval battle during the past five years a number of fine 15th century swords have been appearing in
The sale room and changing hands among collectors they’re from a find of swords dredged from the river door near to the site of the last battle of the 100 years if the battle and the swords could be linked Beyond doubt it would be completely unique
You know where they’ve come from you know roughly the date they come from and you know which country they come from and why they’re important and if these swords are connected to the Battle of Castile in 1453 we’ve nailed it maybe it’s time to look Instead at the story of that battle itself
And it was a battle that didn’t end well for the English the Battle of castiana is absolutely catastrophic for the English one of the most catastrophic I would say actually the most catastrophic since the 1330s the rulers of England and France had fought
What’s known to us now as the Hundred Years War by the early 1450s the English had lost virtually all their possessions in France an army was dispatched to recapture the great city of Bordeaux and its surroundings in the dordoin including the Fortified town of Castile it was the English
Coming back again seeking to defeat the French army in battle and then hopefully re-establishing their position in Southwestern France the English Commander was highly respected by both sides Sir John Talbot was a veteran Soldier he was feared by his enemies because he was successful he
Was a good leader and he was also pretty good at getting on with the locals and this is important because the Army at castillon was not just English it was from Bordeaux a large part of it was French
French loyal to the English crown as they had been for a very long time in that region the alliance between England and gascony had existed for many years before even the time of ajinkal a representative of I think Henry V was very proud to say that the English nation was
Composed of five tongs and he mentioned English Gaelic Welsh Cornish and gascon the French launched a pre-emptive strike and besieged the gascon town of castion Talbot move fast to try and raise the French Siege before castion fell after marching his
Army through the night he launched a headlong assault on the French position [Applause] the French had decided they were going to stand and fight and that’s precisely what they did the English like the French adaging Corps and certainly like the French at poissier and Cressi
Were full of confidence they were incredibly confident in their ability so they charge in there thinking eh they’re only French this is going to be a piece of cake it was anything but the French might not have had the famous English War bar but they had overwhelming Firepower of Their Own
The English were shot to pieces cut down in droves by Cannonball the survivors were charged by the French and the English were completely routed some tried to make it to the dodoin and this is where the Last Stand took place Talbot was killed and his son who led the Reiger
There cannot be many English commanders of the Hundred Years War who were defeated and yet are still commemorated on French soil dalbot’s Monument looks out over the river there was a Ford here and nearby is where 500 years later the swords are assumed to
Have been discovered well they dropped in the Ford during the route how did they get into the river in the early 1980s an article appeared in print in which the author our Insider pondered this very same question [Music] the article appeared in 1982 in it I had repeated
The assumption that the swords were lost in the river by English and gascon men at Arms trying to get away from the battlefield having been soundly beaten by the French the author was an English academic who was passionately interested in swords
He’s one of the great figures in historical arms and armor research of the 20th century he wrote many books and had a wide-ranging influence on a generation of future researchers his name was you at oakshot the first book that I ever came across on arms and armor uh was a
Book by you at Oak shot at one of his night and series oh gosh I must have been nine then and it wasn’t wouldn’t be until about 30 odd years later that I actually ended up meeting them at used to
Lecture the schools and this sort of thing is you used to address himself up in armor it was only about five foot high to actually um meet him or something I’ve never forgotten because I’ve never been served cheesecake with a broth Sage dagger before no it was great it was it was it
Was a real character and a lovely man it was Oak shot who’d been the man in the know on the casteon swords right from their Discovery he was The Insider who wrote a series of articles about them
In each of his articles the story he’s either found out something more so it gets something else is added to it the no more numbers there all those we now know it was found there or as new anecdotal evidence emerged Oak shots interpretation 2 steadily evolved
I was told that the 80 swords had been all together in a box or crate crate might have been in a wagon this was a little more reasonable though how beaten troops getting the hell out
Of it could have stopped to pack 80 swords into a box and put it on a wagon I don’t know later the crate was confirmed as being in fact two large wooden barrels the remains of which had been found with the swords
As Oak shot said this didn’t sound like fleeing troops throwing away their weapons in the river are there clues in what we know about the aftermath of medieval battle back at the battlefield of course you’ve got a load of mixed and in some cases extremely valuable military
Equipment lying around now booty is absolutely Central to the motivation of medieval armies because they’re not paid very well if paid at all so if you win survive unhurt you can make a lot of money by collecting the stuff that’s lying around and there’s going to be Merchants arms Merchants
Those people we all love hovering around in the background ready to come in and buy up this stuff it’s an odd parallel that half a millennia later the casteon swords are still highly sought after by dealers in arms today it’s not just private collectors who buy antique arms and armor foreign
