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Mace (bludgeon)
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A mace is a blunt weapon, a type of club or virge that uses a heavy head on the end of a handle to deliver powerful strikes. A mace typically consists of a strong, heavy, wooden or metal shaft, often reinforced with metal, featuring a head made of stone, bone, copper, bronze, iron, or steel.
The head of a mace can be shaped with flanges or knobs to increase the pressure of an impact by focusing the force on a small point. They would bind on metal instead of sliding around it, allowing them to deliver more force to an armored opponent than a traditional mace.[1] This effect increased the potential for the mace to injure an armored opponent through weak spots in the armor, and even damage plate armor by denting it, potentially binding overlapping plates and impeding the wearer's range of motion.[2] Medieval historian and re-enactor Todd Todeschini (AKA Todd Cutler) demonstrated this effect with period accurate equipment in a series of tests on video.[1]
Maces are rarely used today for actual combat, but many government bodies (for instance, the British House of Commons and the U.S. Congress), universities and other institutions have ceremonial maces and continue to display them as symbols of authority. They are often paraded in academic, parliamentary or civic rituals and processions.
Etymology
[edit]The modern English word mace entered Middle English from Old French mace, ("large mallet/sledgehammer, mace") itself from a Vulgar Latin term *mattia or *mattea (cf. Italian mazza, "club, baton, mace"), probably from Latin mateola (uncertain, possibly a kind of club, hammer, or "hoe handle/stick"). Possibly influenced by Latin mattiobarbulus ("type of javelin"), mattiarius ("soldier armed with said javelin"), from mataris, matara ("Gallic javelin"), from a Gaulish or Celtic word.[3][4]
Development history
[edit]Prehistory
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (February 2021) |

The mace was developed during the Upper Paleolithic from the simple club, by adding sharp spikes of either flint or obsidian.
In Europe, an elaborately carved ceremonial flint mace head was one of the artifacts discovered in excavations of the Neolithic mound of Knowth in Ireland, and Bronze Age archaeology cites numerous finds of perforated mace heads.
In ancient Ukraine, stone mace heads were first used nearly eight millennia ago. The others known were disc maces with oddly formed stones mounted perpendicularly to their handle. The Narmer Palette shows a king swinging a mace. See the articles on the Narmer Macehead and the Scorpion Macehead for examples of decorated maces inscribed with the names of kings.

The problem with early maces was that their stone heads shattered easily and it was difficult to fix the head to the wooden handle reliably. The Egyptians attempted to give them a disk shape in the predynastic period (about 3850–3650 BC) in order to increase their impact and even provide some cutting capabilities, but this seems to have been a short-lived improvement.

A rounded pear form of mace head known as a "piriform" replaced the disc mace in the Naqada II period of pre-dynastic Upper Egypt (3600–3250 BC) and was used throughout the Naqada III period (3250–3100 BC). Similar mace heads were also used in Mesopotamia around 2450–1900 BC. On a Sumerian Clay tablet written by the scribe Gar.Ama, the title Lord of the Mace is listed in the year 3100 BC.[5] The Assyrians used maces probably about nineteenth century BC and in their campaigns; the maces were usually made of stone or marble and furnished with gold or other metals, but were rarely used in battle unless fighting heavily armoured infantry.
An important, later development in mace heads was the use of metal for their composition. With the advent of copper mace heads, they no longer shattered and a better fit could be made to the wooden club by giving the eye of the mace head the shape of a cone and using a tapered handle.
The Shardanas or warriors from Sardinia who fought for Ramses II against the Hittites were armed with maces consisting of wooden sticks with bronze heads. Many bronze statuettes of the times show Sardinian warriors carrying swords, bows and original maces.
