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  2. File:Chinese dagger-axe and related polearms.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Chinese_dagger-axe...

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  3. Chinese polearm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_polearm

    The three most common types of Chinese polearms are the ge (戈), qiang (槍), and ji (戟). They are translated into English as dagger-axe, spear, and halberd. [1] Dagger-axes were originally a short slashing weapon with a 0.9–1.8 m (2 ft 11 in – 5 ft 11 in) long shaft, but around the 4th century BC a spearhead was added to the blade, and it became a halberd.

  4. Dagger-axe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dagger-axe

    The dagger-axe (Chinese: 戈; pinyin: gē; Wade–Giles: ko) is a type of polearm that was in use from the Longshan culture until the Han dynasty in China. [1] It consists of a dagger-shaped blade, mounted by its tang to a perpendicular wooden shaft. The earliest dagger-axe blades were made of stone. Later versions used bronze.

  5. Guandao - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guandao

    The modern guandao as adopted by martial artists today usually weighs between 2 and 10 kg (4.4 and 22.0 lb), and is typically composed of a wood shaft of about 3 to 5 ft (0.91 to 1.52 m) in length, a short blade of about 12 to 18 in (300 to 460 mm) on one end, and a mace head on the other (which serves mostly as a counterweight to the blade but ...

  6. Halberd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halberd

    The halberd consists of an axe blade topped with a spike mounted on a long shaft. It can have a hook or thorn on the back side of the axe blade for grappling mounted combatants and protecting allied soldiers, typically musketeers. [2] The halberd was usually 1.5 to 1.8 metres (4.9 to 5.9 ft) long. [3]

  7. Polearm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polearm

    The dagger-axe (Chinese: 戈; pinyin: gē; Wade–Giles: ko; sometimes confusingly translated "halberd") is a type of weapon that was in use from Shang dynasty until at least Han dynasty China. It consists of a dagger-shaped blade made of bronze (or later iron) mounted by the tang to a perpendicular wooden shaft: a common Bronze Age infantry ...

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  9. Chariots in ancient China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chariots_in_ancient_China

    Weapons carried on the chariot consisted of close-combat and long range weapons. The most important close-combat weapon aboard the chariot was the dagger-axe or gē (戈), a weapon with a roughly three-meter shaft. At the end of the double-headed device there was a sharp dagger on one side and an axe head on the other. [17]