Like any other consumer if there’s an item the Royal armories want for their collection they have to buy it from a dealer in their storerooms in Leeds Tim gets a rare chance to see it firsthand the armories six castion blade when did the swords first come into the Royal
Armies collection them they the swords have come into the armories over a period of time starting from about 1977 and through the 80s and they have been acquired through either auction or from dealers and what’s interesting as a group is there’s similarities and their differences
So there are none that are identical none of them are going to be identical because they’re all of course Hand Forged different person might make the pommelon the cross as opposed to the blade even if they were for you know a contract like we know about places like the tower issuing arms
Don’t leave for campaigns so even if they were to fulfill that function they’re still going to be differences we don’t even know to be honest whether these are French or English all right right so there’s nothing here stylistically it’s it’s it they could have been used basically all
Over the continent you at Oak shots recognize the variations in the swords from his wide-ranging surveys of surviving medieval weapons these Royal armories blades conform to his initial grouping by three broad types of the 80 supposedly out there they fall into most fall into three categories
The powerful looking type A swords are the most numerous in the group this one here being the largest categories referred to as type A and it has this tapering cut and thrust Diamond section sometimes with the hollowed outsides of the blade as well and this downturned cross and heavy wheel
Pommel fewer in number than the taipees the type B’s differ very slightly in design but they still have the same recognizable characteristics that would be a classic type B with the fishtail pommel the straight cross with the bulbous ends and the gradually tapering Diamond section blade
So more of a more of a thrusting specific weapon and then the smallest group of which I think is a group of two is the type C ones and that’s with this pear-shaped or you know scent stopper pommel similar cross to type B’s and then triple Fuller into Diamond section Blaze
Another of the armories collection can be included in a third group group C what I found very interesting is is this Falcon type it’s also a very very very fine function it’s not a sort of a typical fossil like a clubbing someone is it nice it is definitely
A fine sword but it’s definitely a function so if you think of uh perhaps well you can think of some certainly earlier Fountains of the laws being like a machete that as you say is very
Very fine it’s very delicate and the [ __ ] tip as you can see is is quite Exquisite the line on it a falcian was a medieval slashing weapon this single sword is perhaps the rarest of the whole
Casteon group this is a gold decoration on the blade it could actually be a custom made one-off and there is none other like it well apparently out of the apparent 80 that were known this is the only Falcon type so medieval Falcons overall are incredibly rare surviving despite being quite
Quite often shown in art and things like that actual physical surviving specimens it’s the compact type a sword that Tim’s drawn to oh that’s uh yeah that’s really heavy but if you look at the medieval manuscripts you quite often see this very typical very broad blade this end and very fine at
The other end and even some of the tombs have got swords engraved on that are very similar to this variants of this type occur almost right through the 15th century I’ve seen so many illustrations
But to hold it and feel the weight of it I mean that is the form is a classic yeah fighting sword yeah but is there any archaeological evidence on the blades that might tell us more about their use
Maybe in a battle even Castiel in your opinion do these look as though they’ve been used some of them are on the edges of the blade appear to give evidence of having been used shall we say but um one might see those actually as just um corrosion products whether a
Nick started it or whether it is just a corrosion product is hard to say yeah that’s interesting again it’s got a line across the and just see if there’s a similar line on the other side I wonder if that’s the length of the
Oh there is perfect yes there is so that’s how long the scabbers were that’s interesting they didn’t go right to the hilt no you’d have your metal Mount yes yeah corrosion yeah wow that’s uh that’s quite nice I think that’s a new spot isn’t it several of the 80 swords and
Now this one show evidence that they were scabbarded when they went into the water does this help with trying to work out how they came to be there one of the main questions is uh what this collection is all about is it a collection
Of swords that was going to a battle is this collection soil that was been that been looted off the battlefield afterwards collected up and then taken away from the battlefield and so is there any evidence that the style and the type and anything else could answer that question
The only thing that’s always struck me is I find it hopefully we’re going to battle later they would be treated well so you have silver decorated pommels you have gold on the blade bustling and jostling if you like alongside common soldier’s sword maybe and I find that a bit odd
But I can imagine if it’s being an after the battle scenario everything is being bundled and jumbled together because they don’t belong to anybody anymore that’s right they’ve just been taken away yeah and pillaged yeah basically these six swords are like the whole of the casteon group
Some expensive blades some lesser some may be used in battle some probably not and some at least scattered so does it sound like they were looted or something else we know they’re in a river or we’re presumably they’re in a river but we don’t know and that
