Shashka

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File:Sabel, schaschka - Livrustkammaren - 1315 (cropped).tif
A Caucasian/Circassian shashka

Template:Cossacks

The shashka or shasqua (Abkhaz: Аҳәа, Асахәа; Template:Langx, Script error: No such module "IPA".long-knife; Georgian: ჭოლაური, ch'olauri; Chechen: Гlорда, Гlурда; Template:Langx) is a kind of Caucasian sabre: a single-edged, single-handed, and guardless sabre. The comparatively gentle curve of a shashka blade puts the weapon midway between a radically curved sabre and a straight sword, effective for both cutting and thrusting.

Etymology

The word shashka originally came from the Adyghe word – Template:Langx, Script error: No such module "IPA".long-knife

History

The shashka originated among the mountain tribes of the Caucasus. The earliest depictions of this sword date to the early 17th century in west Georgia,[1] though most extant shashkas have hilts dating to the 19th century.[2] The earliest datable example is from 1713. Later, most of the Russian and Ukrainian Cossacks adopted the weapon. Two styles of shashka exist: the Caucasian/Circassian shashka and the Cossack shashka. In 1834 the Russian government produced the first military-issue shashka pattern.[3]

The blades of non-regulation shashkas were of diverse origins; some were locally made in the Caucasus, others in Russia, some were manufactured in Germany, mostly in Solingen, and displayed imitations of the 'running wolf' mark of Passau.[4]

The typically Circassian (Adyghe) form of sabre was longer than the Cossack type; in fact, the Russian word shashka originally came from the Adyghe word – Template:Langx (Sashko) – meaning "long knife". It gradually replaced the sabre in all cavalry units except hussars during the 19th century.[5]

Russian troops, having encountered it during their conquest of the Caucasus (1817–1864), preferred it to their issued sabres.

At this time, there were three types of non-regulation shashka:

  • The Caucasus type, where the handle almost sits inside the scabbard. This type was used by peoples of the Caucasus and Kuban Cossacks who adopted it from Caucasians. The only problem with this type of shashka was that in the rain, water could go down into the scabbard. This type of shashka was very light at Template:Convert, flexible, and strong. The best and most famous shashkas of these types were Gurda, Volchek (running wolf symbol on the blade).
  • The Don Cossack shashka, which has a straighter blade. The weight of this shashka is around Template:Convert.
  • The Terek Cossack shashka; the hilt, like the Don Cossack shashka, does not go inside the scabbard. It is very light and strong.

The first officially regulated Russian military shashka was the 1834 pattern, also called the "Nizhegorodka". This was followed by the 1838 pattern shashka. In 1881, two patterns were introduced: a 'Cossack' pattern, which was typical in not having a guard, and a 'dragoon' pattern, which was much more like a standard sabre in having a brass knuckle-bow, and was derived from the 1841 dragoon sabre. The blades of the two types were, however, essentially identical.[6]

The Cossack hosts (not full-time regiments) used non-regulation shashkas until 1904, when they received their own regulation pattern.[7]

The Soviet government introduced the 1927 pattern, which was very similar to the 1881 Cossack pattern; production of this pattern continued until 1946. The last pattern shashkas to be introduced were the 1940 patterns for "line commanding personnel" and generals—both had knuckle-bows.[8]

Construction

File:Belarus-Minsk-National museum of history and culture of Belarus-Cold Steel-2.jpg
Sabres and daggers at the National Museum of History and Culture of Belarus, including a shashka.
File:Шашка.jpg
Reproduction of an 1881 pattern 'Cossack' shashka
File:ТКУ 33.jpg
Hilt of an 1881 pattern 'Dragoon' shashka (and revolver)

