A Norwegian Farmer Just Discovered A 1,100-Year-Old Viking Sword In His Field

Published June 3, 2024
Updated May 14, 2025

The weapon dates to between 900 and 1050 C.E. and may be a famed Ulfberht sword.

Norway Farm Viking Sword

Rogaland County MunicipalityNorwegian farmer Øyvind Tveitane Lovra holding the Viking sword.

A farmer in Suldal, Norway, just unearthed a Viking sword in one of his fields. Originally thinking it was a scrap of metal from old farm equipment, he was prepared to throw it away when he noticed it had a blade and a handle.

After the farmer handed it over to the Archaeological Museum of the University of Stavanger, researchers confirmed that the discovery was a rare Viking sword crafted between 900 and 1050 C.E.

Now, archaeologists are hoping to determine how it ended up in the field in the first place.

Discovering The Viking Sword On A Farm

On May 27, 2024, Øyvind Tveitane Lovra and his son were cleaning up a field on their farm in Suldal, Norway, to prepare it for plowing when Lovra picked up a piece of metal. He originally assumed it was a piece of farm equipment, and he was preparing to toss it when he noticed it had a hilt.

Lovra immediately contacted the Rogaland County Council about the discovery.

“I quickly realized that this wasn’t an everyday find. For me, it was a given that I should turn it in. It’s about our history, and it’s nice to learn about what has been here before,” Lovra stated, according to a press release from the Archaeological Museum of the University of Stavanger.

The county sent two archaeologists, Lars Søgaard Sørensen and Kim Thunheim, to inspect and retrieve the sword. They used metal detectors on the property to see if there were more historic relics beneath the soil, but they did not find anything else. Then, Sørensen and Thunheim sent the weapon to the Archaeological Museum of the University of Stavanger for testing.

Astoundingly, the museum confirmed that the artifact is not only a 10th or 11th-century Viking weapon with no equal in the region, but it may also be a famed Ulfberht sword.

Where Did The Viking Sword Come From?

According to the museum, the sword measured 15 inches long and would have been twice that size when it was originally forged. X-rays revealed that the thick layer of clay the artifact was buried beneath preserved its handle and blade exceptionally well for a millennium.

Viking Sword Examination

Øyvind Nesvåg/Rogaland County MunicipalityResearchers examine the Viking sword.

However, the most incredible finding was the inscription on the blade that may have once read “VLFBERHT,” the name of a Viking swordsmith who created quality weapons with a high carbon content.

“When we first saw the sword, we were happy because it’s not often we get Viking Age swords. When we saw the X-ray image, we were really excited. We didn’t expect there to be an inscription on the blade,” Professor Sigmund Oehrl of the University of Stavanger stated in the press release.

Ulfberht swords were status symbols among Vikings. So far, archaeologists have unearthed more than 170 of these weapons, mainly from burials across Europe. They have found 45 of them in Norway, but this is the first one ever unearthed in Rogaland. This discovery comes after several similar finds in Europe, such as the Viking sword pulled from the River Cherwell in November 2023 and another discovered in the grave of a Viking warrior in Setesdal, Norway.

“This is very rare,” said Sørensen. “The sword was the greatest status symbol in the Viking Age, and it was a privilege to be allowed to carry a sword. It is not often that we, as archaeologists, get to experience something like this.”


After reading about the Viking sword found on a Norwegian farm, dive into the story of Viking Berserkers, the brutal Norse warriors who fought as if they were in a trance. Then, learn about Erik the Red, the Viking who settled Greenland.

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Amber Breese
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Amber Breese is an Editorial Fellow for All That's Interesting. She graduated from the University of Florida with a degree in political science, history, and Russian. Previously, she worked as a content creator for America House Kyiv, a Ukrainian organization focused on inspiring and engaging youth through cultural exchanges.
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Cara Johnson
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A writer and editor based in Charleston, South Carolina and an assistant editor at All That's Interesting, Cara Johnson holds a B.A. in English and Creative Writing from Washington & Lee University and an M.A. in English from College of Charleston and has written for various publications in her six-year career.
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Breese, Amber. "A Norwegian Farmer Just Discovered A 1,100-Year-Old Viking Sword In His Field." AllThatsInteresting.com, June 3, 2024, https://mirror2.pbh-network.com/norway-farm-viking-sword/. Accessed October 2, 2025.