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View Full Version : Japanese or Chinese Polearm ?


drac2k
2nd June 2025, 07:39 PM
I am not quite sure what I have;at first appearance it seems that this could be a Japanese or Chinese polearm, however after the binding, the haft looks out of place;the lower part could have been "barrack cut," to bring it home from a foreign port, but I believe the whole lower half is entirely foreign.

drac2k
18th June 2025, 12:45 PM
Any guesses?

kronckew
18th June 2025, 05:14 PM
It looks Japanese, a Kama Yari spear. They come with these side spikes, facing forward or to the rear... The construction of the haft mounting looks traditional. As noted, It could have been cut down by someone for shipping convenience. Common for spears. Many have the joint converted so they shaft can be re-joined for display, tho it's not a strong as the original.


My Yari point is a Fukuro Yari point, pocketed for easier re-hafting in case it gets broken, rather than the long tang most have that requires it to fit a socket drilled into the haft, then reinforced with metal bands, and/or other bindings. It also has been shortened. :D

drac2k
19th June 2025, 04:18 AM
Thanks Kronckew.It sure looks like a Kama Yari;just a little cruder than what I am used to seeing in Japanese weapons.

pbleed
19th June 2025, 11:27 PM
I am reasonably sure that this "polearm" is actually a Japanese fire fighting tool. These are called "tobiguchi". Most are short fire-axe type things that were used in urban homes and businesses of pre-modern urban Japan, the wisdom being that when a fire broke out in the rather lightly constructed downtown areas, folks could pull down thatch and walls to stop the spread of the flames. Long, "polearm" versions are not common, but they may have been made for neighborhood teams or operations that offered tall structures, places like temple yards mebbe.