• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Italy’s Sword In The Stone Isn’t A Fake, According To Chemical Analysis

May 3, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

At the Montesiepi Chapel in Siena, Italy, there is a strange artifact that will be instantly familiar to fans of Arthurian legend and anybody who has watched Disney’s The Sword in the Stone, being that it is a literal sword embedded inside a stone. According to a chemical analysis of the artifact, it is probably from the right time period rather than a recent fake.

The legend around the sword says that it was the weapon of Galgano Guidotti, a ruthless knight born in 1148 who went on to become a Catholic saint. According to the story – which largely comes from the canonization process which took place shortly after his death – Galgano’s father died early in Galgano’s childhood.

Advertisement

A rebellious child, Galgano fell in with a bad crowd. In today’s terms, that might mean people doing drugs, but at the time this meant participating “very eagerly in internal wars led by local lords of Gherardesca, Pannocchieschi and others, shedding blood of his neighbors”. 

Galgano continued in this way for years, relishing the violence, before one day falling off his horse and having a religious revelation, converting shortly afterward to Christianity. According to legend, he abandoned his fiance and began a hermit’s life, all the while being served visions nagging at him to build a hermitage of his own.

Galgano was said to have thrust his old sword into the stone, a symbol of how he was abandoning his violent life. Rather than acting like a rock, it “yielded like butter” according to versions of the legend, leaving the hilt protruding from the top and the tip poking out the other end of the rock. Since then, the sword has remained in the stone, now housed inside the Rotunda in Siena, Tuscany.

As nonsensical as that sounds, there is a bit of a curveball coming up – in the form of scientific analysis. In 2001, chemist Luigi Garlaschelli examined the artifact and found a number of surprising details, while dispelling the myth that the sword was a recent fake.

Advertisement

“The style of the sword is consistent with that of other similar weapons from the same time,” Garlaschelli wrote at the time, “we can even label it as an Xa-type sword, typical of the late twelfth century”.

Garlaschelli retrieved samples of the sword from within the rock via a hole drilled into it and submitted them for analysis.

“Although iron artifacts cannot be unequivocally dated,” he wrote, “the composition of the metal did not reveal that modern alloys had been used, and so it is fully compatible with a medieval origin”.

Further analysis added weight to the sword being an authentic artifact from the time of Galgano’s life.

Advertisement

“We compared the ‘fingerprints’ of trace elements within the sword’s metal with that of pieces of iron slag that can still be found around the great abbey of St. Galgano. This slag is the waste from the small foundries used by the monks to manufacture their small iron objects, using local iron ore,” Garlaschelli explained.

Weirder still, a pair of mummified arms held near the sword – said to be those of thieves who had tried to take the stone, before being struck down by god ~ were also carbon-dated back to the 12th century. Meanwhile, it was also determined that the hilt protruding out of the rock and the sword blade underneath are one piece. 

As annoying as it is, it remains a mystery precisely how the sword got in there, beyond vague legends that the stone somehow turned into butter.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. UK PM Johnson to address lawmakers about Afghanistan on Monday
  2. Pandemic-hit Qantas weighs new pay structure to keep key executives
  3. Air New Zealand reels from Auckland curbs, Australia bubble loss
  4. Stranded Dolphins’ Brains Show Signs Of Alzheimer’s-Like Disease

Source Link: Italy's Sword In The Stone Isn't A Fake, According To Chemical Analysis

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Wearing A Tie Might Have A Concerning Consequence
  • How Many Babies Did Dinosaurs Have? And Other Questionable Prehistoric Parenting Practices
  • Cookiecutter Sharks Are Adorable Little Freaks – And Eat Their Prey In A Bizarre Way
  • 6,000 Years Ago, A Mysterious Human Population Entered South America – Then Vanished Without A Trace
  • “Interstellar Concert”: ESA Beams “True Unofficial Space Anthem” To NASA’s Voyager 1
  • Over 700 Manatees Gather In Florida Park, The Largest Group Ever Seen There
  • Good News, The Milky Way May Not Collide With Andromeda In 5 Billion Years After All
  • What Is This Giant Line That Slices Through Scotland?
  • “Unlike Anything We Have Seen Before”: Repeating Signal From Deep In Galactic Plane Puzzles Astronomers
  • How You Can Navigate Your Way North Or South Using A Crescent Moon
  • Help, My Nails Have Turned Green! What Is Chloronychia, AKA “Green Nail Syndrome”?
  • Is 1 Billion The Same Number Around The World? The Short Answer Is: No
  • The World’s Oceans Are Getting Darker, Raising “A Genuine Cause For Concern”
  • Seals Playing Video Games For Science? We’ve Got The Footage To Prove It
  • Are There Colors That Only Exist In Our Brains? Find Out More In Issue 35 Of CURIOUS – Out Now
  • If They Take Fluoride Out Of The Water, What Could Happen To Americans’ Teeth?
  • Paraglider Accidentally Flies Into The “Death Zone” 8,500 Meters Up – And Survives
  • World’s Oldest Fingerprint, Bioacoustics Could Give Us “A Peek Into The Language Of Wolves”, And Much More This Week
  • Please Stop Jamming Coins Into The Rocky Cracks Of Legendary Giant’s Causeway
  • We’re A Step Closer To Knowing Who Made The Earliest Known Stone Tools
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version