Art by TL Jeffcoat |
The Katara was designed as a thrusting blade, with an H-shaped handle and a wide blade that extended from the fist. These steel blades varied in length, usually between one foot and 3 feet (one meter). Sometimes the blade was widened and split to create a double pointed tip. In southern India it was often curvy, and there were even designs that were wavy, which allowed it to be more effective as a slashing weapon. There wasn’t much consideration for self-defense involved in the design, so the warrior had to rely on his martial arts skills and agility to get in close to his opponent.
What makes this short blade so dangerous is the power of its thrust. With the design made so that when the Rajput struck, he was able to put his weight into the blow. The combined force of the jab from a katara and the Rajput’s strength was powerful enough to easily slice into chainmail, and was even able to penetrate plate armor. The blades of the katara were made thick to avoid breaking or bending when striking. A normal sword blade could not survive the force of a Rajput’s body weight delivered into each stab. Some of the original designs of the katara included a leaf shaped cover of the back of the handle to protect the fist, but this was discarded in later models.
Art by TL Jeffcoat |
Another set of katara were designed with a pistol installed into the handle to deliver a kill shot after a thrust. The Rajput never used these in actual combat either.
I hope you enjoyed this
edition of Weapons and Warriors, click here to view the entire catalog of
weapons and cultures. Thank you, see you next week.
That British scissor version is wicked! Never seen that one before!
ReplyDeleteYes it is. They outdid themselves with the flashy stuff. That is on my list if weapons for my collection.
ReplyDeleteI love this. I want some. Can I order through you? Deliver is to Canada. If you need help getting across the border, I'll send my helicopter.
ReplyDeleteYou think this thing is bad, just wait. The Rajput had even more spectacular weapons still.
ReplyDeleteThose are pretty wicked. ;) Not wicked enough that you'd get me anywhere near a tiger with one, but I'm a wuss like that!
ReplyDeleteHaha! I bet Cedar* wouldn't have any problem with getting near a tiger with a couple of these.
ReplyDelete*A character in the Flash Gold series:
http://mrtalkstoomuch.blogspot.com/2011/09/book-recommendation-flash-gold.html