If you try to hammer stakes into the ground with heavy hammers, because light one handed versions don't develop enough energy, you will perhaps discover some things, just like me.
If the hammerhead is small it's quite possible that you damage the stake. As a result it doesn't go down as deep as you want. So I would favour a broad head for that purpose, especially if I have to work under conditions that make me nervous.
If you swing the hammer with two hands you need someone to hold the stake, so only 50% of the people involved need a hammer.
Considering things on a theoretical level, it would make sense to me to have lead integrated for weight, hard wood for forming a cheap, but durable, hammerhead and an iron surface to make it last even longer because the pressure is more even distributed on the wood. That's cheap and pretty low tech for such a tool.
However, you just need one side of this hammer to hammer down stakes. The other side can serve whatever purpose you consider beneficial, like another side for hammering or mounting a spike, a blade or a hook. Personally, if I was an archer in these days, I would opt for a narrow blade. It makes a nice tool to chop wood and it should still be narrow and strong enough to damage armour. No, it doesn't have to break it, just causing a nasty trauma.
This reminds me about the loaded stick, called shillelagh, used in Ireland. Such an item could easily be carried by anybody and would serve quite nicely to hit someone hard, although you should use a bigger size against plate armour.
In a museum in Romania they had lots of very simple wooden clubs next to swords and yatagans as examples of medieval weapons used in warfare in this region, but I'm not very sure about the correctness of the reconstruction.
M Davis wrote: |
Even today, anyone who has spent much time camping probably either brings a mallet/hammer or profoundly regrets leaving it behind. |
You can use an axe with a flat butt for that purpose. :P