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Encyclopedia > Guisarme

A guisarme (sometimes gisarme or bisarme) is a now antiquated pole weapon used in Europe primarily between 1000-1400. Like most polearms it was developed by peasants by combining hand tools with long poles: in this case by putting a pruning hook onto a spear shaft. While hooks are fine for dismounting horsemen from mounts, they lack the stopping power of a spear especially when dealing with static opponents. While early designs were simply a hook on the end of a long pole, later designs implemented a small reverse spike on the back of the blade. Eventually weapon makers incorporated the usefulness of the hook in a variety of different polearms and guisarme became a catch-all for any weapon that included a hook on the blade. This is exemplified by the terms bill-guisarmes, voulge-guisarmes, and glaive-guisarmes.


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Medieval Polearms,Medieval Polearms Manufacturers,Medieval Polearms Exporters (762 words)
The guisarme was furnished with a sharp cutting edge along its convex side, probably from reverse spike to hook.
Bill hook was almost same as the French guisarme, but its concave (hook) edge was the sharp one and had an L-shaped tine projecting forward.
Bills, bill-guisarmes, glaive-guisarmes, and guisarmes are further extensions of this category of pole arms.
NationMaster - Encyclopedia: Guisarme (350 words)
A guisarme (sometimes gisarme or bisarme) is a now antiquated pole weapon used in Europe primarily between 1000-1400.
Also, many pictures purporting to be guisarmes are actually fauchard-forks, which is a fauchard, with a sharp spear point added to the back of the blade.
The guisarme was furnished with a sharp cutting edge along its convex side, probably from reverse spike to hook.
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