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Building a Viking Riveted Cauldron — Iron Cookware
Forge

Oluşturan

Forge

22. March 2026

Building a Viking Riveted Cauldron — Iron Cookware

The riveted iron cauldron was the centerpiece of the Viking hearth — suspended over the central fire by a chain, it was used for boiling stews, soups, porridge, and rendering fat. The most famous example is the large cauldron from the Oseberg ship burial (circa 834 AD). Viking-era cauldrons were constructed by forging bloom iron into flat sheets, shaping them into curved panels, and riveting the panels together — a technique that required considerable skill. The rim was reinforced with a forged iron band, and a suspension ring or arch allowed the cauldron to hang from a chain over the hearth.

Advanced
8-12 hours

Talimatlar

1

Forge Iron Sheets

Heat bloom iron and hammer it into flat sheets approximately 2-3mm thick. You need several sheets large enough to form the curved panels of the cauldron bowl. Each sheet should be roughly rectangular — approximately 30cm × 20cm for a medium-sized cauldron.

Forge-weld smaller pieces together if needed to achieve the required sheet size. Work at welding heat (white-hot, with sparks flying) and hammer firmly to fuse the iron. Achieving uniform thickness across large sheets requires patience and skill — this is the most labor-intensive part of the project.

2

Shape Bowl Sections

Working over a forming stake (a domed iron or wooden form set into a stump) or a dished stump, hammer each sheet into a curved section. Each piece forms one panel of the cauldron bowl. Work from the center outward, rotating the piece regularly to maintain even curvature.

The number of panels depends on the desired cauldron size — typically 4 to 8 panels for a medium cauldron (30-40cm diameter). Each panel overlaps its neighbor by 2-3cm at the edges where they will be riveted together. Shape a separate flat or slightly dished disc for the bottom of the cauldron.

3

Punch Rivet Holes

Along the overlapping edges of each panel, punch evenly-spaced holes (every 1.5-2cm) using a punch set over a backing hole in the anvil or a punching block. The holes should be just large enough to receive the rivet shanks — approximately 4-5mm diameter.

Clamp or hold corresponding panels together and punch matching holes through both layers simultaneously to ensure perfect alignment. Misaligned rivet holes will cause gaps and leaks in the finished cauldron.

4

Rivet the Sections Together

Insert iron rivets through aligned holes from the outside of the cauldron. On the inside, place a rove (a small iron washer or diamond-shaped plate) over the protruding rivet shank. Support the rivet head on a backing tool or small anvil and peen (hammer) the shank end over the rove, mushrooming it flat to lock the joint.

Work systematically around the entire cauldron, riveting all panels together. Start at the bottom and work upward. The overlapping joints should be watertight when all rivets are set. If gaps remain, additional rivets or gentle hammer-closing of the seam can seal them.

5

Forge and Attach the Rim Band

Forge a flat iron strip (approximately 2cm wide, 3mm thick) and bend it into a circle matching the cauldron mouth diameter. This rim band reinforces the top edge of the cauldron, preventing the thin walls from cracking or deforming.

Place the rim band around the outside of the top edge and rivet it in place using the same riveting technique. Space rivets every 3-4cm around the entire circumference. The rim should sit flush with the top edge of the cauldron walls.

6

Attach the Suspension Ring

Forge an iron ring (approximately 8-10cm diameter) or a semicircular arch that spans the mouth of the cauldron. Attach it to the rim band at two opposite points using rivets or by forging the ends into hooks that clip over the rim.

This suspension ring or arch is where a chain connects to hang the cauldron over the hearth. The attachment must be very strong — a full cauldron of stew is extremely heavy. Some Viking-era cauldrons used a separate adjustable chain hook (a trammel) to control the height above the fire.

Test the completed cauldron by filling with water and checking for leaks at the rivet joints. Seal any drips by peening the rivets tighter or applying a thin slurry of clay and ash to the inside joints (this was a historical technique).

Malzemeler

  • Bloom Iron (for sheets) - 3-5 kg pieceYer Tutucu
    Görüntüle
  • Iron Rivets - 50-100 pieceYer Tutucu
    Görüntüle
  • Iron Strip (for rim band) - ~1m pieceYer Tutucu
    Görüntüle

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