fbpx
Wikipedia

Anvil

An anvil is a metalworking tool consisting of a large block of metal (usually forged or cast steel), with a flattened top surface, upon which another object is struck (or "worked").

Single-horn anvil
A blacksmith working iron with a hammer and anvil
A blacksmith working with a sledgehammer, assistant (striker) and Lokomo anvil in Finland

Anvils are as massive because the higher their inertia, the more efficiently they cause the energy of striking tools to be transferred to the work piece. In most cases the anvil is used as a forging tool. Before the advent of modern welding technology, it was the primary tool of metal workers.[1]

The great majority of modern anvils are made of cast steel that has been heat treated by either flame or electric induction. Inexpensive anvils have been made of cast iron and low-quality steel, but are considered unsuitable for serious use, as they deform and lack rebound when struck.

The largest single piece tool steel anvil that is heat treated is 1600 pounds. This anvil was made in 2023 by Oak Lawn Blacksmith. There are larger anvils that are made out of multiple pieces such as “The mile long anvil” made by Napier which weights 6500 pounds. This anvil is not heat treated or made from tool steel.

Structure edit

 
Parts of a single-horn anvil

The primary work surface of the anvil is known as the face. It is generally made of hardened steel and should be flat and smooth with rounded edges for most work. Any marks on the face will be transferred to the work. Also, sharp edges tend to cut into the metal being worked and may cause cracks to form in the workpiece. The face is hardened and tempered to resist the blows of the smith's hammer, so the anvil face does not deform under repeated use. A hard anvil face also reduces the amount of force lost in each hammer blow. Hammers, tools, and work pieces of hardened steel should never directly strike the anvil face with full force, as they may damage it; this can result in chipping or deforming of the anvil face.

The horn of the anvil is a conical projection used to form various round shapes and is generally unhardened steel or iron. The horn is used mostly in bending operations. It also is used by some smiths as an aid in "drawing down" stock (making it longer and thinner). Some anvils, mainly European, are made with two horns, one square and one round. Also, some anvils are made with side horns or clips for specialized work.

The step is the area of the anvil between the "horn" and the "face". It is soft and is used for cutting; its purpose is to prevent damaging the steel face of the anvil by conducting such operations there and so as not to damage the cutting edge of the chisel, though many smiths shun this practice as it will damage the anvil over time.

 
Anvil with upsetting block

There have also been other additions to the anvil such as an upsetting block; this is used to upset steel, generally in long strips/bars as it is placed between the feet of the anvil. Upsetting is a technique often used by blacksmiths for making the steel workpiece short and thick, having probably been originally long and thin.

The hardy hole is a square hole into which specialized forming and cutting tools, called hardy tools, are placed. It is also used in punching and bending operations. These are not to be confused with swage blocks, although their purpose is similar.

The pritchel hole is a small round hole that is present on most modern anvils. Some anvils have more than one. It is used mostly for punching. At times, smiths will fit a second tool to this hole to allow the smith more flexibility when using more than one anvil tool.

Placement edit

 
Blacksmith's anvil mounted on a log

The anvil is placed as near to the forge as is convenient, generally no more than one step from the forge to prevent heat loss in the work piece. An anvil needs to be placed upon a sturdy base made from an impact and fire resistant material. Common methods of attaching an anvil are spikes, chains, steel or iron straps, clips, bolts where there are holes provided, and cables.

The most common base traditionally was a hard wood log or large timber buried several feet into the floor of the forge shop. In the industrial era, cast iron bases became available. They had the advantage of adding additional weight to the anvil, making it more stable. These bases are highly sought after by collectors today. When concrete became widely available, there was a trend to make steel reinforced anvil bases by some smiths, though this practice has largely been abandoned. In more modern times, anvils have been placed upon bases fabricated from steel, often a short thick section of a large I-beam. In addition, bases have been made from dimensional lumber bolted together to form a large block or steel drums full of oil-saturated sand to provide a damping effect. In recent times, tripod bases of fabricated steel have become popular.

Types edit

 
Anvil of a farrier

There are many designs for anvils, which are often tailored for a specific purpose or to meet the needs of a particular smith. For example, there were anvils specifically made for farriers, general smiths, cutlers, chain makers, armorers, saw tuners, coach makers, coopers, and many other types of metal workers. Most of these anvil types look similar, but some are radically different. Saw maker anvils, for instance, are generally a large rectangular block of steel that have a harder surface than most other anvils due to hammering on a harder steel for saws. Bladesmith anvils tend to be rectangular with a hardy and pritchel, but no horn. Such designs have originated in diverse geographic locations. Several styles of anvils include, Bavarian, French Pig anvil, Austrian, and Chinese turtle anvil.

