Bronze Age sword

Image:Bronze Age swords.jpg
three Bronze Age swords (not to scale): from Hajdusamson, Hungary (ca. 1600 BC), Mycenae (with golden hilt, 16th century BC), Urnfield culture (11th century BC)

Bronze Age swords appear from around the 17th century BC, evolving out of the dagger. The 3rd millennium Sumerian "sickle-sword" is an early predecessor of the backsword.

Early examples with typical leaf-shaped blades are found in Mesopotamia, around the Mediterranean, particularly in Crete, and around the Black Sea.

Sword production in China is attested from the Bronze Age Shang Dynasty, with steel swords making their appearance from the 3rd century BC Qin Dynasty. The Chinese Dao (刀 pinyin dāo) is single-edged, sometimes translated as sabre or broadsword, and the Jian (劍 pinyin jiàn) double edged.

Swords from the Nordic Bronze Age from ca. the 13th century BC show characteristic spiral patterns. [1]

Characteristic for the Bronze Age are antenna-hilted swords; finds are spread from the Balearic Islands to the Gangetic plain (Copper Hoard culture, both on the Baleares and in India found in combination with double axes). The Halstatt culture continues to produce the type, in iron, until the 7th century BC.

Early Iron Age swords like the Xiphos retain a similar shape, and evolve into the Spatha during the time of the Roman Empire.

See also

pl:Miecz epoki brązu