Intricate gold inlays found on ritual spears – History
An X-ray examination of the gilded bronze spear sheath from the Kofun period of Japan (300-538 AD) found that the iron spear inside was embedded in complex patterns. This is the first spear with inlay decoration found in East Asia.
The artifact was discovered in 1954 under a boulder on the Holy Island. 1954. Uksi – The ancient godto shrine occupied the entire island, and from the 4th to the 9th century, dedicated to religious rituals, inviting the protection of the sea gods on the sea from the early imperial governments. It is believed that the gods live on the boulders of the island and that the devotion is part of the ritual of devotion.
Early rituals were performed on top boulders. In the late 5th and 7th centuries, they moved to the ground under the shadow of the boulders, where the spear sheaths were. More than 80,000 precious artifacts have been found in Okinawa, all of which are designated national treasures.
The Japanese Cultural Affairs Bureau is raying X-rays and analyses more than 4,200 metal workpieces from OkinoShima, as part of a conservation program. The X-rays of the spear sheath confirm the inlay on the iron spear that is still embedded in the sheath. Outstanding findings trigger more detailed imaging and modeling analysis.
The sword became an iron spear inside the scabbard. It is believed that it was a triangular pointed iron spear made in the Japanese archipelago from the late 6th to early 7th century and was ancestralized from the Korean Peninsula. It is fully stitched, and the mode is likely a combination of the modified turtle shell and phoenix design and obabesque mode. In Japan or abroad, there are no other examples of this type, which is a great example of the peaks of scalps and spears in East Asia at that time. The structure of the spear has little practical use and is considered to be dedicated to the rituals provided on Okinoshima. This discovery gives us a glimpse of the importance of what the Amatto government says to rituals on Okino, a ritual that can shed light on OkinoShima.

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The sword became an iron spear inside the scabbard. It is believed that it was a triangular pointed iron spear made in the Japanese archipelago from the late 6th to early 7th century and was ancestralized from the Korean Peninsula. It is fully stitched, and the mode is likely a combination of the modified turtle shell and phoenix design and obabesque mode. In Japan or abroad, there are no other examples of this type, which is a great example of the peaks of scalps and spears in East Asia at that time. The structure of the spear has little practical use and is considered to be dedicated to the rituals provided on Okinoshima. This discovery gives us a glimpse of the importance of what the Amatto government says to rituals on Okino, a ritual that can shed light on OkinoShima.