Ancient history
[edit]
Persians used a variety of maces and fielded large numbers of heavily armoured and armed cavalry (see Cataphract). 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. The enchanted talking mace Sharur made its first appearance in Sumerian/Akkadian mythology during the epic of Ninurta.[6]
The Indian epics Ramayana and Mahabharata describe the extensive use of the gada in ancient Indian warfare as gada-yuddha or 'mace combat'.[7]
The ancient Romans did not make wide use of maces, probably because of the influence of armour, and due to the nature of the Roman infantry's fighting style which involved the Pilum (spear) and the Gladius (short sword used in a stabbing fashion), though auxiliaries from Syria Palestina were armed with clubs and maces at the battles of Immae and Emesa in 272 AD. They proved highly effective against the heavily armoured horsemen of Palmyra.[citation needed]
Post classical history
[edit]Western Europe
[edit]
During the Middle Ages metal armour such as mail protected against the blows of edged weapons.[8] Though iron became increasingly common, copper and bronze were also used, especially in iron-deficient areas.
One example of a mace capable of penetrating armour is the flanged mace. The flanges allow it to dent or penetrate thick armour. Flange maces did not become popular until after knobbed maces. Although there are some references to flanged maces (bardoukion) as early as the Byzantine Empire c. 900[9] it is commonly accepted that the flanged mace did not become popular in Europe until the 12th century, when it was concurrently developed in Russia and Mid-west Asia.[citation needed]
Maces, being simple to make, cheap, and straightforward in application, were quite common weapons.
It is popularly believed that maces were employed by the clergy in warfare to avoid shedding blood (sine effusione sanguinis).[10] The evidence for this is sparse and appears to derive almost entirely from the depiction of Bishop Odo of Bayeux wielding a club-like mace at the Battle of Hastings in 1066 in the Bayeux Tapestry, the idea being that he did so to avoid either shedding blood or bearing the arms of war.[11]
In the 1893 work Arms and Armour in Antiquity and the Middle Ages, Paul Lacombe and Charles Boutell state that the mace was chiefly used for blows struck upon the head of an enemy.[12]
Eastern Europe
[edit]Eastern European maces often had pear shaped heads. These maces were also used by the Moldavian ruler Stephen the Great in some of his wars (see Bulawa).[citation needed]
The mace is also the favourite weapon of Prince Marko, a hero in South Slavic epic poetry.[citation needed]
The pernach was a type of flanged mace developed since the 12th century in the region of Kievan Rus', and later widely used throughout the whole of Europe. The name comes from the Slavic word pero (перо) meaning feather, reflecting the form of pernach that resembled a fletched arrow. Pernachs were the first form of the flanged mace to enjoy a wide usage. It was well suited to penetrate plate armour and chain mail. In the later times it was often used as a symbol of power by the military leaders in Eastern Europe.[13]
Pre-Columbian America
[edit]The cultures of pre-Columbian America used clubs and maces extensively. The warriors of the Moche state and the Inca Empire used maces with bone, stone or copper heads and wooden shafts.[citation needed] The quauholōlli was used in Mesoamerica.
Asia
[edit]
Maces in Asia were most often steel clubs with a spherical head. In Persia, the "Gorz" (spherical-head mace) served as a primary combat arm across many eras, most often being used by heavy infantry or Cataphracts. In India a form of these clubs was used by wrestlers to exercise the arms and shoulders. They have been known as gada since ancient times.[citation needed]
During the Mughal era, the flanged mace of Persia was introduced to South Asia. The term shishpar is a Persian phrase which literally translates to "six-wings", to refer to the (often) six flanges on the mace. The shishpar mace was introduced by the Delhi Sultanate and continued to be utilized until the 18th century.[citation needed]
-
Indian shishpar (flanged mace), all-steel construction, with eight knife-edged, hinged flanges, 18th-19th century, 26 in (660 mm) long
-
Indian shishpar (flanged mace), steel with solid shaft and eight-flanged head, 24 in (610 mm)
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Indian (Deccan) tabar-shishpar, an extremely rare combination tabar axe and shishpar eight-flanged mace, steel with hollow shaft, 21.75 in (552 mm), 17th to 18th century
Modern history
[edit]Trench raiding clubs used during World War I were modern variations on the medieval mace. They were homemade mêlée weapons used by both the Allies and the Central Powers. Clubs were used during night time trench raiding expeditions as a quiet and effective way of killing or wounding enemy soldiers.[14][15]
Makeshift maces were also found in the possession of some football hooligans in the 1980s.[16]
In 2020 China–India skirmishes personnel of People's Liberation Army Ground Force were seen using makeshift maces (batons wrapped in barbed wire and clubs embedded with nails).[17][18]
Some units of the People's Police of China carry two-handed maces. Reportedly these are used for disabling errant martial artists.[19]
Ceremonial use
[edit]Maces have had a role in ceremonial practices over time, including some still in use today.
