Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Swordstaff

Medieval Scandinavian pole weapon From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Swordstaff
Remove ads

A swordstaff (Old Danish: sværdstaf), or staffsword (Old Danish: stavsværd, Old Swedish: stafsværdh,[a] Middle Low German: stafswert), is a Medieval polearm mentioned in Scandinavian sources. It is a figurative term, referencing a spear, or similar, utilizing with a sword- or dagger-esque blade and crossguard.[1][2]

Thumb
Paul Dolnstein's sketch of a Swedish militiaman (left) using a swordstaff in combat with a landsknecht (right).
Thumb
Sketch by landsknecht mercenary Paul Dolstein of Swedish army (ca. 1502), back row wielding swordstaffs (with crossguards)
Remove ads

Evidence

Summarize
Perspective

Period description

Evidence of the weapon in use at the battle of Elfsborg (Alvesborg) in 1502 is provided by Paul Dolnstein,[3] a landsknecht mercenary who fought in the battle, who refers to the Swedes carrying "good pikes made from swords". He also provides sketches of the weapon.[4]

Period Swedish texts mention swordstaffs separately along with other polearms, such as halberds, poleaxes, partisans, spears, and thereof.[2] A period text uses the term brander (compare Old Norse: brandr), an older term for swordblade, to drescribe the blades of swordstaffs:

Jagh haffuer tinget vj (6) ny brande till staffswerdh, och jag haffuer ingen penning ath betala them med, eren i wiid penninge, gören wel och sender hiid nogre, her staar ey peningha til fongx paa pant.

I have negotiated VI (6) new blades for swordstaffs, and i have no money to pay for them, (yours in with money?), do well and send here some, here stand no money to catch for pawn.

Bidrag till Skandinaviens historia ur utländska arkiver. Fjerde delen. Sverige i Sten Sture den äldres tid, 1470–1503 (1875). p. 314.

Other languages

Various other languages have analog terms which might have referred to similar or the same type of weapon.

In Variarum rerum vocabula cum sueca interpretatione (1538), Sweden's oldest dictionary, Latin: venabulum, a type of hunting spear, is translated as both "swine skewer" (swijn spett), and "swordstaff" (staff swärdh).[1]

In Russia, a similar weapon, called rogátina (Russian: рога́тина), a heavy daggerbladed spear for hand-to-hand combat and hunting large animals (compare sovnya), featured in later forms a full crossguad and sword length blade.[5]

Origins

The weapon has visual similarities to the partisan and langue de boeuf and may share common origins. However, Scandinavian sagas make references to a number of pole weapons, usually translated as "halberd" or "bill".[6] These weapons are used to cut and to stab but their names suggest they were derived from the spear rather than a cutting weapon, such as the hewing spear (höggspjót) and the atgeir.[7] While clearly identifiable artistic or archaeological evidence of the form of these weapons is lacking, it is possible that the swordstaff may be a late derivative of this family of weapons.

Remove ads

Chinese swordstaff

Chinese polearms that resembled swordstaves were also commonly used in ancient China from the late Warring States/Qin dynasty to the Han dynasty era. These were known as the pi (鈹), translated into English as either "sword-staff" or "long lance", and a long bladed ranseur-like swordstaff weapon called the sha (鎩) with a blade that was around 62 cm (24 in) long (up to 80 cm (31 in) long) and a hilt that was about 19 cm (7.5 in) long.[citation needed]

Remove ads

See also

Footnotes

  1. Also spelled: staffswærdh, staffswerdh

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads