Seax is an Old English word for "knife". In modern archaeology, the term seax is used specifically for a type of small sword, knife or dagger typical of the Germanic peoples of the Migration period and the Early Middle Ages, especially the Saxons, whose name derives from the weapon. These vary considerably in size, but are mostly all-purpose tools and weapons, often carried by women as well as men. In heraldry, the seax is a chargeconsisting of a curved sword with a notched blade, appearing, for example, in the coats of arms of Essex and the former Middlesex. Old English seax, sax and Old Frisiansax are identical with Old Saxon and Old High Germansaks, all from a Common Germanic*sahsą from a root *sah, *sag- "to cut". In Scandinavia, the wordssax, saks or sakset all refer toscissors, which are used for cutting various materials. The term scramaseax or scramsax is sometimes used for disambiguation, even though it is not attested in Old English, but taken from an occurrence of scramasaxi in Gregory of Tours' History of the Franks. The name of the roofer's tool, the zax, is a development from this word.
Description
Amongst the shape and construction of seaxes there is a great deal of variation. The most frequent characteristics are:
A tang in the centerline of the blade, inserted into an organichilt
A large single-edged blade
The blade is worn horizontally inside a scabbard attached to the belt, with the edge of the blade upwards
In the continental Germanic area, the following types are defined for seaxes between roughly 450 and 800 AD, in chronological order:
Narrow long seax
Short seax
Narrow seax – Often have braided bands or snakes engraved in the blade, and frequently include metal bolsters and pommels. Both the edge and the back are curved towards the tip, which is generally located above the centerline of the blade.
Light broad seax – Similar to narrow seax, but frequently lack metal hilt parts, and have simpler decorations on the blade, such as parallel lines. Both the edge and the back curve towards the tip, which is generally located at the centerline of the blade.
Heavy broad seax – Have simple decorations on the blade if any, and long single-part organic hilts. Both the edge and the back curve towards the tip, which is generally located at the centerline of the blade.
Atypical broad seax – Same as heavy broad seax.
Long seax – Blades are 50 cm/20 in or longer, often with multiple fullers and grooves, pattern welded blades, and long hilts similar to broad seaxes. The edge is generally straight, or curved slightly towards the tip. The back either curves gently, or with a sharp angle towards the tip, which is located below the centerline of the blade.
The general trend, as one moves from the short to the broad seax, is that the blade becomes heavier, longer, broader and thicker. Long seaxes, which arrived at the end of the 7th century, were the longest of the seax. These were narrower and lighter than their predecessors. Initially, these weapons were found in combination with double-edged swords and were probably intended as side arm. From the 7th century onwards, seaxes became the main edged weapon, sometimes in combination with small side-knives. The rest of Europe followed a similar development, although some types may not be very common depending on location. In England long seaxes appear later than on the continent and finds of long seaxes remain very rare in comparison to finds of swords throughout the period. in Kent Another typical form of the seax is the so-called broken-back style seax. These seaxes have a sharp angled transition between the back section of the blade and the point, the latter generally forming 1/3 to 3/5 of the blade length, exactly like a large version of a modern clip-point blade. These seaxes exist both in long seax variety and in smaller blades of various lengths. They occurred mostly in the United Kingdom and Ireland, with some examples in Germany around 8th-11th century. Some examples have pattern welded blades, while others have inlays of silver, copper, brass, etc.