The shashka was a relatively short sabre, typically being Template:Convert in total length.[9] It had a slightly curved, fullered, blade with a single edge; the back of the blade was often sharpened for the 3rd of the blade nearest the tip (a false edge). The blade length was usually Template:Convert. The hilt had no guard (except for Russian Dragoon 'shashka' patterns, which had a brass knuckle-bow and quillon, and a conventional sabre pommel). The pommel was hook-shaped and divided into two 'ears'. This is a feature found in many weapons of the Western Asian highlands, from the Turkish yataghan to the Afghan pesh-kabz. The sword was worn in a scabbard suspended with the edge uppermost. The Caucasian form of the shashka had a scabbard which enclosed most of the hilt, with little more than the hooked pommel protruding.[10]

Plainer, non-regulation shashkas often had hilts of horn, more highly decorated examples had hilts sheathed in niello-inlaid silver, with scabbard mounts to match. Russian military shashkas were much plainer, with hilts typically consisting of a brass ferrule, ribbed wooden grip and brass pommel. Unlike traditional non-regulation shashkas, the pommel of pattern shashkas was pierced to receive a sword-knot. The pommel was decorated with an imperial insignia; following the 1917 revolution, this was often ground off. Shashkas manufactured under the Soviet regime (Pattern 1927) had Communist symbols in place of the imperial ones. Later trooper models often had modified brass scabbard furniture to hold a bayonet for the Mosin–Nagant carbine. Officer's models, though of similar construction, did not have an attached bayonet, and were much more heavily decorated. In Tsarist times officers had considerable freedom in the decoration of their shaskas and some had non-regulation blades.[11]

The 1834 pattern shashka was a popular weapon, when it was replaced by the 1881 pattern, several regiments complained so vociferously that their 1834s were returned to them.[12]

The 1838 Pattern - typical statistics for a pattern sword:

Total length: Template:Convert

Blade length: Template:Convert

Blade width: Template:Convert

Blade curvature: Template:Convert

Point of balance: Template:Convert

Weight: Template:Convert[13]

Use

Little or no surviving contemporary written information remains on how the people of the Caucasus used the shashka. However, surviving Russian military manuals indicate that, despite the lack of protection for the hand, the military shashka was used in much the same manner as a Western European sabre, with very similar cuts, thrusts, guards, and parries. In particular, Russian soldiers were not taught to cut in one movement from unsheathing, whatever Caucasus traditions suggest.[14]

See also

References

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Cited works

  • Kirill A. Rivkin (no date). "Scaling universality and quantitative analysis of historical edged weapons based on allometric equation", Seagate Technology.
  • Leonid Tarassuk and Claude Blair (1982). The Complete Encyclopedia of Arms & Weapons. Simon and Schuster.
  • Ruslan Urazbakhtin (2018). "Shashka in Late XIX–XX C: Outline of Russian Combat Techniques", Acta Periodica Duellatorum (vol. 6, issue 2), Matyas Miskolczi (ed.) Template:Catalog lookup linkScript error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".Script error: No such module "check isxn".. Script error: No such module "doi"..
  • Talantov C. and Dvalishvili L. (2019) "Depiction of Shashkas on the 17th century murals of west Georgia (in Russian)."

External links

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kk:Қылыш

  1. Talantov, Dvalishvili. "Depiction of Shashkas on 17th century murals of west Georgia (in Russian)."
  2. Rivkin, p. 21
  3. Urazbakhtin, pp. 126, 131–134
  4. Tarassuk and Blair, p. 420
  5. Urazbakhtin, p. 126
  6. Urazbakhtin, pp. 135–137
  7. Urazbakhtin, p. 141
  8. Urazbakhtin, pp. 144–145
  9. Mickov, D. (2023, June 26). The deadly shashka sword used by the renowned Cossacks. Sword Encyclopedia. https://swordencyclopedia.com/shashka-sword/
  10. Urazbakhtin, p. 126
  11. Urazbakhtin, pp. 126–135, 144
  12. Urazbakhtin, p. 134
  13. Urazbakhtin, p. 136
  14. Urazbakhtin, pp. 146–168, summary p. 169