axes in Madagascar
back to the mystery land of madagascar
at the 15:00 mark in the video you can see they have axes to shape the log and both have the handles extending about 20 cm or 30 cm further than the head of the axe. very very strange..i really do wounder what this is for and also if anyone has any information about this. seems very odd.. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lBwlCiW2FOE |
That's a bit odd, but the bowl carvers a bit further into the video are using axes with the extended part cut off more like we'd expect.
Tool axes are normally hafted with the head having the haft joined from the bottom into the parallel sided socket, wedged to tighten, and the protrusion cut off. This has the disadvantage of any shrinkage or loosening allowing the head to fly off. Tomahawks are usually provided with a tapering socket, wider at the top. The grip end of the haft is smaller than the business end, and the head is moved up until stopped by the taper of the upper end. it is then sawn off, either flush or leaving a bit sticking out -which allows you to just tap the end on the ground or something hard to re-tighten the head. Weapon axes can be made this way too. One does not want one's axe head to fly off at the wrong time. I have a large Dane axe like that. The video ones are likely made like that. These guys have taken that a bit too far tho. I expect it would interfere with your swing in tight spaces. Or if you want to square a tree for use as a beam when it is lying on the ground. |
yeah, ive very curious about it too. they are only working and cutting wood as their means of employment in the video i can see 3 axe types all quite conventional the madagascan axes appear to be decended from arab in indian axes.. the heavy thick headed narrow axe later in the film looks identical to an indian axe. ive seen othersmall axes used as weapons, like tomahawks that are almost identical to hammerheaded axes in oman and persia. some with metal bands or furrels on the grip. .. so the locals know about axes and have some verity.
it seems very intentional that their axe handles are sticking past the axe head but for what reason i do not know. seems totally unhealpful for theaxes use |
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I have a guess that the ax handles are made from freshly felled wood. When the wood of these handles becomes dry, the heads of the axes can be pushed deeper and cut off the excess part (perhaps I did not describe this process correctly in English). |
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this is totally baffling id love to just call one of those guys and say "what on earth do you have your axes like this for?!".. if i ever get a chance to go to madagascar ill save this video travel to these people and ask them! also these people are a rather isolated group so asking a regular madagascan probably wouldnt help as theyed be familiar with "regular axes"... its really quite curious in the video you cal also see some tools the women have that are very similar to naga or ifugao "war axes" .. being very thick odd shaped cleaver like blades on a short shaft. curious tools ... |
here is another one
https://www.novethic.fr/actualite/en...es-143913.html https://www.novethic.fr/fileadmin/_p...680897e916.jpg his axe is well worn and the top of the handle shows some damage.. this is most odd. and its only some axes . im guessing the man in the image is of a related group as it says its in the south east and also the roofs are similar.. form split bamboo.. although the houses are clay... but that type of split bamboo roof seems to be only in one part of madagascar so id say this probably a relative ethnic group. its really very odd. |
I note there appears to be a re-enforcing sleeve, possibly sheet metal, between the head and the shaft, much like the Bulova axes of eastern India, which also use the tapering of the business end to keep the head on the haft. It looks like the extended end is just the larger end where it was cut off the rest of the wood with a similar axe, instead of being sawn. Maybe they don't have a saw? Still, odd. The haft, being 'seasoned' and dried out would be a lot harder to cut -maybe they just can't be bothered...
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id find that highly unlikely.. after all they have an axe head to cut things and they have already cut the handle to the exact length they want it.. . other axes they have are not like that. its like there is one type of various sizes that has this weird extension and then all others dont have it. it must have some practical function we are missing. i just dont think theyed make it like that for some weird decoration. after all it looks very impractical. so there must be a practical use. i guess its like a person seeing a single beveled knife for the first time and seeing it as the height of uselessness .. until they figure out why its that way.. they must all be doing something specific with the axes for that extended handle to be of some use. this is going to drive me nuts. the only.. only thing i could thin of is like with some billhooks and nata there is an extended blunt tip to stop it striking the ground so you can cut or split things close to rocks ad the ground without hitting your edge ...... that extended handle would sort of do that |
I have to admit the design of these axes is odd. Is it possible that the axe blade was used like a large draw knife, with a hand either side of the blade, to shave or shape wood with the grain?
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One of the strangest axes I've ever seen:
http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showpo...&postcount=314 |
Looks more like the stock of a Hmong/Montainyard crossbow to go with the arrow he's holding. walking stick leaning against his back, I do not see an axe.
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This makes the ax easier to see :)
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looks more like a sickle
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This photo shows that the working part is wooden. But in his right hand he has an axe according to its functionality. |
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Like mine: Also a temple fresco showing them used as a military weapon. note: the cutting edge is not where you would expect ;) It's the lower (concave) edge on mine and similar items. The upper edge is a broad flat spine. |
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Some background info which y'all probably know already...
Historic Axe construction video by Matt Easton, who is a HEMA instructor and also sells historic antique edged weapons. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O7s3G0o4XD8 Also includes comments on non-European 'ethnic' axe construction. |
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https://www.quaibranly.fr/fr/explore...ancier/page/1/ https://www.quaibranly.fr/fr/explore...-hache/page/1/ The archaic construction is clearly visible from the Bronze Age. |
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Do you have any ideas how the Celtic bronze axe in the Bronze Age got to Laos?;) :D |
There was no trump card in my sleeve :D I had to look in someone else's sleeve.
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re-ren, the axe's haft in your post is not Bronze Age. As noted in the video I posted, wood doesn't survive from that old. Except now some has... at Must Farm.
See below for a better 'reconstruction' — and some just found in an English bog* where the wood actually WAS preserved along with a bunch of (20) socketed axe heads. They attached the head to a branch off the main tree trunk along with a trimmed section of the trunk which formed a bent elbow. They also found a bunch of other stuff, tools, swords, etc. in remarkable condition. Just a bit of mud keeping them from looking new. Top: reconstruction Middle: found haft — they found a bunch just like this. Bottom: Axe heads. Edited: Added one they found with an intact haft *- Must Farm, UK dig. |
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OK, so the 'Balance Axe' is also a bit weird, iron head and not Bronze Age. And it doesn't have an extened haft to get in the way of chopping, tho why they have the long wood counter-weight is also a bit unclear. |
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its interesting that we take european axes for granted .. but in actuial fact many people had developed a slightly different solution for a similar tool.. in europe.. finland for example their traditional axes look very odd compared to an american pattern of axe.. .. but now no longer made for more than 25 years.. i guess things like hammers, axes, digging tools., saws.. ect things most cultures that had metal had probably had a great variation once in the past till european.. to be more precise.. mostly... english speakers patterns took over the worlds markets. |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=40xKsh1tfJg here he is making the axe .... but i think he just makes it for the first time maybe.. but as mentioned in my other post there is a video of people making these to use recently.. in laos . |
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Cool. Seems rather complex way of making an axe, I can't see what the advantage is. I accept that there are many ways to skin the proverbial cat. :D |
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PS: RenRen, thank you too) |
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back to the Madagascan question the only thing i can think of is it is indeed some sort of sop so they can cut near the ground without hitting the blade? |
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