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Mark Millman wrote: |
Dear M. Hermes,
These are pike-heads with bodkin points, rather than leaf-shaped points. The bodkin style is less common than points with leaf-shaped blades, but not by any means rare. I'm not aware that there's any evidence to suggest that bodkin points were considered especially well suited to piercing armor. Perhaps they were more durable, but mostly I think they were simply a different style than leaf-shaped blades. They may have been easier to make, but the ornamental work on the points that you show suggests that any potentially greater ease of manufacture is unlikely to have been a significant factor in choosing one style or the other. The spheres between the blades and the sockets suggest, as your other informant indicated, that these are sixteenth-century examples. There's some evidence that this ornamented style may have been most popular early in the century, before 1530, at least in England, but it appears to have persisted throughout the century, particularly in Italy. You can see bodkin-point pike-heads and pike-heads with beads and decorated sockets like those you show, on the British Royal Armouries' Web site. If you prefer, you can also go to their collections search page and look for other examples. My search was for "pike" in the 16th century (the first entered in the dialogue box, and the second chosen in the date filter). I found two photos with other examples like yours, combining bodkin points with the spherical ornaments in the Royal Armouries' collection: Object Number: VII.767 Object Number: VII.137 (I'm not sure that the object numbers in these cases refer to the points showing both bodkin blades and beads. In fact, in the first case I'm sure that the object number is for the other pike.) Edited to add: Here's an ornamented bodkin point from the seventeenth century: Object Number: VII.2952 This is just a quick answer without extensive research. You may well be able to find more. I hope this proves helpful. Best, Mark Millman |
Jeff Cierniak wrote: |
I have a much less in depth question: what is the cross section? Square, I assume? |
Gregg Sobocinski wrote: |
I would like to comment that square profile spikes (like bodkin points on projectiles) are indeed designed for bursting mail and are the most effective point type for penetrating metal plate. The edges of the spike cut the metal during penetration, while round points encounter more friction. This does not mean you can stab through armor under any normal circumstances, but it will most easily make holes, and if you find a mailed gap, that person is in trouble.
The best examples of this are seen in crossbow and arrow head tests. Needle points will stab through mail, while bodkins cut right through. Both will make for a bad day. As you pointed out the square profile is also very strong, and easier to make. My favorite sources for comparing different points are the Tod’s Workshop arrow and crossbow bolt tests on YouTube. Sorry I do not have a specific one to link which covers this topic. |
T. Kew wrote: |
A square profile is good for thrusting, but long pikes tend to have some natural flex to them which is probably going to be unhelpful for trying to drive it through mail - and of course the use of mail components in armour is getting less frequent anyway. A much more likely explanation for square pike point is simply that it's a good shape for a lightweight thrust-only weapon point. |
Mark Millman wrote: |
Dear Matthew,
I, for one, certainly am not suggesting that. I'd add that if somebody other than the manufacturer cared what kind of point a pike had, it would have been a regiment's colonel or whomever the colonel employed to outfit the regiment, and he would have specified it in the original purchase order, which I suspect would have been for a lot of at least 80 (which is the nominal size of a company of foot armed with pikes--eight files of ten soldiers each (or, if you prefer, ten ranks of eight soldiers each); there were also nominal ten-by-ten companies), or larger lots depending on how many companies in the regiment needed new pikes. The survival patterns of extant pikes indicate that they were not purchased as individual items, although I suppose a soldier or trained-bandsman (i.e., militiaman) could have purchased one from a lot if that had seemed desirable. It seems unlikely that more than a very few would have been purchased as single, individually produced items by private soldiers (or militiamen) in the way that, for example, swords could be. I know that you in particular have often noticed the modern tendency to ascribe historical design choices to some supposed functional benefit when in fact the choices were made to comply with fashion or, as Anthony Clipsom points out, factors largely unrelated to an imagined superiority over some other design. But all modern folk are to some extent technophiles and contemporary culture encourages the tendency, which can be awkward for hobbyist historians. Best, Mark Millman |