That’s the thing if we knew how how they were actually found the groupings even may be able to there could be that the swords that have similar pommels were all grouped together we don’t know were they in fact battle related or is it possible these are similar because this was a dealer in
Sorts and this was his collection and for some reason he got swamped in a river and lost a lot David Oliver too has come to favor this possible explanation the reason why one of the reasons why I think that not Battlefield finds is that because the so many
Are virtually they’re not identical but of the same type so to my mind the bean supplies from a a maker or a A supplier of of Munitions um which you’ve been going to either castion Bergerac or wherever and just happen to be lost coincidentally in the casteon region
Can we even say the Battle of castion had any connection at all to the swords given what the physical evidence tells us you as an archaeologist are more aware of this than than perhaps others there was a battle just up the road from the alleged fine site so therefore these swords
Must be Associated from the battle actually there is no evidence for that but given the traffic is a very busy river it yeah it it could just be total coincidence back in London another of the casteon swords prepares to meet a new owner it’s nearly time for the sale barnums have
Never before sold the casteon sword with less than 24 hours to go anticipation is building the starting price of the piece is 8 000 pounds arms and armor collecting is a popular Market you’re selling into a an educated audience if you like and um yes they appreciate the work of you
Know the quality of work and they appreciate the Rarity and they appreciate the fact that they have a historical connection very often so lots of anticipation about tomorrow let’s hope so we’re going to see auctions like these are vital for museums to acquire their exhibits the the arms and
Armor trade sometimes gets a bad press sometimes I I tell my friends or I’m off to an arms fair tomorrow or something and they seem to think I’m going to go off and buy a jet fighter and of
Course it’s actually it’s an Antiques or antique Arms Fair the academic world can get a little bit sniffy about the whole commercial sales buying and selling of these beautiful and interesting objects and personally I I feel that’s most unfair by encouraging and spreading this interest they bring
In artifacts which we might otherwise not see which the academics might not see like the Castiel swords Souls themselves have a Mystique I think um there’s there’s something about them um that elevates them above all other weapons I think like David Nicole Clive Thomas researchers and writes
About historical items in the arms and armor trade and he too is fascinated by the Cassian swords yeah the first time I um actually got to grips with a Medieval sword uh was actually one of the casteon pieces it was uh it was just superb and I was I felt very privileged to
To be holding it I think at that point that was when uh my uh my interest in the casteon group um was really sparked I suppose Clive was well versed in the work of you at oakshot
I was first aware of you and oakshot when uh when I read his book The archeology of weapons I still dip into it occasionally just for the sheer pleasure of reading it much later I uh I actually met the man and um I I met him probably
Probably four or five times before he died which was I think in 2002. what was he like very very he was very enthusiastic about the subject basically uh very friendly very um very approachable and I
Remember when uh the very first time I actually met him I uh I I was introduced to him by a chap from the Amazon armor society and um this guy took me over to you at um at the Park Lane Arms
Fair as well and uh and said this guy’s just written an article but you’ve got to see and uh and and knew it opened the article up said oh I say you know and uh there we were chatting away
Like we’ve been old friends for for decades you know you at oakshot passed away in 2002. over almost three decades he’d written numerous articles and books about the casteon blight yet the story wasn’t complete and still the swords kept appearing for auction there were still blanks
To be filled in after Hewitt died uh I was I was looking through these articles and I thought well I think I think somebody really needs to put it all together and you know there was definitely
A sense of a a bat on being passed I think Clive continued the work of you at oakshot by starting out with his own research his aim was to try to establish the true chain of events it still
Wasn’t known for sure when or even how the find occurred he was able to establish some of this as far as I know we’d pinned the year down to 1974 when they were discovered they were
Discovered by I think a dredging company as far as as far as we can tell anyway but where the dredging happened was another matter nobody seemed to know or want to tell even Oak shot
Himself was koi on the matter in his articles the general area of the Fine Place is known though for reasons of secured locations location may not be disclosed it was as if he couldn’t really um tell
You everything but he uh he sort of cheated he he put He put just enough information in there just to uh just so anybody in the know could actually determine roughly where these things were found there was a clue that the swords were found near afford and this along with the apparent
Date and type of the swords is how they came to be associated with the battle it’s often thought that the um that the phone point was actually near the site of the battle the 1453 battle in actual fact it was the other side of the of the town uh further Downstream
This changed everything not the Ford of razan which was close to the battlefield but the Ford of jean-bar just under a kilometer to the south west if true this put paid once and for all to the idea of defeated English soldiers losing their
