Posts: 160 Location: Sunshine Coast, Australia
Fri 27 Apr, 2012 5:03 pm
As much as I don’t want to lightly question the dating by the museum, if it were not for that dating, I would suggest that they are almost identical to pike heads from the 16th to 19th centuries. In the article “The Irish Pike” by G. A. Hayes-McCoy he quotes a writer from the 17th century who says:
"The Irish pikes, were longer by a foot or two than the Scottish pikes, and far better to pierce, being four square and small..”
Also: “A correspondent of the Nation (June 24, 1848, 408) advises pikes like army lances, with heads ten inches long, an inch and a quarter broad and sharpened as carefully as a dagger.”
Hayes-McCoy says: “Some of the pikes made for the Irish Volunteers before 1916 were fitted with a head of square section.”
An accompanying diagram of a pre-1916 pike head looks very similar to the photos. It seems that the form of the Irish pike was very distinctive and quite different from that of the English or Scottish.
This would also tie in with Sean's suggestion that the far left head suggestion that the far left head “resembles an English leading staff head of the late 16th/early 17th c”.
Its only putting an idea out there. As I said, if it weren’t for that dating I think that they would be a pretty good match for a 16th or 17thC or even later, Irish pike.
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