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Wikipedia

Spear

A spear is a pole weapon consisting of a shaft, usually of wood, with a pointed head. The head may be simply the sharpened end of the shaft itself, as is the case with fire hardened spears, or it may be made of a more durable material fastened to the shaft, such as bone, flint, obsidian, iron, steel, or bronze. The most common design for hunting or combat spears since ancient times has incorporated a metal spearhead shaped like a triangle, lozenge, or leaf. The heads of fishing spears usually feature barbs or serrated edges.

Spear-armed hoplite from Greco-Persian Wars

The word spear comes from the Old English spere, from the Proto-Germanic speri, from a Proto-Indo-European root *sper- "spear, pole". Spears can be divided into two broad categories: those designed for thrusting as a melee weapon and those designed for throwing as a ranged weapon (usually referred to as javelins or darts).

The spear has been used throughout human history both as a hunting and fishing tool and as a weapon. Along with the club, knife, and axe, it is one of the earliest and most important tools developed by early humans. As a weapon, it may be wielded with either one or two hands. It was used in virtually every conflict up until the modern era, where even then it continues on in the form of the fixed bayonet on a long gun, and is probably the most commonly used weapon in history.[1]

Origins

Spear manufacture and use is not confined to humans. It is also practiced by the western chimpanzee. Chimpanzees near Kédougou, Senegal have been observed to create spears by breaking straight limbs off trees, stripping them of their bark and side branches, and sharpening one end with their teeth. They then used the weapons to hunt galagos sleeping in hollows.[2]

Prehistory

 
Wooden spear point from about 420,000 years ago. Natural History Museum, London
 
Hunting spear and knife, from Mesa Verde National Park

Archaeological evidence found in present-day Germany documents that wooden spears have been used for hunting since at least 400,000 years ago,[3] and a 2012 study from the site of Kathu Pan in South Africa suggests that hominids, possibly Homo heidelbergensis, may have developed the technology of hafted stone-tipped spears in Africa about 500,000 years ago.[4][5] Wood does not preserve well, however, and Craig Stanford, a primatologist and professor of anthropology at the University of Southern California, has suggested that the discovery of spear use by chimpanzees means that early humans may have used wooden spears before this.[6]

Neanderthals were constructing stone spear heads from as early as 300,000 BP, and by 250,000 years ago, wooden spears were made with fire-hardened points.

From circa 200,000 BCE onwards, Middle Paleolithic humans began to make complex stone blades with flaked edges which were used as spear heads. These stone heads could be fixed to the spear shaft by gum or resin or by bindings made of animal sinew, leather strips or vegetable matter. During this period, a clear difference remained between spears designed to be thrown and those designed to be used in hand-to-hand combat. By the Magdalenian period (c. 15,000–9500 BCE), spear-throwers similar to the later atlatl were in use.[7]

Military

 
Sumerian spearmen advancing in close formation with large shields – Stele of the Vultures, c.2450 BCE

Europe

Classical antiquity

Ancient Greeks
 
Athenian warrior wielding a spear in battle

The spear is the main weapon of the warriors of Homer's Iliad. The use of both a single thrusting spear and two throwing spears are mentioned. It has been suggested that two styles of combat are being described; an early style, with thrusting spears, dating to the Mycenaean period in which the Iliad is set, and, anachronistically, a later style, with throwing spears, from Homer's own Archaic period.[8]

In the 7th century BCE, the Greeks evolved a new close-order infantry formation, the phalanx.[9] The key to this formation was the hoplite, who was equipped with a large, circular, bronze-faced shield (aspis) and a 7–9 ft (2.1–2.7 m) spear with an iron head and bronze butt-spike (doru).[10] The hoplite phalanx dominated warfare among the Greek City States from the 7th into the 4th century BCE.

The 4th century saw major changes. One was the greater use of peltasts, light infantry armed with spear and javelins.[11] The other was the development of the sarissa, a two-handed pike 18 ft (5.5 m) in length, by the Macedonians under Phillip of Macedon and Alexander the Great.[12] The pike phalanx, supported by peltasts and cavalry, became the dominant mode of warfare among the Greeks from the late 4th century onward[13] until Greek military systems were supplanted by the Roman legions.

Ancient Romans
 
Re-enactor outfitted as a Late Roman legionary carrying a pilum

In the pre-Marian Roman armies, the first two lines of battle, the hastati and principes, often fought with a sword called a gladius and pila, heavy javelins that were specifically designed to be thrown at an enemy to pierce and foul a target's shield. Originally the principes were armed with a short spear called a hasta, but these gradually fell out of use, eventually being replaced by the gladius. The third line, the triarii, continued to use the hasta.

From the late 2nd century BCE, all legionaries were equipped with the pilum. The pilum continued to be the standard legionary spear until the end of the 2nd century CE. Auxilia, however, were equipped with a simple hasta and, perhaps, javelins or darts. During the 3rd century CE, although the pilum continued to be used, legionaries usually were equipped with other forms of throwing and thrusting spear, similar to auxilia of the previous century. By the 4th century, the pilum had effectively disappeared from common use.[14]

In the late period of the Roman Empire, the spear became more often used because of its anti-cavalry capacities as the barbarian invasions were often conducted by people with a developed culture of cavalry in warfare.

Medieval period

After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, the spear and shield continued to be used by nearly all Western European cultures. Since a medieval spear required only a small amount of steel along the sharpened edges (most of the spear-tip was wrought iron), it was an economical weapon. Quick to manufacture, and needing less smithing skill than a sword, it remained the main weapon of the common soldier. The Vikings, for instance, although often portrayed with axe or sword in hand, were armed mostly with spears,[15] as were their Anglo-Saxon, Irish, or continental contemporaries.

Infantry
 
Assyrian soldier holding a spear and wearing a helmet. Detail of a basalt relief from the palace of Tiglath-pileser III at Hadatu, Syria. 744–727 BCE. Ancient Orient Museum, Istanbul

Broadly speaking, spears were either designed to be used in melee, or to be thrown. Within this simple classification, there was a remarkable range of types. For example, M. J. Swanton identified thirty different spearhead categories and sub-categories in early Saxon England.[16] Most medieval spearheads were generally leaf-shaped. Notable types of early medieval spears include the angon, a throwing spear with a long head similar to the Roman pilum, used by the Franks and Anglo-Saxons, and the winged (or lugged) spear, which had two prominent wings at the base of the spearhead, either to prevent the spear penetrating too far into an enemy or to aid in spear fencing.[17] Originally a Frankish weapon, the winged spear also was popular with the Vikings. It would become the ancestor of later medieval polearms, such as the partisan and spetum.

