The Book of the Sword: A History of Daggers, Sabers, and Scimitars from Ancient Times to the Modern Day

The Book of the Sword: A History of Daggers, Sabers, and Scimitars from Ancient Times to the Modern Day

by Richard Francis Burton
The Book of the Sword: A History of Daggers, Sabers, and Scimitars from Ancient Times to the Modern Day

The Book of the Sword: A History of Daggers, Sabers, and Scimitars from Ancient Times to the Modern Day

by Richard Francis Burton

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Overview

“The history of the sword,” the author writes in his introduction, “is the history of humanity.” For centuries, the sword has been a symbol of power, strength, liberty, and courage. In the Middle Ages, the image of a sword was used to signify the word of God. Nearly every culture in history has forged blades from stone or steel to fight in times of battle and protect in times of peace.

In this groundbreaking work, Richard Francis Burton, explorer, translator, scholar, and swordsman, draws on a wealth of linguistic, archaeological, and literary sources to trace the millennia-old history of the sword. From its earliest days as a charred, sharpened stick to the height of craftsmanship in the modern era, the sword has been the weapon of choice for warriors of all stripes.

In eloquent, captivating prose, Burton describes:
• Dirks
• Daggers
• Knives
• Sabers
• Cutlasses
• The origin of the weapon
• The weapons of the age of wood
• The Copper Age of weapons
• The Iron Age of weapons
• The sword in ancient Egypt
• The sword in ancient Greece
• And more

Nearly three hundred line drawings enhance Burton’s richly detailed text. Any reader of history or student of weaponry will find this book a fascinating, highly enjoyable read.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781628738476
Publisher: Skyhorse
Publication date: 01/07/2014
Sold by: SIMON & SCHUSTER
Format: eBook
Pages: 336
File size: 36 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

About The Author
Richard Francis Burton was an explorer, translator, writer, soldier, spy, fencer, and diplomat. He is most famous for his translations of One Thousand and One Nights and the Kama Sutra and for having been the first European to visit the Great Lakes of Africa. He traveled to Mecca in disguise and spoke nearly thirty languages. He died in 1890.

Table of Contents

Foreword xiii

Introduction xv

I Preamble: On the Origin of Weapons 1

II Man's First Weapons-The Stone and the Stick. The Earliest Ages of Weapons. the Ages of Wood, of Bone, and of Horn 16

III The Weapons of the Age of Wood: The Boomerang and the Sword of Wood; Of Stone, and of Wood and Stone Combined 31

IV The Proto-Chalcitic or Copper Age of Weapons 53

V The Second Chalcitic Age of Alloys-Bronze, Brass, Etc.: The Axe and the Sword 74

VI The Proto-Sideric or Early Iron Age of Weapons 97

VII The Sword: What is It? 123

VIII The Sword in Ancient Egypt and in Modern Africa 143

IX The Sword in Khita-Land, Palestine and Canaan; Phoenicia and Carthage; Jewry, Cyprus, Troy, and Etruria 172

X The Sword in Babylonia, Assyria and Persia, and Ancient India 199

XI The Sword in Ancient Greece: Homer; Hesiod and Herodotus: Mycenæ 220

XII The Sword in Ancient Rome; The Legion and the Gladiator 244

XIII The Sword Amongst the Barbarians (Early Roman Empire) 262

Conclusion 280

List of Authorities 281

Index 291

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