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The obuch, obuszek or obuszysko is a type of melee weapon, very similar to a
horseman's pick The horseman's pick was a weapon of Middle Eastern origin used by cavalry during the Middle Ages in Europe and the Middle East. This was a type of war hammer that had a very long spike on the reverse of the hammer head. Usually, this spike was sl ...
( pl, nadziak) but differing from it with a curved beak opposite the hammer. In Poland, it was customary to distinguish this type of weapon by the type of tip: if it has a sharp, perpendicular beak, it is a horseman's pick; if the beak is curled downward, it is an obuch; if it has an axe head, it is a . Most often there was a hammer on the opposite side of the blade. Used from the 16th to the 18th century by the Szlachta (Polish nobility), it often had a shaft length of 80–100 cm and was carried like a staff and was often bound in velvet and gold twine. It was a weapon often used in duels and brawls. It was supposed to be safer than a horseman's pick, from which it was made, but the difference was not great, for which reason it was forbidden to bring this type of weapon to
sejmik A sejmik (, diminutive of ''sejm'', occasionally translated as a ''dietine''; lt, seimelis) was one of various local parliaments in the history of Poland and history of Lithuania. The first sejmiks were regional assemblies in the Kingdom of ...
s and also to some churches. In old Poland, wearing an obuch was so common (for nobles) that it spawned the saying: ' ("An obuch is to a sabre as bedding is to a bed"). It was a common secondary weapon to a Polish sabre (
karabela A karabela was a type of Polish sabre () popular in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. Polish fencer Wojciech Zabłocki defines a karabela as a decorated sabre with the handle stylized as the head of a bird and an open crossguard. Etymol ...
).


Sources


Polish Renaissance Warfare: obuch, hammer, czekan
* Zdzisław Żygulski (junior), 1982: ''Broń w dawnej Polsce na tle uzbrojenia Europy i Bliskiego Wschodu''. Warszawa: PWN. ISBN 83-01-02512-8 Hammers Renaissance-era weapons Polearms Weapons of Poland {{polearm-stub