The thrusting spear also has the advantage of reach, being considerably longer than other weapon types. Exact spear lengths are hard to deduce as few spear shafts survive archaeologically but 6–8 ft (1.8–2.4 m) would seem to have been the norm. Some nations were noted for their long spears, including the Scots and the Flemish. Spears usually were used in tightly ordered formations, such as the shield wall or the schiltron. To resist cavalry, spear shafts could be planted against the ground.[18] William Wallace drew up his schiltrons in a circle at the Battle of Falkirk in 1298 to deter charging cavalry;[19] this was a widespread tactic sometimes known as the "crown" formation.[20] Thomas Randolph, 1st Earl of Moray used a circular schiltron on the first day of the Battle of Bannockburn. However, the rectangular schiltron was much more common and was used by King Robert the Bruce on the second day of the Battle of Bannockburn and in the Battle of Old Byland when he defeated English armies.[21]

Throwing spears became rarer as the Middle Ages drew on, but survived in the hands of specialists such as the Catalan Almogavars.[22] They were commonly used in Ireland until the end of the 16th century.[23]

Spears began to lose fashion among the infantry during the 14th century, being replaced by pole weapons that combined the thrusting properties of the spear with the cutting properties of the axe, such as the halberd. Where spears were retained they grew in length, eventually evolving into pikes, which would be a dominant infantry weapon in the 16th and 17th centuries.[24]

Cavalry

Cavalry spears were originally the same as infantry spears and were often used with two hands or held with one hand overhead. In the 12th century, after the adoption of stirrups and a high-cantled saddle, the spear became a decidedly more powerful weapon. A mounted knight would secure the lance by holding it with one hand and tucking it under the armpit (the couched lance technique)[25] In combination with a lance rest, this allowed all the momentum of the horse and knight to be focused on the weapon's tip, whilst still retaining accuracy and control. This use of the spear spurred the development of the lance as a distinct weapon that was perfected in the medieval sport of jousting.[26]

In the 14th century, tactical developments meant that knights and men-at-arms often fought on foot. This led to the practice of shortening the lance to about 5 ft (1.5 m).) to make it more manageable.[27] As dismounting became commonplace, specialist pole weapons such as the pollaxe were adopted by knights and this practice ceased.[28]

Introduction of gunpowder

 
German reenactors of pikemen

The development of both the long, two-handed pike and gunpowder firearms in Renaissance Europe saw an ever-increasing focus on integrated infantry tactics.[29] Those infantry not armed with these weapons carried variations on the polearm, including the halberd and the bill. At the start of the Renaissance, cavalry remained predominantly lance-armed; gendarmes with the heavy knightly lance and lighter cavalry with a variety of lighter lances. By the 1540s, however, pistol-armed cavalry called reiters were beginning to make their mark. Cavalry armed with pistols and other lighter firearms, along with a sword, had virtually replaced lance armed cavalry in Western Europe by the beginning of the 17th century.[30]

Ultimately, the spear proper was rendered obsolete on the battlefield. Its last flowering was the half-pike or spontoon,[31] a shortened version of the pike carried by officers of various ranks. While originally a weapon, this came to be seen more as a badge of office, or leading staff by which troops were directed.[32] The half-pike, sometimes known as a boarding pike, was also used as a weapon on board ships until the late 19th century.[33]

Middle East

Modern era

 
A Palestine Arab sufi ascetic carrying a short assegai in 1913.
 
A Bedouin Arab warrior carrying a long hunting az-zaġāyah c. 1914.

Muslim warriors used a spear that was called an az-zaġāyah. Berbers pronounced it zaġāya, but the English term, derived from the Old French via Berber, is "assegai". It is a pole weapon used for throwing or hurling, usually a light spear or javelin made of hard wood and pointed with a forged iron tip. The az-zaġāyah played an important role during the Islamic conquest as well as during later periods, well into the 20th century. A longer pole az-zaġāyah was being used as a hunting weapon from horseback. The az-zaġāyah was widely used. It existed in various forms in areas stretching from Southern Africa to the Indian subcontinent, although these places already had their own variants of the spear. This javelin was the weapon of choice during the Fulani jihad as well as during the Mahdist War in Sudan. It is still being used by certain wandering Sufi ascetics (Derwishes).

Asia

China

 
Spear with inscription, Zhou dynasty
 
Shang Dynasty spear heads

In the Chinese martial arts, the Chinese spear (Qiang 槍) is popularly known as the "king of weapons". The spear is listed in the group of the four major weapons (along with the gun (staff), dao (a single-edged blade similar to a sabre), and the jian (sword)).[34]

Spears were used first as hunting weapons amongst the ancient Chinese. They became popular as infantry weapons during the Warring States and Qin era, when spearmen were used as especially highly disciplined soldiers in organized group attacks. When used in formation fighting, spearmen would line up their large rectangular or circular shields in a shieldwall manner. The Qin also employed long spears (more akin to a pike) in formations similar to Swiss pikemen in order to ward off cavalry. The Han Empire would use similar tactics as its Qin predecessors. Halberds, polearms, and dagger axes were also common weapons during this time.

Spears were also common weaponry for Warring States, Qin, and Han era cavalry units. During these eras, the spear would develop into a longer lance-like weapon used for cavalry charges.

 
Bronze spears, notice the ears on the side of the socket.

There are many words in Chinese that would be classified as a spear in English. The Mao is the predecessor of the Qiang. The first bronze Mao appeared in the Shang dynasty. This weapon was less prominent on the battlefield than the ge (dagger-axe). In some archaeological examples two tiny holes or ears can be found in the blade of the spearhead near the socket, these holes were presumably used to attach tassels, much like modern day wushu spears.

In the early Shang, the Mao appeared to have a relatively short shaft as well as a relatively narrow shaft as opposed to Mao in the later Shang and Western Zhou period. Some Mao from this era are heavily decorated as is evidenced by a Warring States period Mao from the Ba Shu area.[35]

In the Han dynasty the Mao and the Ji (戟 Ji can be loosely defined as a halberd) rose to prominence in the military. Interesting to note is that the amount of iron Mao-heads found exceeds the number of bronze heads. By the end of the Han dynasty (Eastern Han) the process of replacement of the iron Mao had been completed and the bronze Mao had been rendered completely obsolete. After the Han dynasty toward the Sui and Tang dynasties the Mao used by cavalry were fitted with much longer shafts, as is mentioned above. During this era, the use of the Shuo (矟) was widespread among the footmen. The Shuo can be likened to a pike or simply a long spear.[36]

 
A later period qiang

After the Tang dynasty, the popularity of the Mao declined and was replaced by the Qiang (枪). The Tang dynasty divided the Qiang in four categories: "一曰漆枪, 二曰木枪, 三曰白杆枪, 四曰扑头枪。” Roughly translated the four categories are: Qi (a kind of wood) Spears, Wooden Spears, Bai Gan (A kind of wood) Spears and Pu Tou Qiang. The Qiang that were produced in the Song and Ming dynasties consisted of four major parts: Spearhead, Shaft, End Spike and Tassel. The types of Qiang that exist are many. Among the types there are cavalry Qiang that were the length of one zhang (eleven feet and nine inches or 3.58 m), Litte-Flower Spears (Xiao Hua Qiang 小花枪) that are the length of one person and their arm extended above his head, double hooked spears, single hooked spears, ringed spears and many more.[37]

There is some confusion as to how to distinguish the Qiang from the Mao, as they are obviously very similar. Some people say that a Mao is longer than a Qiang, others say that the main difference is between the stiffness of the shaft, where the Qiang would be flexible and the Mao would be stiff. Scholars seem to lean toward the latter explanation more than the former. Because of the difference in the construction of the Mao and the Qiang, the usage is also different, though there is no definitive answer as to what exactly the differences are between the Mao and the Qiang.[38]

India

 
Razakars during Operation Polo
 
Engraving of a Maratha soldier with spear by James Forbes, 1813.

Spears are known as Bhala in Indian languages.[39] Spears in the Indian society were used both in missile and non-missile form, both by cavalry and foot-soldiers. Mounted spear-fighting was practiced using with a ten-foot, ball-tipped wooden lance called a bothati, the end of which was covered in dye so that hits may be confirmed. Spears were constructed from a variety of materials such as the sang made completely of steel, and the ballam which had a bamboo shaft.

The Arab presence in Sindh and the Mameluks of Delhi introduced the Middle Eastern javelin into India.

The Rajputs wielded a type of spear for infantrymen which had a club integrated into the spearhead, and a pointed butt end. Other spears had forked blades, several spear-points, and numerous other innovations. One particular spear unique to India was the vita or corded lance.