 
45 pound Bavarian Style Anvil

The Bavarian style is known for the sloped brow. The brow was first used in medieval times to make armor on the church windows below the brow. Common manufactures include, Söding Halbach and Holthaus. This style of anvil is known not to sway in the face due to the extra mass with the brow.

The common blacksmith's anvil is made of either forged or cast steel, forged wrought iron with a hard steel face or cast iron with a hard steel face. Cast iron anvils are not used for forging as they are incapable of standing up to the impact and will crack and dent. Also, cast iron anvils without a hard steel face do not have the rebound that a harder anvil would and will tire out the smith. Historically, some anvils have been made with a smooth top working face of hardened steel welded to a cast iron or wrought iron body, though this manufacturing method is no longer in use. At one end, the common smith's anvil has a projecting conical bick (beak, horn) used for hammering curved work pieces. The other end is typically called the heel. Occasionally, the other end is also provided with a bick, partly rectangular in section. Most anvils made since the late 18th century also have a hardy hole and a pritchel hole where various tools, such as the anvil-cutter or hot chisel, can be inserted and held by the anvil. Some anvils have several hardy and pritchel holes, to accommodate a wider variety of hardy tools and pritchels. An anvil may also have a softer pad for chisel work.

 
Steam hammer anvil

An anvil for a power hammer is usually supported on a massive anvil block, sometimes weighing over 800 tons for a 12-ton hammer; this again rests on a strong foundation of timber and masonry or concrete.

An anvil may have a marking indicating its weight, manufacturer, or place of origin. American-made anvils were often marked in pounds. European anvils are sometimes marked in kilograms. English anvils were often marked in hundredweight, the marking consisting of three numbers, indicating hundredweight, quarter hundredweight and pounds. For example, a 3-1-5, if such an anvil existed, would be 3×112 lb + 1×28 lb + 5 lb = 369 lb ≈ 168 kg.

Cheap anvils made from inferior steel or cast iron and often sold at retail hardware stores, are considered unsuitable for serious use, and are often derisively referred to as "ASOs", or "anvil shaped objects".[2] Amateur smiths have used lengths of railroad rail, forklift tines, or even simple blocks of steel as makeshift anvils.

A metalworking vise may have a small anvil integrated into its design.

History edit

 
An anvil at the medieval construction site of Guédelon in Treigny, France.
 
A top view of a well-used London pattern anvil

Anvils were first made of stone, then bronze, and later wrought iron. As steel became more readily available, anvils were faced with it. This was done to give the anvil a hard face and to stop the anvil from deforming from impact. Many regional styles of anvils evolved through time from the simple block that was first used by smiths. The majority of anvils found today in the US are based on the London pattern anvil of the mid-19th century.

The wrought iron steel faced anvil was produced up until the early 20th century. Through the 19th and very early 20th centuries, this method of construction evolved to produce extremely high quality anvils. The basic process involved forge-welding billets of wrought iron together to produce the desired shape. The sequence and location of the forge-welds varied between different anvil makers and the kind of anvil being made. At the same time cast iron anvils with steel faces were being made in the United States. At the dawn of the 20th century solid cast steel anvils began to be produced, as well as two piece forged anvils made from closed die forgings. Modern anvils are generally made entirely from steel.

There are many references to anvils in ancient Greek and Egyptian writings, including Homer's works. They have been found at the Calico Early Man Site in North America.

Anvils have since lost their former commonness, along with the smiths who used them. Mechanized production has made cheap and abundant manufactured goods readily available. The one-off handmade products of the blacksmith are less economically viable in the modern world, while in the past they were an absolute necessity. However, anvils are still used by blacksmiths and metal workers of all kinds in producing custom work. They are also essential to the work done by farriers.

