Falcata
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A falcata is a type of sword typical of Ancient Spain, similar to the Greek kopis. It has a one edged blade that pitches forward towards the point, the edge being concave on the lower part of the sword, but convex on top. The hilt is typically hook-shaped, the end being stylized in the shape of a horse or a bird. There is often a thin chain connecting the tip of the hilt the upper section.
The term falcata is not ancient. It seems to have been coined by M. Fulgosio in 1872, on the model of the Latin expression ensis falcatus "sickle-shaped sword" (which, however, refers to the harpe). He presumably went with falcata rather than falcatus because the Spanish word for sword, espada is feminine. The name caught on very quickly, and is now firmly entrenched in the scholarly literature.
In Ancient Texts
Since "falcata" is not a term used in Classical Latin, it is difficult to tell when, or if it is being referred to in ancient literature. There is, however, one passage that is generally agreed to refer to this type of sword, in Seneca's De Beneficiis 5.24. In this passage a veteran is on trial for roughing up his neighbors in an argument over a road that ran near their properties. The trial comes before Caesar, and the veteran asks him if he remembers how a young soldier once brought him water in his helmet, when he (Caesar) was stuck under a tree with a sprained ankle, unable to get a drink for himself.External links
Bibliography
- F. Quesada Sanz: "Máchaira, kopís, falcata" in Homenaje a Francisco Torrent, Madrid, 1994, pp. 75-94.
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