Used by the Maratha army, it had a rope connecting the spear with the user's wrist, allowing the weapon to be thrown and pulled back. The Vel is a type of spear or lance, originated in Southern India, primarily used by Tamils.[40][41]

Sikh Nihangs sometimes carry a spear even today. Spears were used in conflicts and training by armed paramilitary units such as the razakars of Nizams of Hyderabad State as late as the second half of the 20th century.

Japan

 
Ukiyo-e print of a samurai general holding a yari in his right hand

The hoko spear was used in ancient Japan sometime between the Yayoi period and the Heian period, but it became unpopular as early samurai often acted as horseback archers. Medieval Japan employed spears again for infantrymen to use, but it was not until the 11th century in that samurai began to prefer spears over bows. Several polearms were used in the Japanese theatres; the naginata was a glaive-like weapon with a long, curved blade popularly among the samurai and the Buddhist warrior-monks, often used against cavalry; the yari was a longer polearm, with a straight-bladed spearhead, which became the weapon of choice of both the samurai and the ashigaru (footmen) during the Warring States Era; the horseback samurai used shorter yari for his single-armed combat; on the other hand, ashigaru infantries used long yari (similar with European pike) for their massed combat formation.

Philippines

 
A Filipino warrior holding a Sibat (spear) in the Boxer Codex.

Filipino spears (sibat) were used as both a weapon and a tool throughout the Philippines. It is also called a bangkaw (after the Bankaw Revolt.), sumbling or palupad in the islands of Visayas and Mindanao. Sibat are typically made from rattan, either with a sharpened tip or a head made from metal. These heads may either be single-edged, double-edged or barbed. Styles vary according to function and origin. For example, a sibat designed for fishing may not be the same as those used for hunting.

The spear was used as the primary weapon in expeditions and battles against neighbouring island kingdoms and it became famous during the 1521 Battle of Mactan, where the chieftain Lapu Lapu of Cebu fought against Spanish forces led by Ferdinand Magellan who was subsequently killed.

Africa

 
Zulu man with iklwa, 1917

The various types of the assegai (a light spear or javelin made of wood and pointed with iron or fire-hardened tip) were used throughout Africa and it was the most common weapon used before the introduction of firearms. The Zulu, Xhosa and other Nguni tribes of South Africa were renowned for their use of the assegai.

Shaka of the Zulu invented a shorter stabbing spear with a two-foot (0.61m) shaft and a larger, broader blade one foot (0.3m) long. This weapon is otherwise known as the iklwa or ixwa, after the sound that was heard as it was withdrawn from the victim's wound.[42][43] The traditional spear was not abandoned, but was used to range attack enemy formations before closing in for close quarters battle with the iklwa. This tactical combination originated during Shaka's military reforms. This weapon was typically used with one hand while the off hand held a cowhide shield for protection.

The Americas

West Mexico and South America (Pre-Colombia)

As advanced metallurgy was largely unknown in pre-Columbian America outside of Western Mexico and South America, most weapons in Meso-America were made of wood or obsidian. This did not mean that they were less lethal, as obsidian may be sharpened to become many times sharper than steel.[44] Meso-American spears varied greatly in shape and size. While the Aztecs preferred the sword-like macuahuitl for fighting,[45] the advantage of a far-reaching thrusting weapon was recognised, and a large portion of the army would carry the tepoztopilli into battle.[46] The tepoztopilli was a polearm, and to judge from depictions in various Aztec codices, it was roughly the height of a man, with a broad wooden head about twice the length of the users' palm or shorter, edged with razor-sharp obsidian blades which were deeply set in grooves carved into the head, and cemented in place with bitumen or plant resin as an adhesive. The tepoztopilli was able both to thrust and slash effectively.

Throwing spears also were used extensively in Meso-American warfare, usually with the help of an atlatl.[47] Throwing spears were typically shorter and more stream-lined than the tepoztopilli, and some had obsidian edges for greater penetration.

Native Americans

 
A photograph of a Hupa native American man with his spear – by Edward Sheriff Curtis, 1923
 
Spear Case, Crow (Native American), late 19th century, Brooklyn Museum

Typically, most spears made by Native Americans were created with materials surrounded by their communities. Usually, the shaft of the spear was made with a wooden stick while the head of the spear was fashioned from arrowheads, pieces of metal such as copper, or a bone that had been sharpened. Spears were a preferred weapon by many since it was inexpensive to create, could more easily be taught to others, and could be made quickly and in large quantities.

Native Americans used the buffalo pound method to kill buffalo, which required a hunter to dress as a buffalo and lure one into a ravine where other hunters were hiding. Once the buffalo appeared, the other hunters would kill him with spears. A variation of this technique, called the buffalo jump, was when a runner would lead the animals towards a cliff. As the buffalo got close to the cliff, other members of the tribe would jump out from behind rocks or trees and scare the buffalo over the cliff. Other hunters would be waiting at the bottom of the cliff to spear the animal to death.[48]

Hunting

 
Peruvian fisherman spearfishing with a multi-pronged spear

One of the earliest forms of killing prey for humans, hunting game with a spear and spear fishing continues to this day as both a means of catching food and as a cultural activity. Some of the most common prey for early humans were mega fauna such as mammoths which were hunted with various kinds of spear. One theory for the Quaternary extinction event was that most of these animals were hunted to extinction by humans with spears. Even after the invention of other hunting weapons such as the bow the spear continued to be used, either as a projectile weapon or used in the hand as was common in boar hunting.

Types

 
A boar-spear with a bar
  • Barred spears: A barred spear has a crossbar beneath the blade, to prevent too deep a penetration of the spear into an animal. The bar may be forged as part of the spearhead or may be more loosely tied by means of loops below the blade. Barred spears are known from the Bronze Age, but the first historical record of their use in Europe is found in the writings of Xenophon in the 5th century BC.[49] Examples also are shown in Roman art. In the Middle Ages, a winged or lugged war-spear was developed (see above), but the later Middle Ages saw the development of specialised types, such as the boar-spear and the bear-spear.[50] The boar-spear could be used both on foot or horseback.
  • Javelin
  • Harpoon
  • Trident

Modern revival

Spear hunting fell out of favour in most of Europe in the 18th century, but continued in Germany, enjoying a revival in the 1930s.[51] Spear hunting is still practiced in the United States.[52] Animals taken are primarily wild boar and deer, although trophy animals such as cats and big game as large as a Cape Buffalo are hunted with spears. Alligators are hunted in Florida with a type of harpoon.

Gymnastics

One of the gymnastic exercises performed by the ancient Greeks was the throwing of a spear, referred to as ἀκυντισμός.[53]

In myth and legend

Symbolism

 
The Norse god Odin, carrying the spear Gungnir on his ride to Hel

Like many weapons, a spear may also be a symbol of power.

The Celts would symbolically destroy a dead warrior's spear either to prevent its use by another or as a sacrificial offering.

In classical Greek mythology Zeus' bolts of lightning may be interpreted as a symbolic spear. Some would carry that interpretation to the spear that frequently is associated with Athena, interpreting her spear as a symbolic connection to some of Zeus' power beyond the Aegis once he rose to replacing other deities in the pantheon. Athena was depicted with a spear prior to that change in myths, however. Chiron's wedding-gift to Peleus when he married the nymph Thetis in classical Greek mythology, was an ashen spear as the nature of ashwood with its straight grain made it an ideal choice of wood for a spear.

