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  2. Tabar (axe) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tabar_(axe)

    The tabar (also called tabarzin, which means "saddle axe" [in persian], Persian: تبر) is a type of battle axe. The term tabar is used for axes originating from the Ottoman Empire, Persia, India and surrounding countries and cultures. the word tabar is also used in most Slavic languages as the word for axe [1] (e.g. Russian: топор).

  3. Saintie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saintie

    Staff weapons were given for the ordinary foot soldier to equip them with powerful and effective killing tools. The Indo-Persians innovated a wide range of staff weapons e.g. iron maces, long-handled battle axes, and long shafts with pointed spearheads at the point e.g. the spear-like saintie. [1]

  4. Battle axe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_axe

    A battle axe (also battle-axe, battle ax, or battle-ax) ... What made the Persian axe unique is the very thin handle, which is very light and always metallic. [17]

  5. Sagaris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sagaris

    The sagaris was a kind of battle-axe, or sometimes war hammer. Examples have been collected from Eurasian steppe archeological excavations, and are depicted on the Achaemenid cylinders and ancient Greek pottery and other surviving iconographic material.

  6. Mughal weapons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mughal_weapons

    Tabar (war axe), 3. Eight Bladed flanged mace, 4. Tabar (war axe) and 5. Zaghnal (battle axe) 6.Sword Stick (at the time of Mughals) If the head was pointed and had two cutting edges, the axe was called a zaghnol, or "crow's beak". A double headed axe with a broad blade on one side of the handle and a pointed one on the other was styled a tabar ...

  7. Mace (bludgeon) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mace_(bludgeon)

    For a heavily armed Persian knight, a mace was as effective as a sword or battle axe. In fact, Shahnameh has many references to heavily armoured knights facing each other using maces, axes, and swords.

  8. List of magical weapons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_magical_weapons

    Forseti's axe (also Fosite's axe) – A golden battle axe that Forseti (or Fosite in the Frisian mythology) used to save the old sages of the wreck and then threw the axe to an island to bring forth a source of water. Freyr's sword – A magic sword which fought on its own. It might be Lævateinn.

  9. Aswaran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aswaran

    The word comes from the Old Persian word asabāra (from asa- and bar, a frequently used Achaemenid military technical term). [citation needed] The various other renderings of the word are the following: Parthian asbār (spelt spbr or SWSYN), Middle Persian aswār (spelt ʼswbʼl or SWSYA), Classical Persian suwār (سوار), uswār/iswār (اسوار), Modern Persian savār (سوار).