> Shlomi Katsin, a student in the university’s Department of Maritime Civilizations, was swimming off Dor Beach when he saw a group of divers with metal detectors, the school said. Katsin feared the divers were antiquities thieves and was able to chase them out of the area. Then, he saw the sword protruding from the seafloor, the university said. The discovery was entirely „by chance,“ according to the news release.
Is it just me or is there something.. off and odd.. about the story?
soggycow2790 on
Hopefully they destroy this relic of hatred.
cr33pz on
„shit guys a student caught us, Run!!“
HowitzerIII on
Crazy, this same person discovered another Crusades sword in 2021 as well. What are the chances.
InorganicTyranny on
Incredible find. It’s hard to tell with all the corrosion, but the point seems unusually acute for a 12th century weapon (Oakeshotte types X – XII would have predominated, and had more spatulate tips). I’m no expert but I wonder if this is a 13th century weapon instead; the crusader states lasted until 1291 and mostly hugged the coast after the third crusade, so the opportunity for a later blade in the water of the Mediterranean from that era seems plausible.
Roaddog113 on
Is that you, Arthur?
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cool!
> Shlomi Katsin, a student in the university’s Department of Maritime Civilizations, was swimming off Dor Beach when he saw a group of divers with metal detectors, the school said. Katsin feared the divers were antiquities thieves and was able to chase them out of the area. Then, he saw the sword protruding from the seafloor, the university said. The discovery was entirely „by chance,“ according to the news release.
Is it just me or is there something.. off and odd.. about the story?
Hopefully they destroy this relic of hatred.
„shit guys a student caught us, Run!!“
Crazy, this same person discovered another Crusades sword in 2021 as well. What are the chances.
Incredible find. It’s hard to tell with all the corrosion, but the point seems unusually acute for a 12th century weapon (Oakeshotte types X – XII would have predominated, and had more spatulate tips). I’m no expert but I wonder if this is a 13th century weapon instead; the crusader states lasted until 1291 and mostly hugged the coast after the third crusade, so the opportunity for a later blade in the water of the Mediterranean from that era seems plausible.
Is that you, Arthur?