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Tomas B
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Eric S
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Posted: Mon 06 Oct, 2014 12:52 pm Post subject: Re: looking for photos of poleaxe |
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Tomas, the Wallace link is a war hammer,are you looking strictly for pole axe images?
European (France) war hammer, circa 1450, iron and oak, Width: 15.5 cm, hammer and beak, Length: 9.5 cm, top spike, Weight: 1.22 kg, Length: 71 cm, total length.
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Sean Flynt
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Tomas B
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Posted: Mon 06 Oct, 2014 1:10 pm Post subject: |
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The Wallace length is assumed to have been shortened. The Higgins shows sign of being shortened. Due to size of the head of each weapon it seems more likely they would have been on a 5 foot long pole. Since nobody uses the term polehammer they are generally referred to as poleaxe (at least in my experience).
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Tomas B
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Aaron Hoard
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Posted: Mon 06 Oct, 2014 7:55 pm Post subject: |
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This is the best I have - I had a hard time getting good shots while I was there.
Glass cases + plenty of windows + sunshine = arg!
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Radovan Geist
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Eric S
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Posted: Tue 14 Oct, 2014 7:51 am Post subject: |
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Tomas B wrote: | The Wallace length is assumed to have been shortened. The Higgins shows sign of being shortened. Due to size of the head of each weapon it seems more likely they would have been on a 5 foot long pole. Since nobody uses the term polehammer they are generally referred to as poleaxe (at least in my experience). |
Tomas, they really should be "polehammer / pole hammer" in order to differientiate from other pole weapons. While going through some images from The Royal Armoury (Livrustkammaren) in the Royal Palace Stockholm, Sweden I came across these excelllent examples of pole hammers labeled as "stridshammare" (war hammer).
This image comes from Wikimedia Commons, I cropped and edited the original, there are a lot of other sword related images from the same museum that have not been properly described in English yet, here is a link.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Sword_images_from_Livrustkammaren
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Tomas B
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Posted: Tue 14 Oct, 2014 8:18 am Post subject: |
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Eric S wrote: | Tomas, they really should be "polehammer / pole hammer" in order to differientiate from other pole weapons.
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The period term seems to be closer to pollaxe then anything else. Unless this blog post has been proven incorrect.
http://talhoffer.blogspot.ca/2009/05/what-is-pollaxe.html?m=1
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Eric S
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Posted: Tue 14 Oct, 2014 10:35 am Post subject: |
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Tomas B wrote: | Eric S wrote: | Tomas, they really should be "polehammer / pole hammer" in order to differientiate from other pole weapons.
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The period term seems to be closer to pollaxe then anything else. Unless this blog post has been proven incorrect.
http://talhoffer.blogspot.ca/2009/05/what-is-pollaxe.html?m=1 |
While it is nice to know the period name no one is forbiden from using another name that describes an item in a more understandable way, if I told you I had a "poleaxe" you would not know exactly what I was describing, if I said I had a polehammer" you would. The forum has an article on these weapons titled "The Medieval Poleaxe", maybe it should be called "The Medieval Pollaxe" instead. http://www.myArmoury.com/feature_spot_poleaxe.html
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Lafayette C Curtis
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Posted: Tue 14 Oct, 2014 1:12 pm Post subject: |
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Eric S wrote: | Tomas, they really should be "polehammer / pole hammer" in order to differientiate from other pole weapons. |
It depends on the viewpoint. To collectors and museum curators, it makes sense to distinguish axes from hammers. However, to a martial artist the two are virtually identical since surviving manuals on the poleaxe do not distinguish an axehead from a hammerhead; as a matter of fact, most of them call the weapon an "axe" or "battle-axe" while their illustrations clearly depict hammers instead of axe-heads. In other words, the "typical" poleaxe is a weapon with a hammerhead.
Not so much proven incorrect as never being proven correct in the first place; it failed to provide enough evidence to support its (unnecessarily pedantic) thesis. Note that there is no quotation given of a medieval or Renaissance text that supports the idea of "poll-axe" being the original term that was later corrupted to become "poleaxe." As far as I can tell both terms coexisted and there's no way to tell which one is more correct since contemporary sources overwhelmingly used "axe" or "battle-axe" anyway. "Poleaxe/pollaxe" only became the dominant name for the weapon in the modern era, when it has fallen out of use and people feel more need to distinguish the weapon from such things as utility axes and Dane axes.
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J. Nicolaysen
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Posted: Wed 15 Oct, 2014 10:48 am Post subject: |
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Quote: | However, to a martial artist the two are virtually identical since surviving manuals on the poleaxe do not distinguish an axehead from a hammerhead; as a matter of fact, most of them call the weapon an "axe" or "battle-axe" while their illustrations clearly depict hammers instead of axe-heads. In other words, the "typical" poleaxe is a weapon with a hammerhead. |
Do you mean also that techniques of using them are essentially similar?
I love poleARMS and recently got this little book: http://www.myArmoury.com/talk/viewtopic.php?t...mp;start=0
It has quite a bit of halberds and varieties of other bladed weapons, but there are a couple of hammer weapons.
