29th January 2023, 06:14 PM | #31 |
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Thank you for your pictures and questions. The short answer is I dont know however I did have a good look for similar styles but didnt have any luck except a Japanese Type 32 Cavalry sabre. with a securing device similar to what is seen on your sword. Lets hope a member can narrow this down a bit.. Regards Peter Hudson.
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29th January 2023, 09:11 PM | #32 |
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National History Museum Bucharest.
Sica discovered at Orodel, Dolj county, Romania. Falx discovered at Sarmizegetusa Romania. |
29th January 2023, 09:15 PM | #33 |
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Depictions of falx on Trajan's Column. Replica at the National History Museum in Bucharest.
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30th January 2023, 10:00 AM | #34 |
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Have you tried hanging the scabbard (with the sword) by its suspension rings ? does it stay balanced or the weight of knuckle guard tends to twist it ?
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30th January 2023, 12:56 PM | #35 |
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30th January 2023, 01:22 PM | #36 |
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One (crucial) detail the inventor of this 'prototype' didn't ponder on .
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30th January 2023, 02:26 PM | #37 |
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Returning to the original post at #1 on this thread I refer readers to the technique of fighting with the Scythe Weapon seen below. A squad of 12 men could effectively defend against charging Cavalry by mixing Scythe weapons with spear carriers.. It would appear that the greatest danger would be to the horses from the downward slashes of the Scythes. Variant forms are shown in the second chart. Records show that large numbers of Scythemen were included in the Orbat of Polish troops even to the point of over running Russian Artillery positions. Certainly the weapon would have had a psycholigical advantage upon the enemy and the damage would have been enormous.
Peter Hudson. Last edited by Peter Hudson; 30th January 2023 at 04:52 PM. |
30th January 2023, 03:45 PM | #38 |
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30th January 2023, 03:54 PM | #39 | |
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Quote:
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31st January 2023, 07:17 PM | #40 |
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Further weapons made from Scythes.
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31st January 2023, 08:04 PM | #41 |
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I note from Forum athttp://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?p=97452 #5 the picture below
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2nd October 2023, 06:12 PM | #42 |
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War Scythes.
Please see https://www.cambridge.org/core/journ...3D72E20A96F73D
I think the above reference well supports the idea of the Scythe used in war. Regards, Peter Hudson. |
2nd October 2023, 07:00 PM | #43 |
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Monmouth rebellion
Fantastic account of Monmouth's ill fated rebellion. I mentioned it briefly in my Shotley Bridge history but had never delved deeply into the affair. Brilliant account. Thank-you.
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4th October 2023, 03:42 AM | #44 |
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The scythe as a weapon is something that has puzzled me for a long time, principally because 60 or so years back I had a weekend job clearing neglected building blocks that had become overgrown with grass, and I used a scythe to do the work, I could not understand how a scythe blade could possibly be mounted on a pole, the way the pictures I had available back then showed it as a weapon, the tang & mounting hook on the only scythes I knew where not straight, but were bent at a couple of angles.
Then there was the memory of what I had been taught in high school, that the English scythe had absolutely nothing at all to do with the Scythians known to the Romans, apparently the word "Scythian" & "Scythia" as they were Anglicised , had come from an old Persian word meaning shepherd(?), and that old Persian word had gone through several transliterations and corruptions before it came into Old English in a form that can no longer be spelt with English letters, thus another corruption took place & we finished with with "scythe", & that was a tool. Is it possible that the tool we now know as a scythe is in fact not related at all to the sword-like weapon that resembles a scythe in form? Thus two objects, a tool, & a weapon that do have similarities, but are of totally different origin. Can anybody clarify this matter for me? Thank you. |
4th October 2023, 05:12 AM | #45 | |
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Quote:
That must mean that the word Scythe the cutting tool has nothing to do with Scythia the country as it is a spelling mistake. The name Scythia ...the country does appear to mean country of the nomads...actually brilliant horsemen...which I suppose is the same as sheep or goat herders..or shepherds.....thus SCYTHIA was the name that stuck... I have tried to show how the tool became modified as a weapon..and although there is even a Fektbok illustrating duelling Scythes unmodified it is clear that the Polish were leading the field in using the weapon as a sort of spear/ pole weapon...but that it also appears on other countries armouries and seen in many English battles. I have seen Artwork of a Jacobite battle where Scythes were used and in that incident an English officer had been killed by being struck by a Scythe so modified... But I cannot find the artwork!!... so annoying when that happens... As it happens the swordmakers of Shotley Bridge made agricultural tools and one of those was Scythes... Regards,Peter Hudson. |
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4th October 2023, 12:35 PM | #46 |
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Thank you for your response Peter.
