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Historical Weaponry - The Viking Dane Axe 

Element 18
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The Dane Axe was introduced by the Vikings in the 10th century, and rapidly gained popularity among the Scandinavian lands, including England, which had a heavy Danish influence in this period. Fixed onto a long shaft, and possessing a wide, sharp, hardened edge, the Dane Axe possessed a powerful cutting ability.
Back in England 1066, it was not just William the Conqueror that King Harold had to contend with, his exiled brother Tostig had managed to persuade Harald Hardrada of Norway to invade England from the north. Hardrada defeated the local nobles and took York, so Harold raced up north to deal with this new threat to his realm.
At Stamford Bridge, Harold’s aim was to catch the Viking invaders off guard with the speed of his advance northwards. To achieve this Harold used the fyrd to swell the ranks of army, the fyrd were a militia raised from the common men in the area under attack. They were expected to equip themselves which gave Harold an instant, but poorly equipped and untrained body of men.
A much more formidable part of his army were his professional soldiers called the uscarls. These fearsome Saxon warriors may have numbered as many as three thousand, clad in chainmail, carrying sword and spear, they would’ve been amongst the finest troops in western Europe.
They shared many similarities with the Viking warriors, and this is best displayed in their preferred weapon, the mighty two-handed Dane Axe!
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24 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 29   
@FelixstoweFoamForge
@FelixstoweFoamForge Год назад
I've always thought that the Dane Axe was "Fear" weapon. Something capable of smashing bones, even through the best armour of the day, must have given even the bravest pause for thought. Nice to see someone agree with what I've always instinctively believed. Another good video.
@MrPotatoesLatkie
@MrPotatoesLatkie 5 месяцев назад
It's capable of cutting deep into the human body. The blades are thin in cross section, and light weapons with two hands.
@podsmpsg1
@podsmpsg1 7 месяцев назад
Axes were cheaper, easier and faster to make than swords. Axes also required less steel to make. Not everyone had or could afford a sword.
@emho5135
@emho5135 Год назад
I love how the academic talks of it as an impractical weapon and then they hand one to a giant named Bear who uses it like a scalpel.
@parkinsonga3092
@parkinsonga3092 7 месяцев назад
I love these videos for the hilarious interpretations. Has anyone actually figured out what a "Dane axe" is? Hint the Norse made a lot of boats and each person had his job. A "Dane axe" is actually a hewing axe used to make planks from logs and to square timber. If you look at the full range of axes used to make a large boat, you will see the full range available to Vikings on the battlefield. Hewing axes take a big man to use them, so logically when a big man went to war he took his axe with him. You don't see a carpenter using a Dane axe, and the famous throwing axe?? It's used for caulking in traditional boat work. I'm six foot four inches tall and the only axe that I can use comfortably for long periods is a hewing axe or Dane axe, everything else is too small.
@MrPotatoesLatkie
@MrPotatoesLatkie 5 месяцев назад
Perhaps the axe was used in a unit formation for special tactics? A Swedish axe smith named Tord Bergelin thinks they were. He makes his axes with a shaft of 40" to perhaps 45", which he bases on looking at artwork like the Bayeux tapestry. Some Huscarls used the horns to pull back shields, while other parried spear shafts, and one or more may have hacks the enemy to break up a shield wall.It's just an idea of his. It's interesting how think the blades were. Almost as thin as a sword.
@waaagh3203
@waaagh3203 3 месяца назад
I think if I had to be in 10th century battle, I would choose a spear and an axe as a back up. If not a spear, some type of lighter polearm. Watching HEMA, I actually think the axe is an excellent weapon. It seems like many choose it in HEMA from what I've seen, though they generally aren't Dane Axes, they seem a bit shorter, but still effective. I also like the axes with the spiked back end to concentrate the strike if needed.
@Sr_ECO
@Sr_ECO 7 месяцев назад
My favorite weapon :D
@blanebellerud5811
@blanebellerud5811 Месяц назад
Bear definitely produced results, I suspect if handled with a bit more finesse you might even see bigger effects
@Halli50
@Halli50 Год назад
Funny how English speakers use Harald Hardraade's character description for his last name or family name. Hardraade literally means "Hard Ruler", a description of is style as a ruler, not a name. The same goes for Ragnar Lodhbrok (Loðbrók), which is simply a description of the trousers he was known for wearing: Fur Pants!