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Dan Howard
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Posted: Wed 15 Oct, 2014 2:21 pm Post subject: |
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"Pole" and "poll" are completely different words - both of which are still in use today and have unrelated meanings. Pollaxe is not an archaic term. The word "poll" means "head" and the word "pollaxe" refers to the buisness end of the weapon and has nothing to do with the shaft. Calling it a "poleaxe" misses the entire point. Most of the above photos are of warhammers, not pollaxes. The weapon is essentially an axe with extra bits added such as a hammer head (the poll) and a spike. The length of the shaft is irrelevant.
Author: Bronze Age Military Equipment, Pen and Sword Books
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Ralph Grinly
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Posted: Sat 18 Oct, 2014 2:55 pm Post subject: |
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Maybe some-one more knowledgeable than I can comment, but I believe the term POLLaxe originally referred to an instrument once used to slaughter cattle in an abbatoir. Similar implements were also part of the British army ( and I assume other armies) Farriers Corp equipment, used to despatch wounded horses on the battlefield.
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Dan Howard
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Posted: Sat 18 Oct, 2014 3:43 pm Post subject: |
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That's where the verb "pollaxe" comes from. Originally, to be "pollaxed" meant that the animal was hit with this weapon and felled immediately. Today it implies being felled by one blow but the type of attack is irrelevant. When we say that someone was "pollaxed" we mean that they fell as if hit by a pollaxe. The noun "poll" refers to the hammer-like back of the weapon. It doesn't matter whether it is on an axe or another type of weapon.
Why would anyone use the term "poleaxe" to define a weapon? It is superfluous - all axes are mounted on poles. If the shaft is of an exceptional length then it was called a "long axe" just like they did with swords. Maybe the term should be reserved for axes used in Prussia - specifically Warsaw
Author: Bronze Age Military Equipment, Pen and Sword Books
Last edited by Dan Howard on Sat 18 Oct, 2014 11:00 pm; edited 1 time in total
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Tomas B
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Posted: Sat 18 Oct, 2014 8:10 pm Post subject: |
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So, according to the "poleaxe/pollaxe must have an axe" definition 4 out of the 14 historic poleaxes and 3 out of 4 illustrations in the spotlight article are wrong.
http://myArmoury.com/feature_spot_poleaxe.html
This entire article would be miss titled.
http://myArmoury.com/feature_higgins_pole.html
The reason I chose the Wallace and Higgins weapons as my example is that both weapons are believed by many to originally have been two-handed weapons and their hafts had been shortened at some point.
I am interested in photos of late 14th to early 15th century two-handed weapons which have a weapon head that combines the hammer, beak, and spike. Basically, I was looking for any other period weapons which had heads that looked like the two I showed as examples.
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Eric S
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Posted: Sat 18 Oct, 2014 8:27 pm Post subject: |
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Tomas B wrote: |
I am interested in photos of late 14th to early 15th century two-handed weapons which have a weapon head that combines the hammer, beak, and spike. Basically, I was looking for any other period weapons which had heads that looked like the two I showed as examples. |
So you looking for images of polehammers then
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Dan Howard
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Posted: Sat 18 Oct, 2014 10:11 pm Post subject: |
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Eric S wrote: | Tomas B wrote: |
I am interested in photos of late 14th to early 15th century two-handed weapons which have a weapon head that combines the hammer, beak, and spike. Basically, I was looking for any other period weapons which had heads that looked like the two I showed as examples. |
So you looking for images of polehammers then |
Only in Poland They are generally called war hammers. I'd like to know why it would be called an axe when it doesn't have an axe bit. All of this stems from a misunderstanding of the difference between "pole" and "poll", and confusion between the medieval meaning of "hammer" and the modern one. What we call a hammer today was called a "poll" or "maul" in the past ("mallet" means "little maul"). They used the word "hammer" to refer to the perpendicular spike meant for punching through plate.
The "hammer" was the spiked part not the flat part. The flat part was called the "poll". Technically this would be called a "pollhammer", because it is a hammer with a poll. But we generally simply say "war hammer".
Author: Bronze Age Military Equipment, Pen and Sword Books
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Tomas B
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Posted: Sun 19 Oct, 2014 4:23 am Post subject: |
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That is a one-handed hammer without a spike on top. That weapon was used very differently then the ones I'm asking about. The Wallace example is larger then would be expected for a one-handed weapon. When A&A made their version of it they made it smaller then the original so it felt appropriate for a one-handed weapon. The haft on the Higgins weapon has also been cut down and the weapon head is larger then expected for a one-handed weapon.
You may call it a polehammer or pollhammer or warhammer to your hearts content but I will not. In academia they are frequently grouped with what you call poleaxes. In the fight manuscripts they are always grouped with the other poleaxes. All throughout this site they are referred to as poleaxes.
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Eric S
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Posted: Sun 19 Oct, 2014 4:52 am Post subject: |
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Tomas B wrote: | . In academia they are frequently grouped with what you call poleaxes. In the fight manuscripts they are always grouped with the other poleaxes. All throughout this site they are referred to as poleaxes. | Yes and we know that Academia and this site are never wrong.............
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