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Halberd

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

Historical halberds on display at the Arsenal Museum in Lviv, Ukraine.

A halberd (also called halbard or halbert) is a two-handed polearm. People used it a lot from the 13th to 16th centuries.

It has an axe blade on top with a sharp spike, placed on a long stick. Some halberds also had a hook or a sharp point on the back of the axe blade. This hook helped soldiers.

The halberd was usually about 2 to 2.5 metres long, which is about 6.6 to 8.2 feet. People who fought with halberds were called halberdiers or halbardiers.

The name "halberd" comes from old German words: halm, meaning "handle," and barte, meaning "battleaxe." These words came together to make helmbarte. Sometimes, the word "halberd" is also used to talk about an old weapon from the Bronze Age in Western Europe. That older weapon had a blade fixed to a pole at a right angle.

History

Early-16th-century miniature depicting the Battle of Grandson, from the Lucerner Schilling. Swiss soldiers can be seen armed with earlier halberds.

The halberd was first mentioned around the year 1200 by a German poet. It was used as a weapon by Swiss soldiers in battles, like the Battle of Morgarten in 1315. It was easy to make and very useful in fights.

Later, the Swiss added longer spears to their army, but still used halberds for close fighting. Over time, the halberd became less common as guns were used more. By the 1600s, it was mostly used by leaders to help keep soldiers in line. Today, it is still used in special ceremonies, like by the Swiss Guard in the Vatican.

The development of the halberd

A late-14th/early-15th-century Halberd from Fribourg

The word helmbarte started showing up in German writing in the 1200s. At first, the halberd looked like other broad axes used in Europe, such as bardiches. By the late 1300s, it began to change, with the top of the blade becoming a sharper point for pushing.

Some people wrongly call this shape a voulge or a Swiss voulge, but there is no proof these names were ever used for it. There were different types of these weapons, some with spikes on the back and some without. In the early 1400s, the design changed to include sockets in the blade instead of hoops. This new look made back spikes a normal part of the halberd.

Similar and related polearms

Main article: Polearm

Here are some weapons that are like the halberd. The bardiche was a big two-handed battle axe used in Eastern Europe. The bill looked like a halberd but had a hooked blade. The Ge or dagger-axe was a Chinese weapon with a dagger-shaped blade on a spear. The fauchard had a curved blade on a long pole. The guisarme was a medieval weapon on a long pole. The glaive had a large blade on the end of a long pole. The guandao was a Chinese weapon with a heavy curved blade. The ji combined a spear and dagger-axe in one weapon. The kamayari was a Japanese spear with extra blades. The Lochaber axe was a Scottish weapon with a heavy blade on a pole. The naginata was a Japanese weapon with a long blade on a wooden shaft. The partisan was a large spear with extra parts on the sides. The poleaxe had an axe or hammer head and a spike on top. The ranseur was a polearm with a spearhead and a cross hilt. The spontoon was a fancy pike with extra blades. The voulge was a simple blade on a wooden shaft. The tabarzin was a type of battle axe from the Middle East. The war scythe was a scythe blade attached vertically to a shaft. The Welsh hook was similar to a halberd. The woldo was a Korean polearm with a crescent-shaped blade. And Yue was a Chinese axe with a long shaft.

Images

A group of participants dressed as halberdiers in traditional Scottish attire during a historical reenactment at the May 2006 Scottish Games in Pleasanton, California.
A colorful historical illustration showing people from different cultures wearing traditional clothing from the 1500s.
A Swiss Guard in uniform standing watch in the Vatican City.
Historical halberd weapons displayed in a museum exhibit.
Historical artwork showing Swiss soldiers from the 14th century taking an oath in Zurich.
A colorful medieval illustration of Saint Wiborada from an old German manuscript.
An ancient bronze halberd-axe from the 2nd-1st millennium BC, on display at the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lyon.
A member of the Spanish Royal Guard dressed in a traditional halberdier uniform.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Halberd, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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