In popular culture edit

 
A fiery anvil in the coat of arms of the Tohmajärvi municipality

Firing edit

Anvil firing is the practice of firing an anvil into the air using gunpowder. It has been popular in California, the eastern United States and the southern United States, much like how fireworks are used today. There is a growing interest in re-enacting this "ancient tradition" in the US, which has now spread to England.[3]

Television and film edit

A typical metalworker's anvil, with horn at one end and flat face at the other, is a standard prop for cartoon gags, as the epitome of a heavy and clumsy object that is perfect for dropping onto an antagonist. This visual metaphor is common, for example, in Warner Brothers' Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies shorts, such as those with Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner.[4] Anvils in cartoons were also referenced in an episode of Gilmore Girls, where one of the main characters tries to have a conversation about "Where did all the anvils go?", a reference to their falling out of use on a general scale.[5][6] Animaniacs made frequent gags on the topic throughout its run, even having a kingdom named Anvilania, whose sole national product is anvils.[7]

Books edit

Dwarves were blacksmiths who used anvils for metalworking on C.S.Lewis's The Chronicles of Narnia, most iconically on The Magician's Nephew and Prince Caspian; as well as on J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit.

Music edit

 
Mime at the anvil by Arthur Rackham
 
A chromatic set of tuned anvils

Anvils have been used as percussion instruments in several famous musical compositions, including:

Wagner's Ring des Nibelungen is notable in using the anvil as pitched percussion. The vast majority of extant works use the anvil as unpitched. However tuned anvils are available as musical instruments, albeit unusual. These are not to be confused with the "sawyers' anvils" used to "tune" big circular saw blades. Steel anvils are used for tuning for use as musical instruments, because those based partly on cast iron and similar materials give a duller sound; this is actually valued in industry, as pure steel anvils are troublesomely noisy, though energetically more efficient. The hammer and anvil have enjoyed varying popularity in orchestral roles. Robert Donington pointed out that Sebastian Virdung notes them in his book of 1510, and Martin Agricola includes it in his list of instruments (Musica instrumentalis deudsch, 1529) largely as a compliment to Pythagoras. In pre-modern or modern times anvils occasionally appear in operatic works by Berlioz, Bizet, Gounod, Verdi, and Wagner for example. Commonly pairs of anvils tuned a third apart are used.

In practice modern orchestras commonly substitute a brake drum or other suitable steel structure that is easier to tune than an actual anvil, although a visibly convincing anvil-shaped prop may be shown as desired. In Das Rheingold Wagner scored for nine little, six mid-sized, and three large anvils, but orchestras seldom can afford instrumentation on such a scale.[9]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hahn, Robert. Archaeology and the Origins of Philosophy. Publisher: State University of New York Press 2010. ISBN 978-1438431659
  2. ^ "Ebay Fraud: Purchasing an ASO (Anvil Shaped Object)". Anvilfire.com.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-11-19.
  4. ^ Maly, Tim (18 December 2012). "Elaborate Poster Puts All of Wile E. Coyote's ACME Purchases on Your Wall". Wired. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  5. ^ "23 Questions About Lorelai Gilmore That 'Gilmore Girls' Left Unanswered". Bustle.com. Retrieved 20 April 2021.
  6. ^ "#1400 Gilmore Girls - Where Did All The Anvils Go?, Acquire, The Dress, Ubiquitous". Thedailyenglishshow.com. Retrieved 20 April 2021.
  7. ^ "Animaniacs: "King Yakko" & "No Pain, No Painting"/"Les Miseranimals"". Tv.avclub.com. 7 July 2012. Retrieved 20 April 2021.
  8. ^ Scott, Derek B. (2008). Sounds of the metropolis: the nineteenth-century popular music revolution in London, New York, Paris, and Vienna, p. 139. Oxford University Press, New York. ISBN 978-0-19-530946-1.
  9. ^ Donington, Robert (1970). Music and its Instruments. Methuen. ISBN 9780416722802. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)