@osborne9255
@osborne9255 5 месяцев назад
Pagan goat trousers!
@StevenHughes-hr5hp
@StevenHughes-hr5hp Месяц назад
Are you sure the Vikings did not consider those axes tools for chopping down trees and carving their longboats out of them?
@TKFKU
@TKFKU Год назад
Axes, like hammers, didn't have to go through armor. Sure it didn't cut through the mail but it shattered the person's bones who was wearing it, effectively taking them out of the fight anyway. Even in plate armor, no it's not going through but you are in the can as the axe blows crush it. Not hard to figure out. Not many swords can say the same as they were meant for show, or the gaps.
@gungnir3926
@gungnir3926 8 месяцев назад
also metal needed, you could probaly make several axeheads from one ulfbert.
@MrPotatoesLatkie
@MrPotatoesLatkie 5 месяцев назад
I don't think those axes were used in the plate armor era. They were used in 1066, but I wonder how long after? I think they may have been specialist weapons for units dealing with a pack of shields and spears.
@tomcox297
@tomcox297 Месяц назад
⁠@@MrPotatoesLatkieDane axes stopped being used later on against plate because you can’t do much against plate with one, smaller one handed axes where used alongside shields etc, but the Dane axe was a baseline as an early pole arm and morphed into halberds/glaives.
@choirboyzcutleryoutdoors
@choirboyzcutleryoutdoors Год назад
Excellent!
@tomtaylor6163
@tomtaylor6163 2 года назад
Hope you guys have a good BBQ after this…
@Vidis88
@Vidis88 Год назад
I can shop that deep with a smaler axe then that. And you never see a golfer swing his club around his head like that. In battle it would be very dangerous if your fellow viking next to you startet too swing like that. Naa, I think they were slightly bigger, and more brute force. Imagene working as a farmer, rowing everywhere, a axe like that would be like a toothpick for them.
@hellomate639
@hellomate639 Год назад
Ok, you stand in front of it.
@LegionTacticoolCutlery
@LegionTacticoolCutlery Год назад
Insanity! But how was it actually deployed in battle? Was the handle that long? Was it shorter? Was the tip of the axe used like a spear more that just hacking? One would assume the weapon would be used over and over again in battle instead of one swing and possibly getting “stuck” in human bone or horse or what ever is on the battlefield. It’s a bit of a mystery to me to comprehend. Hacking left and right may have gotten a couple kills but in the heat of battle there is fog of war…. How did the Husecarls deploy this?
@rollothewalker5535
@rollothewalker5535 Год назад
Handle lenght was usually between 60-110 cm and they may have been used one handed two. Longer ones were ceremonial. Yes, you can use the tip for stabbing.
@chralledk
@chralledk Год назад
The was 100% used in battle, the weapon was used behind the shields to strike from above or stab. the frontline warrior are the not the one who goes for the kill. they are hold the line and make gaps for spears and dane axes to be uses to go for the kills.
@a_fuckin_spacemarine7514
@a_fuckin_spacemarine7514 9 месяцев назад
No......these weapons were fantastic, they literally took this design and adapted it for plate armour!
@petermiller6629
@petermiller6629 11 месяцев назад
...by the time Big Guy twirls his axe around a second time I've speared or stuck him with a blade of some sort at least once...
@justinmorgan2126
@justinmorgan2126 Год назад
A fairly inadequate weapon then... or a very bad copy of a better weapon.
@daneaxe6465
@daneaxe6465 Год назад
Oh, so that's why it was used for many centuries. Fresh knowledge is always interesting.
@frankschmidt5932
@frankschmidt5932 Год назад
I don't think that it was very usefull in the center of any Battlefield. The shaft is too long . I guess at last they would operate with diggers and other short arms
@JJ-fromDK
@JJ-fromDK 11 месяцев назад
yes and no, but it depends on the tactics, remember later, that Halbards and the like actually got a significant place in the battlefield
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