The Shashka (Adyghe:
Сэшхуэ /IPA: [saʃxʷa]/ - big knife, Russian:
(Шашка))
is a special kind of sabre;
a very sharp, single-edged, single-handed, and guardless sword. In
appearance, the shashka is midway between a full sabre and a straight sword. It
has a slightly curved blade, and can be effective for both slashing and
thrusting. The blade is either hollowed or fullered.
There is no guard, but a large, curved pommel. The
hilt is frequently highly decorated. Shashkas from the Caucausus, as opposed to
Russian versions, are carried in a wooden scabbard that
encloses part of the hilt. It is worn with the cutting edge to the rear,
opposite to the sabre.
INTERNET SOURCE: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shashka
History
The
shashka originated among the mountain tribes of the Caucasus in
the 12th century. Later most of the Russian and Ukrainian Cossacks
adopted the weapon. Two styles of shashka exist: the Caucasian/Circassian
shashka and the Cossack shashka.
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 - Adyghe: Шашькуэ (Shash
ko) - meaning "long knife". It gradually replaced the sabre in
all cavalry units except hussars during the 19th century. Russian troops, having
encountered it during their conquest
of the Caucasus (1817-1864), preferred it to their issue sabres. The Russian Caucasian Corps first
adopted it in the 1830s. In 1881 shashka became official weapon in Russian
troops and police.
At
this time they were 3 types of shashkas.
1.
Caucasus type where the handle almost sits inside the scabbard, this type was
used by Kuban Cossack and tribes from Caucasus. Only one problem was with this
type of shashka that during rain water could go down into the scabbard, but
this type of shashka was very light 300-400 grams, very flexible, strong and
sharp. The best and most famous shashkas of this types were Gurda (strong and
sharp like bulat), Volchek (running wolf symbol on the blade).
2.
The Don Cossack shashka has straighter blade which gave Cossacks something in
the middle to combine two things in one like cutting from the horse and also
fence. The weight of this shashka is around 1 kilogram.
3.
Terek Cossack shashka, the handle like the Don Cossack shashka does not go
inside the scabbard. It is very light and strong.
Construction
The
absence of the guard is inherited from the original Caucasian construction, in
which the shashka is nearly completely hidden in the scabbard, together with
the hilt. The hilt is slightly curved down, thus providing an additional leverage
for pulling the shashka and for additional force by wrist action.
The
handle of the sabre was crafted so as to have a built-in pommel and possibly a
small guard, which usually extended to only one side of the hilt. Like most medieval and
then imperial Russian weaponry of the time, often the
shashka and its scabbard were very ornately decorated, with gold and silver
engravings, embedded gems and stones placed into, and figures carved out of or
into, the hilts. The blade of the sabre was generally double or triple-fullered,
and due to its greater width than that of the European sabre, and its unique
styles of tempering, it was much stronger too, able to deal damage to light
body armor.
The
shashka has the feel of a European sabre and was notable for its sharpness.
There has been film footage of Tsar Nicholas II (1868–1918) using a Circassian sabre in an
overhead twirling motion to horizontally cut pieces from a wooden pole.
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