Parliamentary maces
[edit]
The ceremonial mace is a short, richly ornamented staff often made of silver, the upper part of which is furnished with a knob or other head-piece and decorated with a coat of arms. The ceremonial mace was commonly borne before eminent ecclesiastical corporations, magistrates, and academic bodies as a mark and symbol of jurisdiction.
Ceremonial maces are important in many parliaments following the Westminster system. They are carried in by the sergeant-at-arms or some other mace-bearers and displayed on the clerks' table while parliament is in session to show that a parliament is fully constituted. They are removed when the session ends. The mace is also removed from the table when a new speaker is being elected to show that parliament is not ready to conduct business.
Ecclesiastical maces
[edit]Maces may also be carried before clergy members in church processions, although in the case of the Roman Catholic pope and cardinals, they have largely been replaced with processional crosses.
Parade maces
[edit]Maces are also used as a parade item, rather than a tool of war, notably in military bands. Specific movements of the mace from the drum major will signal specific orders to the band they lead. The mace can signal anything from a step-off to a halt, from the commencement of playing to the cut off.
University maces
[edit]University maces are employed in a manner similar to parliamentary maces. They symbolize the authority and independence of a chartered university and the authority vested in the provost. They are typically carried in at the beginning of a convocation ceremony and are often less than half a meter high.
Heraldic use
[edit]Like many weapons from feudal times, maces have been used in heraldic blazons as either a charge on a shield or other item, or as external ornamentation.
Thus, in France:
- the city of Cognac (in the Charente département): Argent on a horse sable harnessed or a man proper vested azure with a cloak gules holding a mace, on a chief France modern
- the city of Colmar (in Haut-Rhin): per pale gules and vert a mace per bend sinister or. Three maces, probably a canting device (Kolben means mace in German, cfr. Columbaria the Latin name of the city) appear on a 1214 seal. The arms in a 15th-century stained-glass window show the mace per bend on argent.
- the duke of Retz (a pairie created in 1581 for Albert de Gondy) had Or two maces or clubs per saltire sable, bound gules
- the Garde des sceaux ('keeper of the seals', still the formal title of the French Republic's Minister of Justice) places behind the shield, two silver and gilded maces in saltire, and the achievement is surmounted by a mortier (magistrate's hat)
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ a b Tods Gothic mace – hitting armour. Retrieved 2024-04-01 – via youtube.com.
- ^ Gregory, Thomas (2023-02-21). "Medieval Weapons: What Common Weapons Were Used in the Medieval Period? | History Cooperative". Retrieved 2024-04-01.
- ^ "MACE English Definition and Meaning | Lexico.com". Lexico Dictionaries | English. Archived from the original on 27 April 2022. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
- ^ "Masse: Définition de masse". Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language] (in French). Centre National de Ressources Textuelles et Lexicales. 2012. Archived from the original on 14 Feb 2022. Retrieved 15 Feb 2024.
- ^ The Schoyen Collection: MS 2429/4
- ^ "Ninurta". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2022-04-27.
- ^ Prathamesh. "What is the role of two major Sanskrit epics in the construction of Indian culture". Vidyanju. Retrieved 27 July 2025.
- ^ DeVries, Kelly; Capponi, Niccolò (2019-07-25). Castagnaro 1387: Hawkwood's Great Victory. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4728-3357-0.
- ^ Heath, Ian. Armies of the Byzantine Empire, 886–1118.
- ^ Disraeli, Isaac (1834). Curiosities of Literature, Volume 1. Boston: Lilly, Wait, Colman, and Holden. p. 230.