The Romans and their early enemies would force prisoners to walk underneath a 'yoke of spears', which humiliated them. The yoke would consist of three spears, two upright with a third tied between them at a height which made the prisoners stoop.[54] It has been suggested that the arrangement has a magical origin, a way to trap evil spirits.[55] The word subjugate has its origins in this practice (from Latin sub = under, jugum = yoke).[56]

In Norse mythology, the god Odin's spear (named Gungnir) was made by the sons of Ivaldi. It had the special property that it never missed its mark. During the War with the Vanir, Odin symbolically threw Gungnir into the Vanir host. This practice of symbolically casting a spear into the enemy ranks at the start of a fight was sometimes used in historic clashes, to seek Odin's support in the coming battle.[57] In Wagner's opera Siegfried, the haft of Gungnir is said to be from the "World-Tree" Yggdrasil.[58]

Other spears of religious significance are the Holy Lance[59] and the Lúin of Celtchar,[60] believed by some to have vast mystical powers.

Sir James George Frazer in The Golden Bough[61] noted the phallic nature of the spear and suggested that in the Arthurian legends the spear or lance functioned as a symbol of male fertility, paired with the Grail (as a symbol of female fertility).

 
Statue of the Hindu God of War, Murugan, holding his primary weapon, the Vel. Batu Caves, Malaysia.

The Hindu god of war Murugan is worshipped by Tamils in the form of the spear called Vel, which is his primary weapon.[62]

The term spear is also used (in a somewhat archaic manner) to describe the male line of a family, as opposed to the distaff or female line.

Legends

See also

Related weapons

Notes and references

  1. ^ Weir, William. 50 Weapons That Changed Warfare. The Career Press, 2005, p 12.
  2. ^ Pruetz, Jill D.; Bertolani, Paco (2007). "Savanna Chimpanzees, Pan troglodytes verus, Hunt with Tools". Current Biology. 17 (5): 412–417. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2006.12.042. PMID 17320393. S2CID 16551874.
  3. ^ Thieme, Hartmut (1997-02-27). "Lower Palaeolithic hunting spears from Germany". Nature. 385 (6619): 807–810. Bibcode:1997Natur.385..807T. doi:10.1038/385807a0. PMID 9039910. S2CID 4283393. Retrieved 2017-01-09.
  4. ^ Monte Morin, , Los Angeles Times, November 16, 2012
  5. ^ J. Wilkins et al. "Evidence for early hafted hunting technology". Science, Vol. 338, Nov. 16, 2012, p. 942. doi:10.1126/science.1227608.
  6. ^ Rick Weiss, "Chimps Observed Making Their Own Weapons", The Washington Post, February 22, 2007
  7. ^ Wymer, John (1982). The Palaeolithic Age. London: Croom Helm. p. 192. ISBN 978-0-7099-2710-5.
  8. ^ Webster, T.B.L. (1977). From Mycenae to Homer. London: Methuen. pp. 166–8. ISBN 978-0-416-70570-6. Retrieved 15 Feb 2010.
  9. ^ Hanson, Victor Davis (1999). "Chapter 2 : The Rise of the City State and the Invention of Western Warfare". The Wars of the Ancient Greeks. London: Cassell. pp. 42–83. ISBN 978-0-304-35982-0.
  10. ^ Hanson (1999), p. 59
  11. ^ Hanson (1999), pp.147–8
  12. ^ Hanson (1999), pp149-150
  13. ^ Hunt, Peter. The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare: Volume 1, Greece, The Hellenistic World and the Rise of Rome. Cambridge University Press, 2007, p. 108
  14. ^ Bishop, M.C.; Coulston J.C. (1989). Roman Military Equipment. Princes Risborough: Shire Publications. ISBN 978-0-7478-0005-7.
  15. ^ "Viking Spear". Hurstwic.org. Retrieved 2017-01-09.
  16. ^ Swanton, M.J. (1973). The Spearheads of the Anglo-Saxon Settlement. London: Royal Archaeological Institute.
  17. ^ Martin, Paul (1968). Armour and weapons. London: Herbert Jenkins. p. 226.
  18. ^ e.g. at the Battle of Steppes, 1213. Oman, Sir Charles (1991) [1924]. The Art of War in the Middle Ages. Vol. 1. London: Greenhill Books. p. 451. ISBN 978-1-85367-100-5.
  19. ^ Fisher, Andrew (1986). William Wallace. Edinburgh: John Donald. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-85976-154-3.
  20. ^ Verbruggen, J. F. (1997). The Art of Warfare in Western Europe in the Middle Ages (2nd. ed.). Woodbridge: Boydell Press. pp. 184–5. ISBN 978-0-85115-630-9.
  21. ^ Scott, Ronald McNair (1988). Robert the Bruce, King of Scots. New York: Peter Bedrick Books. pp. 148, 158–159, 202–203.
  22. ^ Morris, Paul (September 2000). "'We have met Devils!': The Almogavars of James I and Peter III of Catalonia–Aragon". Anistoriton. 004. Retrieved 2009-08-04.
  23. ^ Heath, Ian (1993). The Irish Wars 1485–1603. Oxford: Osprey. p. 36. ISBN 978-1-85532-280-6.
  24. ^ Arnold, Thomas (2001). The Renaissance at War. London: Cassel & Co. pp. 60–72. ISBN 978-0-304-35270-8.
  25. ^ Nicholson, Helen (2004). Medieval Warfare. Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan. pp. 102–3. ISBN 978-0-333-76331-5.
  26. ^ * Sébastien Nadot, Rompez les lances ! Chevaliers et tournois au Moyen Age, Paris, ed. Autrement, 2010. (Couch your lances ! Knights and tournaments in the Middle Ages...)
  27. ^ Nicholson (2004), p. 102
  28. ^ Nicholson (2004), p101
  29. ^ Arnold (2001), pp.66–72, 78–81
  30. ^ Arnold (2001), pp.92–100
  31. ^ Oakeshott, Ewart (1980). European Weapons and Armour. Guildford & London: Lutterworth Press. p. 56. ISBN 978-0-7188-2126-5.
  32. ^ Oakeshott (1980), p.55
  33. ^ Oakeshott (1980), p.56
  34. ^ "Spear Training | Spear Fighting | 枪 矛 厹". Imperial Combat Arts.
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  63. ^ P. K. Ford, "On the Significance of some Arthurian Names in Welsh", in Bulletin of the Board of Celtic Studies 30 (1983), pp.268–273 at p.71; R. Bromwich and D. Simon Evans, Culhwch and Olwen. An Edition and Study of the Oldest Arthurian Tale (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1992), p.64