Further reading edit

External links edit

anvil, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar. For other uses see Anvil disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Anvil news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message An anvil is a metalworking tool consisting of a large block of metal usually forged or cast steel with a flattened top surface upon which another object is struck or worked Single horn anvilA blacksmith working iron with a hammer and anvilA blacksmith working with a sledgehammer assistant striker and Lokomo anvil in FinlandAnvils are as massive because the higher their inertia the more efficiently they cause the energy of striking tools to be transferred to the work piece In most cases the anvil is used as a forging tool Before the advent of modern welding technology it was the primary tool of metal workers 1 The great majority of modern anvils are made of cast steel that has been heat treated by either flame or electric induction Inexpensive anvils have been made of cast iron and low quality steel but are considered unsuitable for serious use as they deform and lack rebound when struck The largest single piece tool steel anvil that is heat treated is 1600 pounds This anvil was made in 2023 by Oak Lawn Blacksmith There are larger anvils that are made out of multiple pieces such as The mile long anvil made by Napier which weights 6500 pounds This anvil is not heat treated or made from tool steel Contents 1 Structure 2 Placement 3 Types 4 History 5 In popular culture 5 1 Firing 5 2 Television and film 5 3 Books 5 4 Music 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksStructure edit nbsp Parts of a single horn anvilThe primary work surface of the anvil is known as the face It is generally made of hardened steel and should be flat and smooth with rounded edges for most work Any marks on the face will be transferred to the work Also sharp edges tend to cut into the metal being worked and may cause cracks to form in the workpiece The face is hardened and tempered to resist the blows of the smith s hammer so the anvil face does not deform under repeated use A hard anvil face also reduces the amount of force lost in each hammer blow Hammers tools and work pieces of hardened steel should never directly strike the anvil face with full force as they may damage it this can result in chipping or deforming of the anvil face The horn of the anvil is a conical projection used to form various round shapes and is generally unhardened steel or iron The horn is used mostly in bending operations It also is used by some smiths as an aid in drawing down stock making it longer and thinner Some anvils mainly European are made with two horns one square and one round Also some anvils are made with side horns or clips for specialized work The step is the area of the anvil between the horn and the face It is soft and is used for cutting its purpose is to prevent damaging the steel face of the anvil by conducting such operations there and so as not to damage the cutting edge of the chisel though many smiths shun this practice as it will damage the anvil over time nbsp Anvil with upsetting blockThere have also been other additions to the anvil such as an upsetting block this is used to upset steel generally in long strips bars as it is placed between the feet of the anvil Upsetting is a technique often used by blacksmiths for making the steel workpiece short and thick having probably been originally long and thin The hardy hole is a square hole into which specialized forming and cutting tools called hardy tools are placed It is also used in punching and bending operations These are not to be confused with swage blocks although their purpose is similar The pritchel hole is a small round hole that is present on most modern anvils Some anvils have more than one It is used mostly for punching At times smiths will fit a second tool to this hole to allow the smith more flexibility when using more than one anvil tool Placement edit nbsp Blacksmith s anvil mounted on a logThe anvil is placed as near to the forge as is convenient generally no more than one step from the forge to prevent heat loss in the work piece An anvil needs to be placed upon a sturdy base made from an impact and fire resistant material Common methods of attaching an anvil are spikes chains steel or iron straps clips bolts where there are holes provided and cables The most common base traditionally was a hard wood log or large timber buried several feet into the floor of the forge shop In the industrial era cast iron bases became available They had the advantage of adding additional weight to the anvil making it more stable These bases are highly sought after by collectors today When concrete became widely available there was a trend to make steel reinforced anvil bases by some smiths though this practice has largely been abandoned In more modern times anvils have been placed upon bases fabricated from steel often a short thick section of a large I beam In addition bases have been made from dimensional lumber bolted together to form a large block or steel drums full of oil saturated sand to provide a damping effect In recent times tripod bases of fabricated steel have become popular Types edit nbsp Anvil of a farrierThere are many designs for anvils which are often tailored for a specific purpose or to meet the needs of a particular smith For example there were anvils specifically made for farriers general smiths cutlers chain makers armorers saw tuners coach makers coopers and many other types of metal workers Most of these anvil types look similar but some are radically different Saw maker anvils for instance are