Difference between revisions of "Sword"
m (→Types of Swords: that was a dagger) |
|||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Image:Katana.jpg |thumb|right|A Katana, a type of sword developed in Japan, notable for being the last type of sword to be routinely carried into battle.]] | [[Image:Katana.jpg |thumb|right|A Katana, a type of sword developed in Japan, notable for being the last type of sword to be routinely carried into battle.]] | ||
'''Swords''' are long, metal blade weapons. Swords first emerged in the Bronze Age and remained a primary weapon of war until the widespread use of [[firearm]]s gradually made them obsolete. They still feature prominently in many militaries as ceremonial items. Various civilizations have devised | '''Swords''' are long, metal blade weapons. Swords first emerged in the Bronze Age and remained a primary weapon of war until the widespread use of [[firearm]]s gradually made them obsolete. They still feature prominently in many militaries as ceremonial items. Various civilizations have devised specialized forms for various purposes on the battlefield. | ||
Swords are the first, if not the only, [[human]] hand tools designed exclusively for killing other human beings. Knives, axes, spears, bows, and firearms all have legitimate alternative uses for hunting or gathering, but swords are really only useful in battle. As such, they have have acquired a great deal of symbolic meaning in human culture. | Swords are the first, if not the only, [[human]] hand tools designed exclusively for killing other human beings. Knives, axes, spears, bows, and firearms all have legitimate alternative uses for hunting or gathering, but swords are really only useful in battle. As such, they have have acquired a great deal of symbolic meaning in human culture. | ||
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
*Cutlass | *Cutlass | ||
*Jian | *Jian | ||
*Dao | |||
*Katana | *Katana | ||
*Wakizashi | *Wakizashi |
Latest revision as of 00:08, 29 December 2012
Swords are long, metal blade weapons. Swords first emerged in the Bronze Age and remained a primary weapon of war until the widespread use of firearms gradually made them obsolete. They still feature prominently in many militaries as ceremonial items. Various civilizations have devised specialized forms for various purposes on the battlefield.
Swords are the first, if not the only, human hand tools designed exclusively for killing other human beings. Knives, axes, spears, bows, and firearms all have legitimate alternative uses for hunting or gathering, but swords are really only useful in battle. As such, they have have acquired a great deal of symbolic meaning in human culture.
Types of Swords
- Gladius
- Spatha
- Broadsword
- Longsword
- Claymore
- Zweihander
- Sabre
- Cutlass
- Jian
- Dao
- Katana
- Wakizashi
- Odachi
- Kodachi
Swords in Fiction
Obviously swords figure prominently in fantasy writings, but they are also quite common in science fiction. Science fiction swords typically have special technology to make them more dangerous than a mundane steel sword.
Examples of sci-fi swords include:
- Lightsabres (Star Wars)
- Power swords (Warhammer 40,000)
- Chainswords (Warhammer 40,000)
- Folding swords (seen in Ultraviolet and Star Trek (2009))
- Klingon bat'leths (Star Trek), which have similar symbolic meaning in Klingon culture, even though they don't really resemble swords, and some Klingon warriors use actual swords such as Mek'leths.