Welsh hook

Medieval Welsh pole weapon From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Welsh hook is a type of polearm, a halberd-like weapon with a hook on the back, and gained its name due to its prevalence among the Welsh soldiers during the medieval wars against the English.[1] It closely related to the agricultural implement known as a bill and is commonly classified as a type of poleaxe.[2]

In literature

  • "That no man presume to wear any weapons, especially Welsh-hooks and forest-bills" ("The History of Sir John Oldcastle", Folio 3, 1664, 60).[3]
  • Falstaff: "My own knee? ... and swore the devil his true liegeman upon the cross of a Welsh hook,—What, a plague, call you him?" (Shakespeare Henry IV Part 1, 290).[3]

Notes

References

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