The
Nagyka, nagaika, or nagayka (Russian:
нага́йка;
pronounced [nɐˈɡajkə])
is a short, thick whip
with round cross-section used by Cossacks,
borrowed from Nogai people, hence the original name "nogaika",
or "Nogai's whip". It is also called камча, kamcha from the Turkic
word "kamci" for "whip". The latter word is also used for
short whips of Central Asian origin.
The
nagyka was made out of leather strips by braiding. It
was possible to have a piece of metal at the tip of the whip.
The
main purpose of a nagyka was to urge a horse. A metal piece was used for
defense against wolves. According to Vladimir
Dahl's "Explanatory
Dictionary of the Live Great Russian language", this nagayka was
called volkoboy (волкобой, "wolf-slayer").
In
modern times the descriptions of the military use of nagyka tend to be
mythologized, and in the past the prime and predominant use was to drive horse.
At the same time nagyka was known to be used against unarmed people, e.g., for corporal punishment or to disperse public
disorders (e.g., during Russian Revolutions), so that a cossack with
nagayka has become a symbol of tsarist oppression. During the second world war
it was used in Nazi concentration camps to punish inmates.
In
2005 the Cossacks were
reformed and armed with nagykas in addition to other traditional weapons. In
2014, Members of Pussy Riot were attacked by Cossacks wielding nagykas
and pepper spray while protesting.
INTERNET SOURCE: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nagyka
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