Swords in the Ford as they fled Clive found that Oak shots seemed to be being fed Snippets of detail about the find the let slip clues in his articles it’s interesting from the first articles where it was said that the the souls were founded up in a wagon or something like that and
Then he revised that in the following article to say that they were found in some casks and later said that they were found in a barge it’s amazing seeing how the story develops a plausible picture began to emerge perhaps the swords have been collected after the battle
But it could have been before or even years later the swords were of types in use for much of the 15th century they’ve been loaded on board the river barge for transportation by English or gascon or by French troops we don’t know were they heading up or down river where they loaded around
Here perhaps spoils from the battle we don’t know we do know though that valuable swords packed together in a shipment perhaps in great barrels below decks would have been a serious commodity in the medieval arms trade of the Hundred Years War but just how did they come to be in the river
Right up to his very last words in print on the subject Oak shot himself wondered this for all any others know other things from that vote May lurk beneath the water but why did the barge sink Clive came up with something no one else had the dordoing is one
Of France’s largest rivers and it Bears witness to an incredible and potentially destructive natural force a tidal bore a surge of water driven by the sea I was quite surprised actually when I learned of this of this particular natural phenomenon that
Um that nobody had actually had actually mentioned it in any of the uh the literature on on cassion beforehand that’s why I did a bit of research on it and um the way that tidal balls work
Um the one at cast John is actually known as the Masquerade and it goes all the way up the door into a point about well several kilometers further than than cassion itself there would have been little warning the tidal bore makes hardly any sound until it hits if they weren’t prepared
Or if it was unusually strong the Masquerade might easily have swamped or sunk a small craft the barge and its cargo might also have drifted some distance before they sank into the mud of the dordoin I find it very interesting that that none of that information was ever mentioned by
Anyone beforehand really in fact why was so little known about the whole find even you at oakshot stated that he had to keep quiet on the matter we kept silence or some Authority was anxious less treasure Seekers should come looking for more again Clive came up with an explanation
I I suspect the The Authority that that you had mentioned was probably the French Navy at that point there was a law in France which said that anything discovered in the river had to be investigated by them castion isn’t too far from France’s Atlantic coast and a
Major Naval Base at Bordeaux in the early 70s this was the height of the Cold War so the French navy had to be thorough I have it from various sources that they uh they didn’t just do a washing brief as such they uh they they took they actually took
Pictures in the water cordoned off an area did a proper search but quite what they learned his um is open to question because none of that information is is currently available until it becomes available if ever will never know if the 80 recovered swords were the only ones
Nor whether anything else of the barge and its cargo remains undiscovered at bottoms of Knightsbridge the auction reaches its climax with Lot number 173 the casteon sword the starting price of 8 000 pounds is quickly left behind in the end it takes just 35 seconds
12 000 pounds and another of the extraordinary castion swords has a new owner what would you at oakshot have made of all this I think uh you at oakshop would be delighted with the interest that is being given to these sorts and he’d be fascinated by the fact that more keep
Popping up because he realized that this was not a straightforward case it was a an ongoing story and um well maybe he’s up there thinking hey keep at it you’re doing well there’s still questions to answer there’s little doubt though that if it all happened again today things would be very
Different I can’t help but imagine what it would be like if somebody had found those swords today it would be phenomenal it would be unbelievable we now know hardly anything about the swords of cassion were it not for the arms and armor trade and collectors and experts like David Oliver who
Commissioned the articles by you at oakshot and Clive Thomas all the all the academic institutions use your articles as a reference well it’s nice to think so I mean that’s that’s uh that’s one of the one of the objects of the exercise that these are our works of reference you know that’s
Something which you just look at and throw away it’s they are retained and how many people are account enough to to refer to to our articles to our catalogs in auction catalogs and um and articles and books which are which are written on the subject so hopefully it serves a purpose
Beggars belief now completely um as to how it was done it it just wouldn’t happen these days um and uh but but but the whole story it it provides a a really intriguing sort of mystery I suppose
We’ve now had 40 odd years and the fact there’s still a mystery to this story 40 years on uh I don’t think it’s a good sign I I’ll be optimistic and hope it will be resolved I wanted to be resolved but maybe this is a mystery that we’ll just go on and on
One day uh I hope somebody is going to do a proper archaeological investigation of the site
26 Comments
32:00 what an absolutely ludicrous statement from David Nicole. The antiquities trade does nothing but encourage looting, which not only robs us of any meaningful understanding of these objects but also despoils archaeological sites so that they can never be properly interpreted. These swords could have come from absolutely anywhere and this supposed "provenance" cooked up to drive up the sale price. For all we know, Oakeshott was getting a cut for his part in the scheme. Wouldn't surprise me at all.