- ^ Bates, David R. (1975). "The Character and Career of Odo, Bishop of Bayeux (1049/50-1097)". Speculum. 50 (1): 1–20. doi:10.2307/2856509. JSTOR 2856509. S2CID 163080280. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
- ^ Lacombe, Paul; Boutell, Charles (1893). Arms and armour in antiquity and the Middle Ages. London: Reeves and Turner. p. 121.
- ^ Medieval flanged maces by Shawn M. Caza.
- ^ "Clubs and Blades - Trench Club". Canadian War Museum. Retrieved 2024-05-29.
- ^ "'Morning star' trench club, 1915". National Army Museum, London. Retrieved 2024-05-29.
- ^ "Mace of Evil". Daily Mirror. 27 March 1986. p. 1.
- ^ Biswas, Soutik (16 June 2020). "An extraordinary escalation 'using rocks and clubs'". BBC News. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
- ^ Chatterjee, Sanchari (17 June 2020). "Two nuclear-armed states with chequered past clash: How foreign media reacted to India-China faceoff". India Today. Retrieved 21 June 2020.
- ^ Loh, Matthew (8 June 2023). "A police officer brought an 'electro-sword' to stand guard outside an exam center as Chinese students took the tests of their lives". Business Insider. Retrieved 17 March 2025.
References
[edit]- Dictionary of Medieval Knighthood and Chivalry by Bradford Broughton (NY, Greenwood Press, 1986, ISBN 0-313-24552-5)
- Hafted Weapons in Medieval and Renaissance Europe: The Evolution of European Staff Weapons Between 1200 and 1650 by John Waldman (Brill, 2005, ISBN 90-04-14409-9)
- Medieval Military Technology by Kelly DeVries (Broadview Press, 1998, 0-921149-74-3)
External links
[edit]- Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
Mace (bludgeon)
View on GrokipediaA mace is a blunt weapon, a specialized form of club featuring a heavy head affixed to a handle, engineered to generate powerful striking force capable of fracturing bone or deforming armor through kinetic impact rather than penetration.[1][2] The term derives from Old French mace, denoting a large mallet or sledgehammer, tracing further to Vulgar Latin roots associated with heavy hammering tools.[3] Typically constructed with a wooden or metal shaft for leverage and a dense head—often of stone in antiquity or iron/steel in later eras, sometimes augmented with flanges, knobs, or spikes to amplify trauma—maces prioritized raw momentum over finesse, making them straightforward to wield even by less trained combatants.[1][4] Employed across civilizations from ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt onward, maces served as primary armaments in close-quarters melee, particularly excelling against protected foes where edged weapons faltered, as their concussive delivery could transmit force through mail or plate to induce internal injury or helmet deformation.[1][4] In medieval European and Near Eastern warfare, flanged variants predominated for their capacity to crumple defensive gear without risking blade breakage, remaining viable into the early modern period before firearms supplanted such hand weapons.[2][4] While ceremonial iterations later symbolized authority in institutions, the bludgeon form's defining trait endures as an embodiment of direct, unyielding physical dominance in combat dynamics governed by material resilience and biomechanical vulnerability.[5]
Terminology
Etymology
The English word mace, denoting a heavy club-like weapon, entered the language around 1300 as mace or masse, borrowed from Old French mace (modern French massue), signifying a club or scepter.[3] This Old French term derives from Vulgar Latin mattea or mattia, likely a diminutive form of Latin mateola, which referred to a mallet, staff, or agricultural implement such as a hoe or pestle used for pounding.[6][7] The Latin mateola itself appears in classical texts like those of Pliny the Elder, describing a tool for crushing or stirring, reflecting the weapon's conceptual evolution from utilitarian pounding devices to combat instruments.[8] In medieval French military parlance, the weapon was often specified as masse d'armes ("mass of arms" or "war hammer"), emphasizing its weighted head designed for crushing blows, a usage attested by the late 15th century and influencing English terminology for armored combat tools.[8] Early English references, such as in 14th-century inventories, distinguish the mace from simpler clubs by its reinforced construction, though the term occasionally overlapped with broader descriptors for bludgeoning weapons until standardization in the late Middle Ages.[3] This etymological lineage underscores the mace's roots in prehistoric stone or wooden mallets, with linguistic evidence prioritizing Indo-European terms for heavy striking tools over unrelated borrowings.[6]Distinctions from Similar Weapons