So it seems that things are pretty much as I thought them to be. The Oxford Dictionary on Historical principles places first usage of the current spelling in the early 1500's, and as you have demonstrated we simply do not have the necessary tools to write the word as it was written originally. Yes, I understand that the Scythians of the ancient Greeks & Romans were a nomadic people, but I suspect that a close examination of the etymology of "Scythian" might well provide a different root. As to actual working scythes being used as weapons, I guess they could have been, one thought that comes to mind immediately is that they might be very useful in removing the lower parts of a horse's leg --- or a man's leg for that matter. Echoes of MP & the Search for the Holy Grail. |
4th October 2023, 07:00 PM | #47 |
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Yes I think your final paragraph has it...Where a word becomes muddled in meaning because of mis spelling I think that has thrown people here ...My notes above have focussed on the war scythe and the facts seem to point at fairly extensive useage of the modified Scythr as a type of peasant spear cheap and easy to modify and lethal against Cavalry ...and infantry.
The area that has little meat on its bones is in the use of teh Scythe blade as a backsword as the only viable form appears here...and is only a sketch but is intersting; please see https ://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scythe_sword That sword sketch can also be seen at #3 above. The scythe sword of Thomas Müntzer and a representation of the "summer" half of its runic calendar. The scythe sword (Sensenschwert) was a type of single-edged sword of the German Renaissance, related to the Dussack. It consisted of the blade of a scythe to which a sword hilt was attached. Like the falx or falcata of antiquity, it was thus a curved sword with the cutting edge on the inside (as opposed to the scimitar or sabre type with the edge on the outside). The only known surviving example of a true scythe sword (its blade being made from an actual scythe), is that of Thomas Müntzer (1489–1525), kept in the Historical Museum, Dresden. This sword has a representation of a runic calendar incised on the blade. Demmin (1893) notes the existence of other sword blades of the early 16th century bearing runic calendars in Berlin, Vienna, Paris, Munich, Graz and Luxembourg. It is possible that "scythe sword" may refer to the Thracian romphaia (Greek: ῥομφαία), most commonly a long curved blade with its[1] cutting edge on the concave or inside edge with a piercing point, attached to a pole (wood handle) that's shorter than the blade. The Thracian romphaia is often compared to a Dacian falx, a longer version of a romphaia. The romphaia was a close-combat bladed weapon used by the Thracians as early as 350–400 BC. The two-handed falx is clearly related to the Thracian rhomphaia. It is a derivative of both the sword and the spear, used by the Dacians. Both the romphaia and falx weapons were made in one hand and two handed versions. Most surviving examples suggest the smaller shorter "one hand" type actually would have been "hand and a half", where the second hand was used more as a lever to make strokes, thrusts, recoveries and angle of attack changes more rapid and fluid. So, "scythe sword" could refer to a romphaia, or falx possibly. Last edited by Peter Hudson; 4th October 2023 at 07:19 PM. |
4th October 2023, 07:33 PM | #48 |
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Battle of Frankenhausen 1525. War Scythe.
Here is an artwork worth noting for its illustration of a modified Scythe used in the centre against a mounted Knight ... This was in the early 1500s. This underscores the use of such improvised agricultural tools in war.
Please see https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...._Mai_1525.jpg |
4th October 2023, 07:36 PM | #49 |
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Battle of Frankenhausen 1525
Here is that picture...
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4th October 2023, 08:51 PM | #50 |
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Thank you Peter.