spear, other, uses, disambiguation, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, source. For other uses see Spear disambiguation Spears redirects here For other uses see Spears disambiguation Spearman redirects here For other uses see Spearman 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 Spear news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message A spear is a pole weapon consisting of a shaft usually of wood with a pointed head The head may be simply the sharpened end of the shaft itself as is the case with fire hardened spears or it may be made of a more durable material fastened to the shaft such as bone flint obsidian iron steel or bronze The most common design for hunting or combat spears since ancient times has incorporated a metal spearhead shaped like a triangle lozenge or leaf The heads of fishing spears usually feature barbs or serrated edges Spear armed hoplite from Greco Persian Wars The word spear comes from the Old English spere from the Proto Germanic speri from a Proto Indo European root sper spear pole Spears can be divided into two broad categories those designed for thrusting as a melee weapon and those designed for throwing as a ranged weapon usually referred to as javelins or darts The spear has been used throughout human history both as a hunting and fishing tool and as a weapon Along with the club knife and axe it is one of the earliest and most important tools developed by early humans As a weapon it may be wielded with either one or two hands It was used in virtually every conflict up until the modern era where even then it continues on in the form of the fixed bayonet on a long gun and is probably the most commonly used weapon in history 1 Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Prehistory 2 Military 2 1 Europe 2 1 1 Classical antiquity 2 1 1 1 Ancient Greeks 2 1 1 2 Ancient Romans 2 1 2 Medieval period 2 1 2 1 Infantry 2 1 2 2 Cavalry 2 1 3 Introduction of gunpowder 2 2 Middle East 2 2 1 Modern era 2 3 Asia 2 3 1 China 2 3 2 India 2 3 3 Japan 2 3 4 Philippines 2 4 Africa 2 5 The Americas 2 5 1 West Mexico and South America Pre Colombia 2 5 2 Native Americans 3 Hunting 3 1 Types 3 2 Modern revival 4 Gymnastics 5 In myth and legend 5 1 Symbolism 5 2 Legends 6 See also 6 1 Related weapons 7 Notes and referencesOrigins EditSpear manufacture and use is not confined to humans It is also practiced by the western chimpanzee Chimpanzees near Kedougou Senegal have been observed to create spears by breaking straight limbs off trees stripping them of their bark and side branches and sharpening one end with their teeth They then used the weapons to hunt galagos sleeping in hollows 2 Prehistory Edit Wooden spear point from about 420 000 years ago Natural History Museum London Hunting spear and knife from Mesa Verde National Park Archaeological evidence found in present day Germany documents that wooden spears have been used for hunting since at least 400 000 years ago 3 and a 2012 study from the site of Kathu Pan in South Africa suggests that hominids possibly Homo heidelbergensis may have developed the technology of hafted stone tipped spears in Africa about 500 000 years ago 4 5 Wood does not preserve well however and Craig Stanford a primatologist and professor of anthropology at the University of Southern California has suggested that the discovery of spear use by chimpanzees means that early humans may have used wooden spears before this 6 Neanderthals were constructing stone spear heads from as early as 300 000 BP and by 250 000 years ago wooden spears were made with fire hardened points From circa 200 000 BCE onwards Middle Paleolithic humans began to make complex stone blades with flaked edges which were used as spear heads These stone heads could be fixed to the spear shaft by gum or resin or by bindings made of animal sinew leather strips or vegetable matter During this period a clear difference remained between spears designed to be thrown and those designed to be used in hand to hand combat By the Magdalenian period c 15 000 9500 BCE spear throwers similar to the later atlatl were in use 7 Military Edit Sumerian spearmen advancing in close formation with large shields Stele of the Vultures c 2450 BCE Europe Edit Classical antiquity Edit Ancient Greeks Edit Athenian warrior wielding a spear in battle The spear is the main weapon of the warriors of Homer s Iliad The use of both a single thrusting spear and two throwing spears are mentioned It has been suggested that two styles of combat are being described an early style with thrusting spears dating to the Mycenaean period in which the Iliad is set and anachronistically a later style with throwing spears from Homer s own Archaic period 8 In the 7th century BCE the Greeks evolved a new close order infantry formation the phalanx 9 The key to this formation was the hoplite who was equipped with a large circular bronze faced shield aspis and a 7 9 ft 2 1 2 7 m spear with an iron head and bronze butt spike doru 10 The hoplite phalanx dominated warfare among the Greek City States from the 7th into the 4th century BCE The 4th century saw major changes One was the greater use of peltasts light infantry armed with spear and javelins 11 The other was the development of the sarissa a two handed pike 18 ft 5 5 m in length by the Macedonians under Phillip of Macedon and Alexander the Great 12 The pike phalanx supported by peltasts and cavalry became the dominant mode of warfare among the Greeks from the late 4th century onward 13 until Greek military systems were supplanted by the Roman legions Ancient Romans Edit Re enactor outfitted as a Late Roman legionary carrying a pilum In the pre Marian Roman armies the first two lines of battle the hastati and principes often fought with a sword called a gladius and pila heavy javelins that were specifically designed to be thrown at an enemy to pierce and foul a target s shield Originally the principes were armed with a short spear called a hasta but these gradually fell out of use eventually being replaced by the gladius The third line the triarii continued to use the hasta From the late 2nd century BCE all legionaries were equipped with the pilum The pilum continued to be the standard legionary spear until the end of the 2nd century CE Auxilia however were equipped with a simple hasta and perhaps javelins or darts During the 3rd century CE although the pilum continued to be used legionaries usually were equipped with other forms of throwing and thrusting spear similar to auxilia of the previous century By the 4th century the pilum had effectively disappeared from common use 14 In the late period of the Roman Empire the spear became more often used because of its anti cavalry capacities as the barbarian invasions were often conducted by people with a developed culture of cavalry in warfare Medieval period Edit After the fall of the Western Roman Empire the spear and shield continued to be used by nearly all Western European cultures Since a medieval spear required only a small amount of steel along the sharpened edges most of the spear tip was wrought iron it was an economical weapon Quick to manufacture and needing less smithing skill than a sword it remained the main weapon of the common soldier The Vikings for instance although often portrayed with axe or sword in hand were armed mostly with spears 15 as were their Anglo Saxon Irish or continental contemporaries Infantry Edit Assyrian soldier holding a spear and wearing a helmet Detail of a basalt relief from the palace of Tiglath pileser III at Hadatu Syria 744 727 BCE Ancient Orient Museum Istanbul Broadly speaking spears were either designed to be used in melee or to be thrown Within this simple classification there was a remarkable range of types For example M J Swanton identified thirty different spearhead categories and sub categories in early Saxon England 16 Most medieval spearheads were generally leaf shaped Notable types of early medieval spears include the angon a throwing spear with a long head similar to the Roman pilum used by the Franks and Anglo Saxons and the winged or lugged spear which had two prominent wings at the base of the spearhead either to prevent the spear penetrating too far into an enemy or to aid in spear fencing 17 Originally a Frankish weapon the winged spear also was popular with the Vikings It would become the ancestor of later medieval polearms such as the partisan and spetum The thrusting spear also has the advantage of reach being considerably longer than other weapon types Exact spear lengths are hard to deduce as few spear shafts survive archaeologically but 6 8 ft 1 8 2 4 m would seem to have been the norm Some nations were noted for their long spears including the Scots and the Flemish Spears usually were used in tightly ordered formations such as the shield wall or the schiltron To resist cavalry spear shafts could be planted against the ground 18 William Wallace drew up his schiltrons in a circle at the Battle of Falkirk in 1298 to deter charging