Revised version using RAW files and Phorocatch. This is a fragment of the lower section of a 1100 year-old Viking-Age Christian cross, embedded high up on its side into the north wall of the nave. The model has been turned 90 degrees clockwise to show how it would originally have been viewed. Like several other sculptures from the time, it depicts the saga hero Sigurd’s battle with the dragon Fafnir - see the sketchfab model at https://skfb.ly/6qvGT and the film telling the story at http://www.vimeo.com/201941201 . What’s a Norse saga hero doing on a Christian cross?… Perhaps Viking converts saw a parallel between Sigurd being saved by magic blood, and Christian beliefs about Christ’s blood. Christ’s feet and lower legs can be seen at the top of the fragment. For an academic description, and a good still photograph, see Vol 6 of the Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture now at https://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/archives/view/wist_ahrc_2019/fullrecord.cfm?casss_mon_id=1808
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