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Saga Vanecek found the sword while wading in Sweden's Lake Vidöstern.
Saga Vanecek found the sword while wading in Sweden’s Lake Vidöstern. [NPR]

8-Year-Old Girl Discovers Iron Age Sword In Swedish Lake

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Earlier this summer, an 8-year-old girl named Saga Vanecek was doing what she often does: wading in Sweden’s Lake Vidöstern.

“I like to walk around finding rocks and sticks in the water and then I usually walk around with my hands and knees in the water and in the sand,” she explained to Radio Sweden yesterday.

It was then that she felt something odd beneath her hand and knee. She lifted the object and saw that it had a handle.

An iron age sword was discovered by an 8-year-old girl who was wading in a lake this summer in southern Sweden, in what local authorities called "a spectacular find."
An iron age sword was discovered by an 8-year-old girl who was wading in a lake this summer in southern Sweden, in what local authorities called “a spectacular find.” [NPR]
She pulled it out of the water and carried it over to her father. “Dad, I found a sword,” she said.

“I’m not sure you should be touching it anymore,” he replied. “It looks fragile.”

Saga and her father took the sword to authorities and found that the sword had was very old indeed.

“Indeed an amazing story!” Mikael Nordström, head of the cultural heritage department at the Jönköpings County Museum, told NPR in email. “We now believe that the sword is about 1,500 years old.”

According to the museum, the sword is about 33 inches long and “exceptionally well-preserved.” It even has a sheath made of wood and leather.

Further searching in the lake yielded a piece of metal jewelry from A.D. 300-400.

In the coming days, a team including the Jönköpings County Museum, the county’s administrative board, and members of the Swedish Metal Searchers Association will conduct additional searches of the area. They hope to find other items that would offer clues about the sword and the jewelry.

Conservators are now examining the items, and it will be at least a year before the sword will be exhibited, Nordström told Swedish news site The Local.

“Why it has come to be there, we don’t know,” he told the site. “But perhaps it’s a place of sacrifice. At first we thought it could be graves situated nearby the lake, but we don’t think that anymore.”

Further searching in the lake turned up a piece of metal jewelry from 300-400 AD.
Further searching in the lake turned up a piece of metal jewelry from 300-400 AD. [NPR]
Saga moved with her family to Sweden just last year, The Local reports: she grew up in Minneapolis, and her father is from Minnesota.

And what does Saga think of her ancient discovery?

“That it was pretty cool and that it was exciting,” she told Radio Sweden. “It’s not that common that you find a sword that is 1,500 years old!”

NPR’s Liana Simstrom contributed to this report.

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