cavalry 19 this was a widespread tactic sometimes known as the crown formation 20 Thomas Randolph 1st Earl of Moray used a circular schiltron on the first day of the Battle of Bannockburn However the rectangular schiltron was much more common and was used by King Robert the Bruce on the second day of the Battle of Bannockburn and in the Battle of Old Byland when he defeated English armies 21 Throwing spears became rarer as the Middle Ages drew on but survived in the hands of specialists such as the Catalan Almogavars 22 They were commonly used in Ireland until the end of the 16th century 23 Spears began to lose fashion among the infantry during the 14th century being replaced by pole weapons that combined the thrusting properties of the spear with the cutting properties of the axe such as the halberd Where spears were retained they grew in length eventually evolving into pikes which would be a dominant infantry weapon in the 16th and 17th centuries 24 Cavalry Edit Cavalry spears were originally the same as infantry spears and were often used with two hands or held with one hand overhead In the 12th century after the adoption of stirrups and a high cantled saddle the spear became a decidedly more powerful weapon A mounted knight would secure the lance by holding it with one hand and tucking it under the armpit the couched lance technique 25 In combination with a lance rest this allowed all the momentum of the horse and knight to be focused on the weapon s tip whilst still retaining accuracy and control This use of the spear spurred the development of the lance as a distinct weapon that was perfected in the medieval sport of jousting 26 In the 14th century tactical developments meant that knights and men at arms often fought on foot This led to the practice of shortening the lance to about 5 ft 1 5 m to make it more manageable 27 As dismounting became commonplace specialist pole weapons such as the pollaxe were adopted by knights and this practice ceased 28 Introduction of gunpowder Edit German reenactors of pikemen The development of both the long two handed pike and gunpowder firearms in Renaissance Europe saw an ever increasing focus on integrated infantry tactics 29 Those infantry not armed with these weapons carried variations on the polearm including the halberd and the bill At the start of the Renaissance cavalry remained predominantly lance armed gendarmes with the heavy knightly lance and lighter cavalry with a variety of lighter lances By the 1540s however pistol armed cavalry called reiters were beginning to make their mark Cavalry armed with pistols and other lighter firearms along with a sword had virtually replaced lance armed cavalry in Western Europe by the beginning of the 17th century 30 Ultimately the spear proper was rendered obsolete on the battlefield Its last flowering was the half pike or spontoon 31 a shortened version of the pike carried by officers of various ranks While originally a weapon this came to be seen more as a badge of office or leading staff by which troops were directed 32 The half pike sometimes known as a boarding pike was also used as a weapon on board ships until the late 19th century 33 Middle East Edit Modern era Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message A Palestine Arab sufi ascetic carrying a short assegai in 1913 A Bedouin Arab warrior carrying a long hunting az zaġayah c 1914 Muslim warriors used a spear that was called an az zaġayah Berbers pronounced it zaġaya but the English term derived from the Old French via Berber is assegai It is a pole weapon used for throwing or hurling usually a light spear or javelin made of hard wood and pointed with a forged iron tip The az zaġayah played an important role during the Islamic conquest as well as during later periods well into the 20th century A longer pole az zaġayah was being used as a hunting weapon from horseback The az zaġayah was widely used It existed in various forms in areas stretching from Southern Africa to the Indian subcontinent although these places already had their own variants of the spear This javelin was the weapon of choice during the Fulani jihad as well as during the Mahdist War in Sudan It is still being used by certain wandering Sufi ascetics Derwishes Asia Edit China Edit Spear with inscription Zhou dynasty Shang Dynasty spear heads In the Chinese martial arts the Chinese spear Qiang 槍 is popularly known as the king of weapons The spear is listed in the group of the four major weapons along with the gun staff dao a single edged blade similar to a sabre and the jian sword 34 Spears were used first as hunting weapons amongst the ancient Chinese They became popular as infantry weapons during the Warring States and Qin era when spearmen were used as especially highly disciplined soldiers in organized group attacks When used in formation fighting spearmen would line up their large rectangular or circular shields in a shieldwall manner The Qin also employed long spears more akin to a pike in formations similar to Swiss pikemen in order to ward off cavalry The Han Empire would use similar tactics as its Qin predecessors Halberds polearms and dagger axes were also common weapons during this time Spears were also common weaponry for Warring States Qin and Han era cavalry units During these eras the spear would develop into a longer lance like weapon used for cavalry charges Bronze spears notice the ears on the side of the socket There are many words in Chinese that would be classified as a spear in English The Mao is the predecessor of the Qiang The first bronze Mao appeared in the Shang dynasty This weapon was less prominent on the battlefield than the ge dagger axe In some archaeological examples two tiny holes or ears can be found in the blade of the spearhead near the socket these holes were presumably used to attach tassels much like modern day wushu spears In the early Shang the Mao appeared to have a relatively short shaft as well as a relatively narrow shaft as opposed to Mao in the later Shang and Western Zhou period Some Mao from this era are heavily decorated as is evidenced by a Warring States period Mao from the Ba Shu area 35 In the Han dynasty the Mao and the Ji 戟 Ji can be loosely defined as a halberd rose to prominence in the military Interesting to note is that the amount of iron Mao heads found exceeds the number of bronze heads By the end of the Han dynasty Eastern Han the process of replacement of the iron Mao had been completed and the bronze Mao had been rendered completely obsolete After the Han dynasty toward the Sui and Tang dynasties the Mao used by cavalry were fitted with much longer shafts as is mentioned above During this era the use of the Shuo 矟 was widespread among the footmen The Shuo can be likened to a pike or simply a long spear 36 A later period qiang After the Tang dynasty the popularity of the Mao declined and was replaced by the Qiang 枪 The Tang dynasty divided the Qiang in four categories 一曰漆枪 二曰木枪 三曰白杆枪 四曰扑头枪 Roughly translated the four categories are Qi a kind of wood Spears Wooden Spears Bai Gan A kind of wood Spears and Pu Tou Qiang The Qiang that were produced in the Song and Ming dynasties consisted of four major parts Spearhead Shaft End Spike and Tassel The types of Qiang that exist are many Among the types there are cavalry Qiang that were the length of one zhang eleven feet and nine inches or 3 58 m Litte Flower Spears Xiao Hua Qiang 小花枪 that are the length of one person and their arm extended above his head double hooked spears single hooked spears ringed spears and many more 37 There is some confusion as to how to distinguish the Qiang from the Mao as they are obviously very similar Some people say that a Mao is longer than a Qiang others say that the main difference is between the stiffness of the shaft where the Qiang would be flexible and the Mao would be stiff Scholars seem to lean toward the latter explanation more than the former Because of the difference in the construction of the Mao and the Qiang the usage is also different though there is no definitive answer as to what exactly the differences are between the Mao and the Qiang 38 India Edit Razakars during Operation Polo Engraving of a Maratha soldier with spear by James Forbes 1813 Spears are known as Bhala in Indian languages 39 Spears in the Indian society were used both in missile and non missile form both by cavalry and foot soldiers Mounted spear fighting was practiced using with a ten foot ball tipped wooden lance called a bothati the end of which was covered in dye so that hits may be confirmed Spears were constructed from a variety of materials such as the sang made completely of steel and the ballam which had a bamboo shaft The Arab presence in Sindh and the Mameluks of Delhi introduced the Middle Eastern javelin into India The Rajputs wielded a type of spear for infantrymen which had a club integrated into the spearhead and a pointed butt end Other spears had forked blades several spear points and numerous other innovations One particular