Sunday, November 22, 2015

Sunday, July 13, 2014

Madu about you, or I make a parrying spear.

For whatever reason, I have a taste for exotic weaponry. At least exotic in the context of Europe,
to the people using them, the weapons are pretty much normal. Blame reading too many pulp fiction stories about desperate fights between hard bitten men wielding choora, tulwars, sabres and jezails and too many Saturdays watching Black Belt Theater on Channel 29, where the dao met the jian and tassled spear battled the half moon halberd. Whenever I go to a museum I make a beeline for the arms and armour, seeking out stuff from the Middle and Far East.

This carried over to when I started fighting in the SCA. Someone showed me the buckler/spear combo
called the madu and I was hooked. As I traveled for my military career, I kept my eye out for this weapon. Rarely found, it never seemed stout enough to fight with, most examples being two ibex horns behind a
small shield, hardly a formidable weapon.




Madus from an old museum catalog



I did come across reference to another similar weapon called a saintie. A saintie parrying weapon consisting of an all metal spear with a small handguard. Bazinga! Just what I'm looking for. Unfortunately, I've only been able to find pictures of the weapon in some auction house catalogs.

Saintie from Asoka Arms

The Metropolitan Museum in NYC has one, but it's not shown on their website. I did find some all metal
madus at the Wallace Collection in London.

All metal madu from the Wallace Collection

For a while I've been pondering a way to build a saintie of my own, since those for sale are antiques and more than my meager purse can cover. Simple enough to mount two spear heads to a haft, I thought. but back yard test cutting had shown that unprotected spear hafts were quickly cut/broken by swords.

 Any wooden haft used to parry and block would get chewed up pretty quickly, and fall apart, hence the saintie being made of metal. Maybe a pipe as a haft? Wrapping the haft in rawhide like a Lakota lance seemed like a possibility as well. Could I wrap it in wire? I figured I would cross that bridge when I came to it.


Kult of Athena, the online sword and weapon shop, (www.kultofathena.com) is a candy store to a weapon geek like me. I trolled the site, looking for the right spear. Finally, I settled on the framea. It's a throwing
spear that was used by the Germanic tribes during the Late Iron Age. It's smaller, had a profile I liked and was only21 dollars. I ordered two, one for each end. They arrived in a few days (KOA has awesome
shipping) and I was off to the hardware store, in search of components to finish my weapon.

Figuring this was a prototype, I picked up some pine dowels of varying dimensions and a gate handle for a
hand guard. I still had no idea how I was going to protect the haft, I checked out some piping, but it seemed too heavy at the length I wanted to use.

Fast forward to when I had some time to work on projects, as opposed to the honey-do list. I attached one of the framea heads to a 1" OD 48" long dowel. It felt really "live" in the hand, so I went out to the pell to give it a go. On the way out I grabbed the saber machete I got from
Machete Specialists (www.machetespecialists.com).

Imacasa El Salvadoran Sabre Machete


As I moved around the pell, throwing shots like I use in SCA fighting, I noticed that the end of the spear's
haft came pretty close to my face. If there was a spear point on that end as well, I could just picture getting it
in the face in a press. That would explain why most saintie I've seen have a knob or ball pommel.


Hmmmmmm, back to the drawing board.

I head back to the shed and come across a metal broom handle with an ID of 3/4 inches. I have a dowel
with an OD of the same. Remember how I was stumped for a way to have a metal spear haft? Inspiration
struck and after some witling, sanding, hammering, and cursing, I managed to make the dowel fit inside
the handle, leaving enough protruding in order to attach the framea head. With some work, I get the framea to fit over the dowel and the metal handle.

The socket of the spearhead is split, so it will grip the haft and there is a hole in the side of the socket as well. I used a carpet tack to secure the head to the haft, drilling a small hole in the metal handle first.

I took it to the pell for a test run and it didn't feel as nice in the hand as the javelin. I definitely needed something to counterbalance the head, even with the metal broom handle, the smaller dowel wasn't cutting it and the weapon felt pretty dead. I rooted around the shed until I found a nice heavy drawer knob. A bit of drilling, and Bob's your uncle, a nice counterbalance. I first placed the handguard about two thirds the way from the point, like it is on the spear I use in SCA fighting. Felt pretty leaden in the hand, so I moved the handguard to about the middle of the haft and it felt much better. Nice solid presence, but lively.

I'm pretty chuffed with myself.

So here's what it looks like all put together:




Some comparisons between historical examples and my homemade version:


Mine

The genuine article




Framea javelin head


Saintie spear head


Bargain gate pull handguard


Punched and chased original 


The saintie and machete.  Machete is 30" long, saintie is about 48" or so.


Historical versions seem shorter, more like sword length.









Saturday, July 12, 2014

The Road So Far



So, a lot has been happening since my last post, Oh So Many Months Ago. First,
at the risk of tooting my own horn, I’d like to share with you, my fellow SCAdians that I have 
been taken as a man-at arms by Sir Aethelred Cloudbreaker of An Tir. I’m pretty stoked for two reasons. One is that a man whose opinion I respect believes that I have potential to become a better fighter. The other is I have been looking for a SCA mentor for a while and am glad to have found one.

I've been hitting practice pretty regularly and events more often than before. Admittedly, not too hard given my past record. I have been getting sound advice from experienced fighters. With that in mind, I've come to the conclusion that parrying spear and sword is really the form for me, despite all its inherent limitations. It's what I enjoy most. I've got no fear going up against anyone using that style. I may lose, but I won't embarrass myself, or my knight. I will continue to practice sword and shield, because there will be times I have to use that style (Junefaire this year for instance) and I need to be much better with it. It's almost everyone's A game so it has to be at least my B+ game for those tournaments where it's the required style.

I've been trying several different shields, both to find the right one and because making them has turned out to be a fun little project. I have a big 30 inch Viking round, a center grip heater, a small kite, and my old oval. So far the best result has been the kite, followed closely by the old oval. I may stick with the kite or if I can break my old bad habits, go with the oval.