This area of weaponry is a very long way from my own area of interest, & I freely admit I know very little about ancient European weaponry, however, to my eye there is a glaring anomaly in the foremost scythe-like blade in this picture. I refer to the scythe-like weapon held by the man in the red jacket, front centre. The blade of this weapon appears to be affixed to the shaft with a socket mounting. I am not some sort of expert on the development history of scythes, but every scythe I have ever seen, every picture of a scythe I have ever seen, has the blade mounted at 90 degrees to the shaft, the scythe is used parrallel to & a little above ground level, it is used by putting the whole weight of the body behind the swing of the blade, the ergometric action comes from waist and shoulders. The scythe as a tool cannot have a socket mounted blade, and for a smith to remove the original tang mount and replace with a socket would require smithing work that would be perhaps more difficult than to make a new blade. Perhaps, because of material shortages this might have been done, but it seems to me that to make a scythe-like blade would be a whole lot easier than to take a perfectly good tool and try to turn it into a functional weapon. The scythe blade in large part owes its effectiveness as a harvesting tool to its very thin blade supported by a heavy back, to remove the tang and replace with a socket, & then to remove the socket & replace with a tang when conflict was over, would be an expensive & relatively difficult exercise. Is it possible that the type of scythe-like weapon shown in this picture was in fact a purpose made weapon, not a converted farmer's tool? |
4th October 2023, 10:34 PM | #51 |
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It was apparently an easy job for a blacksmith to take the Scythe Blade off and re align the connection for a shaft so that the blade became a spear like extension . That is apparent in English and Polish examples of this weapon. Making a sword would be more complicated ...perhaps that is why not so many sword examples exist...
Actually post 37 shows the different stages a scythe blade needed to go through to do the work... Regards, Peter Hudson. |
5th October 2023, 12:12 AM | #52 |
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https://www.cambridge.org/core/journ...3D72E20A96F73D
This webpage above is full of historical examples of Scythes in a war role and has also set out several methods by which a Scythe can be converted to a weapon. The original stath or scythe pole is ditched for a longer straight pole and various methods are noted for attaching the blade to its new pole. Peter Hudson. |
5th October 2023, 01:32 AM | #53 |
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Thank you Peter, that Cambridge article needs a close look.
I do understand forge work very well, and if the angled tang is simply reforged to a straight tang, then that is a quick, easy job and easy to reverse. My problem with the red jacket man in the pic is that the blade looks to have a socket rather than a tang, but maybe we're seeing a ferrule rather than a socket, in which case the blade could have a straight tang. A quick glance at the Cambridge article shows that sometimes mechanical means were used to provide a blade mounting, this is something that did not occur to me, but I guess in desperate times it becomes a matter of whatever will fill the need is used, without too much thought of integrity or durability. The idea that making a sword is complicated depends totally upon the quality of the sword. To make a functional blade that could be mounted as a sword is not at all a difficult nor a lengthy job, but to make a quality blade and then mount it as a quality sword is not easy work, nor is it work that takes a short period of time. Saturday night Specials are inexpensive, elegant weapons can cost a kingdom. Perhaps the reason for a small population of swords might be related to several reasons & could embrace both economic and hierarchical reasons? Thank you for assisting my understanding. Last edited by A. G. Maisey; 5th October 2023 at 01:42 AM. |
5th October 2023, 01:46 PM | #54 | |
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5th October 2023, 06:40 PM | #55 |
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Yes but its already placed at #3.
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5th October 2023, 10:08 PM | #56 |
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Forging War Scythes.
Finally an imptression of the way Scythes were modified on the forge...
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6th October 2023, 03:58 AM | #57 |
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Truly Peter?
I can see people working at an anvil with hot metal, & I can see blades that I guess are scythe blades on the floor with modified tangs, but are the men working at the anvil supposed to be modifying a scythe tang? |
6th October 2023, 04:40 AM | #58 |
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Yes. Posts 41 and 37 both show the different stages to go through to modify the Scythe blades . The soldiers are waiting in the Forge picture above with poles waiting to be fitted as spears and as illustrated in the earlier battle scenes.
Peter Hudson. |
6th October 2023, 05:00 AM | #59 |
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1831 PolishScythemen fighting Rusian Cavalry.
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6th October 2023, 07:22 AM | #60 |
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Thank you for your response Peter.
I do appreciate your clarification of my understanding of the scythe as a weapon. I believe that what we can see on the anvil is a billet and it appears to be being forged out to a different dimension, so perhaps what the smith is working on is intended for use in mounting the already modified blade to shaft, I cannot see how it relates to the modification of the blade, but it might relate to the mounting of the blade. |
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