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  1. Goldenguy is offline

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    Posted On:
    12/20/2012 10:05pm


     Style: Judo

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    Hell yeah! Hell no!
    Hey Permalost-

    Those swords from Game of Thrones remind me of the Egyptian khopesh, but with a much more exaggerated curve to the blade. As with the khopesh, the outer edge is used as the cutting edge. Incidentally, the khopesh is also known as a "sickle sword."

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    Here is a really interesting thread on the khopesh:

    http://www.myarmoury.com/talk/viewtopic.php?t=9497

    The Membele is switched around, with the inner edge of the curve used as the cutting edge. Supposedly, one function of the curve is to make it easier to strike an opponent behind a shield.

    Here's a really beautiful Mambele from husband and wife knifemakers in South Africa:

    Click image for larger version. 

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    I don't know how much is costs, as they don't take orders. They prefer to make items as inspiration strikes them.
  2. Bneterasedmynam is offline

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    Posted On:
    12/21/2012 11:12am


     

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    Quote Originally Posted by Goldenguy View Post
    Hey Permalost,

    Thanks for your replies. The double tip of the Battle Sickle actually looks similar to the double tips of these two traditional mambele:

    Attachment 14224
    The one on the right almost looks like a bent lion spear.
  3. Rock Ape is online now
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    Posted On:
    12/21/2012 11:24am

    staff
     

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    Hell yeah! Hell no!
    Quote Originally Posted by Goldenguy View Post
    Here's a really beautiful Mambele from husband and wife knifemakers in South Africa:

    Click image for larger version. 

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    Judging by what I can see in that image, the blade has been folded multiple times, thus was created straight. The curve will have resulted from the quenching of the blade.
    "To sin by silence when one should protest makes cowards out of men".

    ~Ella Wheeler
  4. DdlR is offline
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    Posted On:
    12/21/2012 12:52pm

    supporting member
     Style: Bartitsu

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    Quote Originally Posted by Goldenguy View Post
    I don't think that this really belongs in YMAS, but there is no African Martial Arts sub-forum in the Traditional Arts section.

    Anyway, I've been reading about African Weaponry lately (African Weapons by Werner Fischer), and I really wonder how some of these swords were actually used in combat. Here is someone demonstrating the mambele in compliant drills. Has anyone here ever seen one, or a similar weapon, used in Dog Brothers-style non-compliant training or competition?
    Kind of. The Renaissance-era German weapon master Paulus Hector Mair detailed a large number of combat techniques for the single-handed sickle:

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    Here's a video of some guys sparring with the weapon. As far as I can tell, this was a first attempt at sickle sparring, following experimentation with Mair's formal techniques (note that they're not wearing protective masks, etc.)

    Last edited by DdlR; 12/21/2012 12:56pm at .
  5. Permalost is online now
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    pro nonsense self defense

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    Posted On:
    12/21/2012 1:01pm

    supporting member
     Style: FMA, dumbek, Indian clubs

    --
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    Quote Originally Posted by Vieux Normand View Post
    And their names would be...?

    *scrolls up, sees something about "Dothraki"*

    Oh. Never mind.

    I never ask anyone else to do my homework for me: time permitting, I'll read Game Of Thrones on my own. Thanks.
    Hold your tongue, horselord! If you really want to do some homework, just read about African warfare. They were used, for a long time across different cultures, to injure and kill.
  6. robowimp is offline

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    Posted On:
    12/22/2012 1:48am


     

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    Quote Originally Posted by DdlR View Post
    Kind of. The Renaissance-era German weapon master Paulus Hector Mair detailed a large number of combat techniques for the single-handed sickle:

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    Here's a video of some guys sparring with the weapon. As far as I can tell, this was a first attempt at sickle sparring, following experimentation with Mair's formal techniques (note that they're not wearing protective masks, etc.)

    That was a cool video Ddlr. I hate to say it, but it looks far more realistic in use of the weapon.

    I wonder what the background of the guy in the original sickle sword video is. I have no idea if what he is practicing is legit, as apposed to copied from other martial arts. Check out some of the other videos he has up loaded. The mambele might be one thing, but the rest of it looks more like the stuff they practice in India then it does in the Philippines. Back and forth sabre and shield with minimal closing/grappling as well as 1 vs 2 "sparring" at a fraction of realistic speed.

  7. Goldenguy is offline

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    Posted On:
    12/22/2012 2:32am


     Style: Judo

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    Hell yeah! Hell no!
    Quote Originally Posted by Vieux Normand View Post
    Nope. Nothing contradictory there.
    No, nothing at all- but I do want to thank you for bringing my attention to a mistake I made.

    As anyone who has watched the video can tell, they weren't drilling. They were demonstrating techniques, not how to train those techniques or become proficient in their use. To my mind, such demonstrations are only YMAS material when they are offered as proof of the techniques' effectiveness or the ability to use them against a non-compliant opponent.

    It's too late for me to edit my post, but please don't let my sloppy use of language reflect poorly on anyone but me.
  8. Goldenguy is offline

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    Posted On:
    12/22/2012 2:46am


     Style: Judo

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    Quote Originally Posted by Rock Ape View Post
    Judging by what I can see in that image, the blade has been folded multiple times, thus was created straight. The curve will have resulted from the quenching of the blade.
    If you're interested, this excerpt from a book titled "Spirit of the Sword" goes into a bit more detail about their sword-making process:
    http://books.google.com/books?id=nNX...0sword&f=false
  9. igordog is offline

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    Posted On:
    2/06/2013 5:00pm

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     Style: Escrima

    --
    Hell yeah! Hell no!
    Quote Originally Posted by Rock Ape View Post
    Judging by what I can see in that image, the blade has been folded multiple times, thus was created straight. The curve will have resulted from the quenching of the blade.
    I think that the layered look of the steel is caused by pattern welding not folding. Regardless, there's nothing to indicate that the curve was caused by quenching.
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