generally a large rectangular block of steel that have a harder surface than most other anvils due to hammering on a harder steel for saws Bladesmith anvils tend to be rectangular with a hardy and pritchel but no horn Such designs have originated in diverse geographic locations Several styles of anvils include Bavarian French Pig anvil Austrian and Chinese turtle anvil nbsp 45 pound Bavarian Style AnvilThe Bavarian style is known for the sloped brow The brow was first used in medieval times to make armor on the church windows below the brow Common manufactures include Soding Halbach and Holthaus This style of anvil is known not to sway in the face due to the extra mass with the brow The common blacksmith s anvil is made of either forged or cast steel forged wrought iron with a hard steel face or cast iron with a hard steel face Cast iron anvils are not used for forging as they are incapable of standing up to the impact and will crack and dent Also cast iron anvils without a hard steel face do not have the rebound that a harder anvil would and will tire out the smith Historically some anvils have been made with a smooth top working face of hardened steel welded to a cast iron or wrought iron body though this manufacturing method is no longer in use At one end the common smith s anvil has a projecting conical bick beak horn used for hammering curved work pieces The other end is typically called the heel Occasionally the other end is also provided with a bick partly rectangular in section Most anvils made since the late 18th century also have a hardy hole and a pritchel hole where various tools such as the anvil cutter or hot chisel can be inserted and held by the anvil Some anvils have several hardy and pritchel holes to accommodate a wider variety of hardy tools and pritchels An anvil may also have a softer pad for chisel work nbsp Steam hammer anvilAn anvil for a power hammer is usually supported on a massive anvil block sometimes weighing over 800 tons for a 12 ton hammer this again rests on a strong foundation of timber and masonry or concrete An anvil may have a marking indicating its weight manufacturer or place of origin American made anvils were often marked in pounds European anvils are sometimes marked in kilograms English anvils were often marked in hundredweight the marking consisting of three numbers indicating hundredweight quarter hundredweight and pounds For example a 3 1 5 if such an anvil existed would be 3 112 lb 1 28 lb 5 lb 369 lb 168 kg Cheap anvils made from inferior steel or cast iron and often sold at retail hardware stores are considered unsuitable for serious use and are often derisively referred to as ASOs or anvil shaped objects 2 Amateur smiths have used lengths of railroad rail forklift tines or even simple blocks of steel as makeshift anvils A metalworking vise may have a small anvil integrated into its design History edit nbsp An anvil at the medieval construction site of Guedelon in Treigny France nbsp A top view of a well used London pattern anvilAnvils were first made of stone then bronze and later wrought iron As steel became more readily available anvils were faced with it This was done to give the anvil a hard face and to stop the anvil from deforming from impact Many regional styles of anvils evolved through time from the simple block that was first used by smiths The majority of anvils found today in the US are based on the London pattern anvil of the mid 19th century The wrought iron steel faced anvil was produced up until the early 20th century Through the 19th and very early 20th centuries this method of construction evolved to produce extremely high quality anvils The basic process involved forge welding billets of wrought iron together to produce the desired shape The sequence and location of the forge welds varied between different anvil makers and the kind of anvil being made At the same time cast iron anvils with steel faces were being made in the United States At the dawn of the 20th century solid cast steel anvils began to be produced as well as two piece forged anvils made from closed die forgings Modern anvils are generally made entirely from steel There are many references to anvils in ancient Greek and Egyptian writings including Homer s works They have been found at the Calico Early Man Site in North America Anvils have since lost their former commonness along with the smiths who used them Mechanized production has made cheap and abundant manufactured goods readily available The one off handmade products of the blacksmith are less economically viable in the modern world while in the past they were an absolute necessity However anvils are still used by blacksmiths and metal workers of all kinds in producing custom work They are also essential to the work done by farriers In popular culture edit nbsp A fiery anvil in the coat of arms of the Tohmajarvi municipalityFiring edit Anvil firing is the practice of firing an anvil into the air using gunpowder It has been popular in California the eastern United States and the southern United States much like how fireworks are used today There is a growing interest in re enacting this ancient tradition in the US which has now spread to England 3 Television and film edit A typical metalworker s anvil with horn at one end and flat face at the other is a standard prop for cartoon gags as the epitome of a heavy and clumsy object that is perfect for dropping onto an antagonist This visual metaphor is common for example in Warner Brothers Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies shorts such as those with Wile E Coyote and the Road Runner 4 Anvils in cartoons were also referenced in an episode of Gilmore