Incidentally, the antiquities trade also incentivizes the creation of forgeries, some of which find their way into museum collections. I'm glad people are becoming more sensitive to this issue but the fact is this kind of thing goes on to this very day. Auction catalogs are full of unprovenanced items and no one with any power is bothered to stop it.
It is more likely that a wagon would be caught by a tidal surge than a boat or barge, the captain of which would normally have knowledge of such a possibility.
I dated a girl from bordeaux who told me a story of four children who while swimming in a river found an helmet and 2 swords close to the bank. After taking them home a farmer parent went to the spot and found more. Can this be the same swords. Makes you think.
its interesting there are far fewer swords than there should be. 80 weapons among the dead left untouched
Does smell like forgeries..😊
Kinda remind me of Spanish stuff except the pommels.
The Castile swards are derived from the old Roman Gladio.
What are the chances that these are a collection of forgeries, brought onto the market in a manner where it would be impossible to verify provenance? Most of the initial verification of these swords came from people profiting from them being real.
Edit: What needs to be done for a start is to do X-Ray Diffraction studies on as many of the blades as possible to see if they are too similar in metal content. If there is to much consistency in the alloy/trace metals along with the iron it would be a strong indicator that they are fake.
handling without gloves??!!
Should fix that title….
😳 bare handed, no glove ..
10:50
Sad theres too many questions and no archeological work.
Agree, he sounds as a sophisticated looter and grave robber
Bearing in mind the Iberian location of Castille, it is a fairly major ommission to fail to explain the difference between the 'Castile' in the title, and 'Castillon', the actual location in mid-western France, hundreds of miles and a whole mountain chain separated from 'Castille' (which is well within Spain).
Get Abby from NCIS to take a look, she'll figure it out 😅
Decade…10 years 😲
"Only a few people were truly in the know!" And allowed to flog the stuff in posh auction houses. Keeping the lucky finds prices high! What was needed was a archeological investigation at the find sight. Then we would know. But as usual. Money usurps all. If anyone really cared (beyond financial value) metallurgical investigation could pinpoint the location where the ore was mined.
The 'midevil dead' 1:18? I'd rather see an upload on the 'Grateful Dead'….js
So… the sword are stolen from an archeological important side and the British are trading with stolen historical artifacts?
My guess is these were in the possession of Russians haveing been taken from the Nazis by the cccp
I have two of these, my sons made them in my shop when they were teenagers, but they're not for sale. Too valuable to me.
Hideously dramaticized. Annoying "music".
Why wasn't The Wallace Collection museum involved in this documentary?
Most of my life I was interested in forging and metal work…. When I joined the military was probably my best chance but I was chosen for a different career. I wanted to do it all from forming custom sheet metal by hand into tanks and fenders to custom welding, even milling and lathe work. But most of all blade forging. My life has left me disabled but I’m still trying to make a hand full of my own knives… it’s just killing me. Maya if I had a press or power hammer of some sort I tried taking a piece of weld steel and tried to make a diamond blade profile and I only got may 6 inches of it done. I just can’t handle the labor it would take to make even a short sword.
СКАЗОЧНИКИ.
I live just across the mountain in Haywood county NC on the Tennessee border. 60 percent of which is Great Smoky Mountains parkland. My family has lived in this country for almost 200 years and in fact did once reside on what is now parkland before being forced to relocate in the 30's. I want to assuage you of any doubt that there are any "WILD MEN" whom live off the land and avoid human contact any longer. Although there are know instances of this in each case they always had some form of known humman contact be that distant relative or someone befriended whom would luor them in with food (little Debbie's etc) at first but would never get within 20 feet of them even after years. On the other hand i have hunted bear with hounds for years throughout the deep woods of this country and seen with my own eyes strage tracks that strongly resemble ape or ape like photos of tracks from google. As well as heard old mountain men tell stories in conference about families being harassed and murdered by Large hairy "Devils" whom come from within the deepest parts of these hills were "Any man amongst men with ary since dare not tred. Sometimes called by the name boojum they commonly said he prefers to "take" children, women, and small men in that order.