spear unique to India was the vita or corded lance Used by the Maratha army it had a rope connecting the spear with the user s wrist allowing the weapon to be thrown and pulled back The Vel is a type of spear or lance originated in Southern India primarily used by Tamils 40 41 Sikh Nihangs sometimes carry a spear even today Spears were used in conflicts and training by armed paramilitary units such as the razakars of Nizams of Hyderabad State as late as the second half of the 20th century Japan Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ukiyo e print of a samurai general holding a yari in his right hand The hoko spear was used in ancient Japan sometime between the Yayoi period and the Heian period but it became unpopular as early samurai often acted as horseback archers Medieval Japan employed spears again for infantrymen to use but it was not until the 11th century in that samurai began to prefer spears over bows Several polearms were used in the Japanese theatres the naginata was a glaive like weapon with a long curved blade popularly among the samurai and the Buddhist warrior monks often used against cavalry the yari was a longer polearm with a straight bladed spearhead which became the weapon of choice of both the samurai and the ashigaru footmen during the Warring States Era the horseback samurai used shorter yari for his single armed combat on the other hand ashigaru infantries used long yari similar with European pike for their massed combat formation Philippines Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message A Filipino warrior holding a Sibat spear in the Boxer Codex Filipino spears sibat were used as both a weapon and a tool throughout the Philippines It is also called a bangkaw after the Bankaw Revolt sumbling or palupad in the islands of Visayas and Mindanao Sibat are typically made from rattan either with a sharpened tip or a head made from metal These heads may either be single edged double edged or barbed Styles vary according to function and origin For example a sibat designed for fishing may not be the same as those used for hunting The spear was used as the primary weapon in expeditions and battles against neighbouring island kingdoms and it became famous during the 1521 Battle of Mactan where the chieftain Lapu Lapu of Cebu fought against Spanish forces led by Ferdinand Magellan who was subsequently killed Africa Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it April 2010 Zulu man with iklwa 1917 The various types of the assegai a light spear or javelin made of wood and pointed with iron or fire hardened tip were used throughout Africa and it was the most common weapon used before the introduction of firearms The Zulu Xhosa and other Nguni tribes of South Africa were renowned for their use of the assegai Shaka of the Zulu invented a shorter stabbing spear with a two foot 0 61m shaft and a larger broader blade one foot 0 3m long This weapon is otherwise known as the iklwa or ixwa after the sound that was heard as it was withdrawn from the victim s wound 42 43 The traditional spear was not abandoned but was used to range attack enemy formations before closing in for close quarters battle with the iklwa This tactical combination originated during Shaka s military reforms This weapon was typically used with one hand while the off hand held a cowhide shield for protection The Americas Edit West Mexico and South America Pre Colombia Edit As advanced metallurgy was largely unknown in pre Columbian America outside of Western Mexico and South America most weapons in Meso America were made of wood or obsidian This did not mean that they were less lethal as obsidian may be sharpened to become many times sharper than steel 44 Meso American spears varied greatly in shape and size While the Aztecs preferred the sword like macuahuitl for fighting 45 the advantage of a far reaching thrusting weapon was recognised and a large portion of the army would carry the tepoztopilli into battle 46 The tepoztopilli was a polearm and to judge from depictions in various Aztec codices it was roughly the height of a man with a broad wooden head about twice the length of the users palm or shorter edged with razor sharp obsidian blades which were deeply set in grooves carved into the head and cemented in place with bitumen or plant resin as an adhesive The tepoztopilli was able both to thrust and slash effectively Throwing spears also were used extensively in Meso American warfare usually with the help of an atlatl 47 Throwing spears were typically shorter and more stream lined than the tepoztopilli and some had obsidian edges for greater penetration Native Americans Edit A photograph of a Hupa native American man with his spear by Edward Sheriff Curtis 1923 Spear Case Crow Native American late 19th century Brooklyn Museum Typically most spears made by Native Americans were created with materials surrounded by their communities Usually the shaft of the spear was made with a wooden stick while the head of the spear was fashioned from arrowheads pieces of metal such as copper or a bone that had been sharpened Spears were a preferred weapon by many since it was inexpensive to create could more easily be taught to others and could be made quickly and in large quantities Native Americans used the buffalo pound method to kill buffalo which required a hunter to dress as a buffalo and lure one into a ravine where other hunters were hiding Once the buffalo appeared the other hunters would kill him with spears A variation of this technique called the buffalo jump was when a runner would lead the animals towards a cliff As the buffalo got close to the cliff other members of the tribe would jump out from behind rocks or trees and scare the buffalo over the cliff Other hunters would be waiting at the bottom of the cliff to spear the animal to death 48 Hunting EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it March 2010 Peruvian fisherman spearfishing with a multi pronged spear One of the earliest forms of killing prey for humans hunting game with a spear and spear fishing continues to this day as both a means of catching food and as a cultural activity Some of the most common prey for early humans were mega fauna such as mammoths which were hunted with various kinds of spear One theory for the Quaternary extinction event was that most of these animals were hunted to extinction by humans with spears Even after the invention of other hunting weapons such as the bow the spear continued to be used either as a projectile weapon or used in the hand as was common in boar hunting Types Edit A boar spear with a bar Barred spears A barred spear has a crossbar beneath the blade to prevent too deep a penetration of the spear into an animal The bar may be forged as part of the spearhead or may be more loosely tied by means of loops below the blade Barred spears are known from the Bronze Age but the first historical record of their use in Europe is found in the writings of Xenophon in the 5th century BC 49 Examples also are shown in Roman art In the Middle Ages a winged or lugged war spear was developed see above but the later Middle Ages saw the development of specialised types such as the boar spear and the bear spear 50 The boar spear could be used both on foot or horseback Javelin Harpoon TridentModern revival Edit Spear hunting fell out of favour in most of Europe in the 18th century but continued in Germany enjoying a revival in the 1930s 51 Spear hunting is still practiced in the United States 52 Animals taken are primarily wild boar and deer although trophy animals such as cats and big game as large as a Cape Buffalo are hunted with spears Alligators are hunted in Florida with a type of harpoon Gymnastics EditOne of the gymnastic exercises performed by the ancient Greeks was the throwing of a spear referred to as ἀkyntismos 53 In myth and legend EditSymbolism Edit The Norse god Odin carrying the spear Gungnir on his ride to Hel Like many weapons a spear may also be a symbol of power The Celts would symbolically destroy a dead warrior s spear either to prevent its use by another or as a sacrificial offering In classical Greek mythology Zeus bolts of lightning may be interpreted as a symbolic spear Some would carry that interpretation to the spear that frequently is associated with Athena interpreting her spear as a symbolic connection to some of Zeus power beyond the Aegis once he rose to replacing other deities in the pantheon Athena was depicted with a spear prior to that change in myths however Chiron s wedding gift to Peleus when he married the nymph Thetis in classical Greek mythology was an ashen spear as the nature of ashwood with its straight grain made it an ideal choice of wood for a spear The Romans and their early enemies would force prisoners to walk underneath a yoke of spears which humiliated them The yoke would consist of three spears two upright with a third tied between them at a height which made the prisoners stoop 54 It has been suggested that the arrangement has