A mace features a rigid handle connected to a distinct heavy head—typically of stone, bronze, or iron from prehistoric to medieval periods—optimized for focused concussive impacts, whereas a club is a rudimentary, undifferentiated bludgeon usually carved from a single piece of hardwood or bone, relying on overall mass for blunt force without specialized weighting.[9] This construction evolved as maces incorporated metal components around 1200 CE to counter armor, while clubs remained simpler and more accessible for unarmored combatants.[10] In contrast to the flail, which attaches its weighted head to the handle via a flexible chain, rope, or thong—enabling whipping trajectories that could wrap around defenses like shields—the mace's solid linkage prioritizes controlled, thrusting strikes but risks greater recoil transmission to the user.[11] Flails, often adapted from agricultural threshers, appeared prominently in 15th-16th century Europe, but their momentum made them harder to recover mid-combat compared to the mace's stability.[11] The war hammer incorporates a dual-purpose head with a flat crushing face opposed by a pointed pick or beak, specifically engineered from the late medieval era to puncture plate armor gaps, differing from the mace's emphasis on deformation via rounded, flanged, or knobbed heads suited to shattering mail or helmets through sheer kinetic energy.[10] Flanged maces, with angular protrusions emerging circa 1200 CE, enhanced armor penetration without piercing elements, making them versatile against varied protections where war hammers targeted rigidity.[10] Distinctions from the "morning star" are largely terminological, as it denotes a mace variant with protruding spikes on the head for added laceration alongside crushing—evident in 15th-century Transylvanian finds—though some accounts conflate it with flail-headed versions; medieval Latin texts like baculum or clava encompassed both rigid maces and wooden clubs without strict differentiation.[12] Such overlaps reflect practical battlefield adaptations rather than rigid categories, with spikes proving less effective against heavy plate than flanges.[12]Design and Construction
Materials and Components
The primary components of a mace consist of a haft serving as the handle and a heavy head designed to deliver crushing blows. The haft, typically constructed from durable hardwoods such as ash or oak to withstand impact forces, measures approximately 50 to 80 centimeters in length for one-handed use, though longer variants exist for two-handed operation.[2] In later designs, metal hafts of iron or steel replaced wood for enhanced durability, particularly in all-metal constructions from the late medieval period onward.[1] Mace heads evolved from prehistoric stone carvings to advanced metal forgings. Early examples, dating to the Mesolithic and Neolithic periods around 10,000 to 3,200 BCE, utilized hard stones like quartzite pebbles or limestone, shaped into oval or disc forms with central hourglass perforations for haft insertion and binding.[13][14][15] With Bronze Age advancements circa 3000 BCE, heads transitioned to cast copper or bronze for greater density and moldability, often pear-shaped or discoid.[16] Iron and steel heads predominated in medieval Europe and Asia from the 10th century CE, forged as solid or hollow spheres, sometimes flanged to concentrate force, weighing 0.5 to 2 kilograms to optimize momentum without excessive user fatigue.[1] Attachment methods varied by era and material. Stone heads relied on bindings or wedges through perforations to secure the tapered wooden haft end. Metal heads featured sockets or eyes fitted over the haft, fastened via rivets, nails, or peening the socket rim, with optional langets—metal straps—riveted along the haft for reinforcement against splitting.[17] These techniques ensured stability during combat, allowing the head's mass to generate concussive power effective against armor or unarmored foes.[18]Types and Variations