Girls where one of the main characters tries to have a conversation about Where did all the anvils go a reference to their falling out of use on a general scale 5 6 Animaniacs made frequent gags on the topic throughout its run even having a kingdom named Anvilania whose sole national product is anvils 7 Books edit Dwarves were blacksmiths who used anvils for metalworking on C S Lewis s The Chronicles of Narnia most iconically on The Magician s Nephew and Prince Caspian as well as on J R R Tolkien s The Hobbit Music edit nbsp Mime at the anvil by Arthur Rackham nbsp A chromatic set of tuned anvilsAnvils have been used as percussion instruments in several famous musical compositions including Louis Andriessen De Materie Part I which features an extended solo for two anvils Kurt Atterberg Symphony No 5 Daniel Auber opera Le Macon Alan Silvestri The Mummy Returns Arnold Bax Symphony No 3 The Beatles Maxwell s Silver Hammer makes prominent use of the anvil Their roadie Mal Evans played the anvil Benjamin Britten The Burning Fiery Furnace Aaron Copland Symphony No 3 Don Davis The Matrix trilogy Brad Fiedel The Terminator Neil Finn Song of the Lonely Mountain written for the end credits of The Hobbit An Unexpected Journey Gustav Holst Second Suite in F for Military Band which includes a movement titled Song of the Blacksmith Nicholas Hooper Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince James Horner Used it extensively in Aliens and his other films such as Flightplan The Forgotten and Titanic Metallica For Whom the Bell Tolls Randy Newman Toy Story 3 Carl Orff Antigone Howard Shore The Lord of the Rings film trilogy Used predominantly for the theme of Isengard Juan Maria Solare Veinticinco de agosto 1983 and Un angel de hielo y fuego John Philip Sousa Dwellers of the Western World in which the second movement The White Man calls for two pairs of anvils the one small the other large Johann Strauss Son Der Zigeunerbaron The Gipsy Baron 1885 Ja da wird das Eisen gefuge Josef Strauss Feuerfest op 269 1869 The title means fireproof This was the slogan of the Wertheim fireproof safe company which commissioned the work 8 Edgard Varese Ionisation Giuseppe Verdi Il Trovatore featuring the famous Anvil Chorus Richard Wagner Der Ring des Nibelungen in Das Rheingold in scene 3 using 18 anvils tuned in F in three octaves and Siegfried in act I notably Siegfried s Forging Song Nothung Nothung Neidliches Schwert William Walton Belshazzar s Feast John Williams Jaws Star Wars Episode III Revenge of the Sith Carl Michael Ziehrer Der Traum eines osterreichischen Reservisten 1890 Wagner s Ring des Nibelungen is notable in using the anvil as pitched percussion The vast majority of extant works use the anvil as unpitched However tuned anvils are available as musical instruments albeit unusual These are not to be confused with the sawyers anvils used to tune big circular saw blades Steel anvils are used for tuning for use as musical instruments because those based partly on cast iron and similar materials give a duller sound this is actually valued in industry as pure steel anvils are troublesomely noisy though energetically more efficient The hammer and anvil have enjoyed varying popularity in orchestral roles Robert Donington pointed out that Sebastian Virdung notes them in his book of 1510 and Martin Agricola includes it in his list of instruments Musica instrumentalis deudsch 1529 largely as a compliment to Pythagoras In pre modern or modern times anvils occasionally appear in operatic works by Berlioz Bizet Gounod Verdi and Wagner for example Commonly pairs of anvils tuned a third apart are used In practice modern orchestras commonly substitute a brake drum or other suitable steel structure that is easier to tune than an actual anvil although a visibly convincing anvil shaped prop may be shown as desired In Das Rheingold Wagner scored for nine little six mid sized and three large anvils but orchestras seldom can afford instrumentation on such a scale 9 See also editAnvil Chorus Diamond anvil cell Anvil cloudReferences edit Hahn Robert Archaeology and the Origins of Philosophy Publisher State University of New York Press 2010 ISBN 978 1438431659 Ebay Fraud Purchasing an ASO Anvil Shaped Object Anvilfire com St Clements Day Celebrations Archived from the original on 2009 11 19 Maly Tim 18 December 2012 Elaborate Poster Puts All of Wile E Coyote s ACME Purchases on Your Wall Wired Retrieved 25 April 2014 23 Questions About Lorelai Gilmore That Gilmore Girls Left Unanswered Bustle com Retrieved 20 April 2021 1400 Gilmore Girls Where Did All The Anvils Go Acquire The Dress Ubiquitous Thedailyenglishshow com Retrieved 20 April 2021 Animaniacs King Yakko amp No Pain No Painting Les Miseranimals Tv avclub com 7 July 2012 Retrieved 20 April 2021 Scott Derek B 2008 Sounds of the metropolis the nineteenth century popular music revolution in London New York Paris and Vienna p 139 Oxford University Press New York ISBN 978 0 19 530946 1 Donington Robert 1970 Music and its Instruments Methuen ISBN 9780416722802 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Further reading editAndrews Jack 1994 New Edge of the Anvil ISBN 978 1 879535 09 1 Hrisoulas Jim 1987 The Complete Bladesmith Forging Your Way to Perfection Boulder Colorado Paladin Press ISBN 978 0 87364 430 3 Postman Richard 1998 Anvils In America ISBN 978 0 9663256 0 7 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Anvil category nbsp Look up anvil in Wiktionary the free dictionary Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Anvil Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anvil amp oldid 1201479762, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.