|
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
12th May 2012, 03:24 PM | #31 | |
Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 129
|
Quote:
Best |
|
12th May 2012, 08:43 PM | #32 | |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 1,058
|
Quote:
best, |
|
27th November 2012, 11:44 AM | #33 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Room 101, Glos. UK
Posts: 4,184
|
just for interest, i found out who supplied the weapons for 'Van Helsing' and bought a copy of the dolchstreithammer used in the film. it arrived yesterday.
(they also can provide one with a brass fist, steel spike & wooden haft.) 57 cm. long, 15 cm. spike point to hammer face, all steel excepting tubular wood grip over the solid steel haft, weight just under 2 kg. you'd need to be in good shape to wield this about. |
3rd December 2012, 03:42 AM | #34 |
Member
Join Date: Nov 2012
Posts: 12
|
TY Swordfish for posting this. There's another illustration of these "hand hammers" in a Czech manuscript showing Jan Zizka with a date of 1424 under it.
As for the dispute between long or short bec de corbins. The martel remained in use long after the middle ages. Many nadziak husarski have these short beaks and were clearly weapons. The civilian versions of the nadziak (called Obuch) had their beaks bent down or even back. I think the difference was between "stopping power" for the shorter beaks and "killing power" for the longer ones. A good rap to the head will stun must foes, effectively taking them out, allowing one to deliver more blows or capture them. Dmitry that's not overkill. To kill quickly one needs to scramble the brain like that. Neither of those quarrel piles was a fatal shot, speaking as a hunter who has killed around 12,000 times and yes I have broken skulls with the back side of hatchets. |
|
|