a magical origin a way to trap evil spirits 55 The word subjugate has its origins in this practice from Latin sub under jugum yoke 56 In Norse mythology the god Odin s spear named Gungnir was made by the sons of Ivaldi It had the special property that it never missed its mark During the War with the Vanir Odin symbolically threw Gungnir into the Vanir host This practice of symbolically casting a spear into the enemy ranks at the start of a fight was sometimes used in historic clashes to seek Odin s support in the coming battle 57 In Wagner s opera Siegfried the haft of Gungnir is said to be from the World Tree Yggdrasil 58 Other spears of religious significance are the Holy Lance 59 and the Luin of Celtchar 60 believed by some to have vast mystical powers Sir James George Frazer in The Golden Bough 61 noted the phallic nature of the spear and suggested that in the Arthurian legends the spear or lance functioned as a symbol of male fertility paired with the Grail as a symbol of female fertility Statue of the Hindu God of War Murugan holding his primary weapon the Vel Batu Caves Malaysia The Hindu god of war Murugan is worshipped by Tamils in the form of the spear called Vel which is his primary weapon 62 The term spear is also used in a somewhat archaic manner to describe the male line of a family as opposed to the distaff or female line Legends Edit Amenonuhoko spear of Izanagi and Izanami creator gods in Japanese mythology Gae Bulg spear of Cuchulainn hero in Irish mythology Gae Buide and Gae Derg spears of Diarmuid Ua Duibhne which could inflict wounds that none can recover from Green Dragon Crescent Blade a guan dao wielded by General Guan Yu in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms Gungnir spear of Odin a god in Norse mythology Holy Lance said to be the spear that pierced the side of Jesus Pelian Spear a spear that only Achilles could wield inherited from his father Peleus made by Chiron from an ash tree on Mount Pelion Rhongomyniad referred to simply as Ron spear in Geoffrey of Monmouth s History of Britain the spear of King Arthur 63 verification needed Serpent Spear wielded by General Zhang Fei in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms Spear of Fuchai the spear used by Goujian s arch rival King Fuchai of Wu in China Spear of Lugh named after Lugh a god in Irish mythology Trident a three pronged fishing spear associated with a number of water deities including the Etruscan Nethuns Greek Poseidon and Roman Neptune Trishula a three pronged spear wielded by the Hindu deities Durga and Shiva Vel a flattened broad tipped spear used by the Hindu deity MuruganSee also EditList of types of spears Viking Age arms and armour ProjectileRelated weapons Edit Arrow weapon Assegai Atlatl Bill weapon Dart missile Glaive Halberd Javelin Kontos weapon Lance Naginata Pike weapon Pilum Pole weapon Spear thrower Woomera spear thrower XystonNotes and references Edit Weir William 50 Weapons That Changed Warfare The Career Press 2005 p 12 Pruetz Jill D Bertolani Paco 2007 Savanna Chimpanzees Pan troglodytes verus Hunt with Tools Current Biology 17 5 412 417 doi 10 1016 j cub 2006 12 042 PMID 17320393 S2CID 16551874 Thieme Hartmut 1997 02 27 Lower Palaeolithic hunting spears from Germany Nature 385 6619 807 810 Bibcode 1997Natur 385 807T doi 10 1038 385807a0 PMID 9039910 S2CID 4283393 Retrieved 2017 01 09 Monte Morin Stone tipped spear may have much earlier origin Los Angeles Times November 16 2012 J Wilkins et al Evidence for early hafted hunting technology Science Vol 338 Nov 16 2012 p 942 doi 10 1126 science 1227608 Rick Weiss Chimps Observed Making Their Own Weapons The Washington Post February 22 2007 Wymer John 1982 The Palaeolithic Age London Croom Helm p 192 ISBN 978 0 7099 2710 5 Webster T B L 1977 From Mycenae to Homer London Methuen pp 166 8 ISBN 978 0 416 70570 6 Retrieved 15 Feb 2010 Hanson Victor Davis 1999 Chapter 2 The Rise of the City State and the Invention of Western Warfare The Wars of the Ancient Greeks London Cassell pp 42 83 ISBN 978 0 304 35982 0 Hanson 1999 p 59 Hanson 1999 pp 147 8 Hanson 1999 pp149 150 Hunt Peter The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare Volume 1 Greece The Hellenistic World and the Rise of Rome Cambridge University Press 2007 p 108 Bishop M C Coulston J C 1989 Roman Military Equipment Princes Risborough Shire Publications ISBN 978 0 7478 0005 7 Viking Spear Hurstwic org Retrieved 2017 01 09 Swanton M J 1973 The Spearheads of the Anglo Saxon Settlement London Royal Archaeological Institute Martin Paul 1968 Armour and weapons London Herbert Jenkins p 226 e g at the Battle of Steppes 1213 Oman Sir Charles 1991 1924 The Art of War in the Middle Ages Vol 1 London Greenhill Books p 451 ISBN 978 1 85367 100 5 Fisher Andrew 1986 William Wallace Edinburgh John Donald p 80 ISBN 978 0 85976 154 3 Verbruggen J F 1997 The Art of Warfare in Western Europe in the Middle Ages 2nd ed Woodbridge Boydell Press pp 184 5 ISBN 978 0 85115 630 9 Scott Ronald McNair 1988 Robert the Bruce King of Scots New York Peter Bedrick Books pp 148 158 159 202 203 Morris Paul September 2000 We have met Devils The Almogavars of James I and Peter III of Catalonia Aragon Anistoriton 004 Retrieved 2009 08 04 Heath Ian 1993 The Irish Wars 1485 1603 Oxford Osprey p 36 ISBN 978 1 85532 280 6 Arnold Thomas 2001 The Renaissance at War London Cassel amp Co pp 60 72 ISBN 978 0 304 35270 8 Nicholson Helen 2004 Medieval Warfare Basingstoke Palgrave MacMillan pp 102 3 ISBN 978 0 333 76331 5 Sebastien Nadot Rompez les lances Chevaliers et tournois au Moyen Age Paris ed Autrement 2010 Couch your lances Knights and tournaments in the Middle Ages Nicholson 2004 p 102 Nicholson 2004 p101 Arnold 2001 pp 66 72 78 81 Arnold 2001 pp 92 100 Oakeshott Ewart 1980 European Weapons and Armour Guildford amp London Lutterworth Press p 56 ISBN 978 0 7188 2126 5 Oakeshott 1980 p 55 Oakeshott 1980 p 56 Spear Training Spear Fighting 枪 矛 厹 Imperial Combat Arts 郑 轶伟 2007 中国古代冷兵器 上海 上海文化出版社 p 19 ISBN 978 7 80740 220 6 郑 轶伟 2007 中国古代冷兵器 上海 上海文化出版社 p 20 ISBN 978 7 80740 220 6 郑 轶伟 2007 中国古代冷兵器 上海 上海文化出版社 p 21 ISBN 978 7 80740 220 6 郑 轶伟 2007 中国古代冷兵器 上海 上海文化出版社 p 22 ISBN 978 7 80740 220 6 Pant Gayatri Nath 1970 Studies in Indian Weapons and Warfare Army Educational Stores pp 158 281 Retrieved 14 August 2021 Nikkila Pertti 1997 StO Finnish Oriental Society ISBN 9789519380315 Subrahmanian N 1996 Saṅgam polity the administration and social life of the Saṅgam Tamils Ennes TherionArms Zulu Iklwa war spear www therionarms com McBride Angus 1976 The Zulu War Osprey Publishing pp 9 ISBN 9780850452563 Buck BA March 1982 Ancient technology in contemporary surgery The Western Journal of Medicine 136 3 265 269 ISSN 0093 0415 OCLC 115633208 PMC 1273673 PMID 7046256 Precolumbian Mesoamerican Warfare www precolumbianweapons com Archived from the original on 4 February 2008 Retrieved 17 January 2022 Precolumbian Spears February 4 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 02 04 Pre columbian Atl Atl Spear Throwers www precolumbianweapons com Archived from the original on 4 February 2008 Retrieved 17 January 2022 Native American Spears Indians org Retrieved 22 July 2014 Blackmore Howard 2003 Hunting Weapons from the Middle Ages to the Twentieth Century Dover pp 83 4 ISBN 978 0 486 40961 0 Retrieved 1 March 2010 Blackmore 2003 pp 88 91 Blackmore 2003 pp92 3 Spear Hunting Museum gt Home Archived from the original on 9 July 2012 A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities 1890 William Smith LLD William Wayte G E Marindin Ed Hasta Connolly Peter 1981 Greece and Rome at War London Macdonald Phoebus p 89 ISBN 978 0 356 06798 8 M Cary and A D Nock Magic Spears The Classical Quarterly Vol 21 No 3 4 June October 1927 pp 122 127 subjugation Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 2017 01 09 Crossley Holland Kevin 1982 The Norse Myths London Penguin pp 51 197 ISBN 978 0 14 006056 0 Score BHR0215 Dlib indiana edu Retrieved 2017 01 09 E A Livingstone ed 2006 Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church Oxford Reference ISBN 978 0 19 861442 5 Retrieved 2017 01 09 James MacKillop author January 2004 Dictionary of Celtic Mythology Oxford Reference ISBN 978 0 19 860967 4 Retrieved 2017 01 09 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help The Golden Bough via Project Gutenberg Clothey Fred W 1978 The Many Faces of Murukan The History and Meaning of a South Indian God Walter de Gruyter ISBN 9789027976321 P K Ford On the Significance of some Arthurian Names in Welsh in Bulletin of the Board of Celtic Studies 30 1983 pp 268 273 at p 71 R Bromwich and D Simon Evans Culhwch and Olwen An Edition and Study of the Oldest Arthurian Tale Cardiff University of Wales Press 1992 p 64 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Spears Wikiquote has quotations related to Spear Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spear amp oldid 1135957686, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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