- Almace
In the legendary "Song of Roland", Almace, Almice or Almacia is the sword of
Turpin, Archbishop of Reims , one of the last three Franks to die at theBattle of Roncevaux Pass , along withRoland (Orlando in Italian) and Gualter de Hum.Unlike Roland's much more famous sword
Durendal , very little is said about Almace in the Song of Roland. However theNorse saga , the "Karlamagnus saga" expands this slightly fn|1, claiming that a sword called Kurt (better known as theCurtana ), Almace and Durendal were three swords forged by the legendary Anglo-Saxonblacksmith Weyland , and presented toCharlemagne to secure the release of a Norse prisoner. Charlemagne tested the swords by seeing how far they would cut into a steel mound; Kurt penetrated "a hand's breadth" but was notched, Almace penetrated a hand's breadth without damage, and Durendal penetrated "half the length of a man's foot". Charlemagne gave Kurt toOgier the Dane and Almace to Bishop Turpin, and initially kept Durendal for himself. (Later he was told in a dream to give Durendal to Count Roland.)Another legendfn|2, written on Curtana itself, claims that it, Durendal, and Charlemagne's
Joyeuse are a set of three, leaving Almace's origins unexplained.The
etymology of the name is uncertain but it may be derived from theOld Norse language "almusa", meaningalms .Notes
*fnb|1http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Italian_Studies/people/zafrin/kms2.html
*fnb|2Bullfinch's Mythology, Legends of Charlemagne, Chapter 24
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