| Classic late 18th or Early 19th Century Hand Forged French, European, or Scandinavian Naval Boarding Ax in Excellent Condition. Turned oak or ash handle with designs midway and butt end, may or may not be original but certainly of 18th/19th century vintage. Significantly sturdy fore and aft slightly bulging riveted thru-and-thru langets for additional support. Blade has the classic French flare with just a slightly curved beveled spike, with a lightly stamped box and what appears to be a 5 Pointed Star or a "Fleur De Lys" over the number 31 or 51. |
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Length: 15" long Head: 10" long Blade: 4 1/8" wide Spike: 4" long. |
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540 659 6209 |
Photo to the left illustrates a partial collection and representation of Scandinavian, European and British naval boarding axes from the 18th and 19th centuries. The Scandinavian and French boarding ax are very similar and distinctive with wide flaring blades and curved spikes, while the British boarding ax has a more traditional hatchet-type smaller blade and slightly straighter spike.
The 16th thru 19th centuries saw the culmination of the Naval Boarding Ax and Boarding Pike as vital defensive and offensive personal weapons as part of the inventory of a man-of-war. Both of which became obsolete by the beginning of the 20th century due to the advent of steel ships, small highly accurate personal multi-round firearms such as pistols and rifles, and of course highly accurate large-bore short and long-range naval artillery which would prevent close-quarter boarding.
From the Spanish American War onward there no longer came the need or even opportunity to board other vessels by climbing up the bulging wooden sides using the boarding ax, or the need to pick out "hot shot" rounds from wooden timbers and masts, or to drag and cut away ropes and sails taken down by canon fire, or to use the boarding ax to hack away or throw at an opponent.
Just as the enlisted naval cutlass was specially designed for close quarter combat by an ordinary seaman aboard a fighting vessel, as opposed to its landbased bretheren the sword; so was the naval boarding axe and naval boarding pike differentiated from its cousins the landbased military battle-axe and the halberd or pike.
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