Posts: 5,981 Location: Birmingham, Alabama
Fri 29 Jul, 2011 12:57 pm
Military/Judicial Uses of the Boar Spear
The hunting spear of the 15th and 16th centuries was adopted for use in the field and judicial lists, apparently without significant modification of the form or construction. We see them in contexts like the one below and in images of combat. The toggle seems to be common in all applications, as does the leather binding and tacks. The possible exception is that an offensive spike appears on the que of some spears, which suggests an adaptation for use against humans. I'd like to start a military spear project similar to the one shown below but I don't feel like I have enough information on this subject. What can y'all tell me about this?
Specifically, I'd like to know...:
•...if the leather binding serves any purpose other than providing a secure grip (which would seem especially important given the implied force against the toggle).
•...if there was any difference between hunting and non-hunting toggles.
•...if toggles were always present in military versions of this weapon (the spear below does have a toggle, as do those in adjacent images from this edition of Talhoffer).
•...if military/judicial spear toggles were more likely to be of the steel/iron form secured by a rivet through the socket.
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