The mace, as a bludgeon, exhibits variations chiefly in head configuration to optimize impact force, ranging from simple spherical or pear-shaped forms for delivering concussive blows to more specialized designs like flanged or knobbed heads for countering armor. Prehistoric examples, dating to the Neolithic period over 10,000 years ago, typically consisted of round stone heads hafted to wooden shafts, providing basic crushing capability against unarmored targets.[19] Bronze Age developments introduced disc-shaped mace heads, as seen in Egyptian artifacts from 4000–3400 BCE, where the flat, wide profile maximized momentum for slashing or stunning strikes in close combat.[20] In Mesopotamian contexts, copper alloy mace heads with knobbed or ribbed surfaces emerged around 2500 BCE, enhancing bone-crushing effects through localized pressure points.[21] Medieval European maces diversified into flanged types, featuring 4 to 12 radial projections on the head to focus kinetic energy and deform metal armor without requiring sharp edges. A 15th-century French example preserved at the Metropolitan Museum of Art has a faceted shaft and head with pierced triangular flanges, measuring approximately 68 cm in length and weighing over 1.5 kg for mounted use.[22] Similarly, a seven-flanged steel mace from the Cleveland Museum of Art, datable to the late medieval period, exemplifies knightly adaptations for tournament and battlefield efficacy against plate.[23] Knobbed maces, with rounded protrusions rather than flanges, prioritized blunt trauma to fracture bones beneath mail or partial plate, as evidenced by ribbed copper alloy heads in British Museum collections designed to break skeletal structures within protective gear.[24] Spiked variants, often termed morning stars when featuring a rigid shaft with a protruding spiked ball, diverged toward piercing capabilities, though they retained bludgeoning roots; a 16th-century Italian steel mace at the Met Museum incorporates etched flanges with spike-like elements for hybrid trauma.[25] Eastern traditions produced specialized forms like the Indian shishpar, a flanged mace with 6–8 hinged or solid steel ridges on an all-metal shaft, measuring 61–66 cm long and used from the 17th to 19th centuries for penetrating chainmail in South Asian warfare.[20] Persian buzdygan maces similarly employed pear-shaped or multi-lobed heads for cavalry charges, emphasizing weight distribution for repeated strikes.[26] These variations reflect adaptations to material availability and tactical demands, with iron and steel heads supplanting stone by the Iron Age for durability against edged weapons.[27]Historical Development
Prehistoric and Ancient Origins
The earliest evidence of mace-heads, perforated stones designed for hafting to wooden shafts as bludgeons, dates to the Pre-Pottery Neolithic period in the Ancient Near East around the tenth millennium BCE.[28] Archaeological finds indicate these artifacts emerged approximately 10,000 years before present, marking an evolution from simple clubs through the addition of weighted, detachable stone heads for enhanced striking power.[15] This development coincided with early sedentary communities and the need for effective close-combat weapons in inter-group conflicts or hunting.[29] In predynastic Egypt, stone mace-heads appeared by the fourth millennium BCE, initially in discoidal forms ground smooth for attachment to perishable handles.[30] Examples from Naqada I-II periods (ca. 4000–3250 BCE) demonstrate functional designs suited for crushing impacts, with materials like marble or breccia selected for durability.[31] By the late predynastic era, pear-shaped (piriform) variants replaced discs, as seen in artifacts ca. 3500–3100 BCE, reflecting refinements in craftsmanship and possibly dual use in warfare and ritual contexts symbolizing authority.[31] Egyptian iconography from this time onward frequently depicts rulers wielding maces to signify power over enemies.[32] Mesopotamian cultures adopted maces early in the third millennium BCE, with Sumerian examples featuring stone heads for infantry combat alongside spears and slings.[33] These weapons, often simple and hafted, provided blunt force effective against unarmored foes in the region's urban conflicts from ca. 3000 BCE.[34] In Europe, Neolithic mace-heads proliferated around 3000–2500 BCE, as evidenced by polished flint or stone examples from sites in Britain and Orkney, such as the Maesmor mace-head, which combined aesthetic banding with perforations for practical mounting.[35] These artifacts suggest both martial utility and elite status, with regional variations in form indicating independent development or diffusion from Near Eastern precedents.[36]Medieval and Post-Classical Use
The mace saw significant adaptation during the medieval period (c. 500–1500 CE) and into the post-classical era, evolving from simpler clubs to incorporate iron or steel heads designed to deliver concussive force against chainmail and early plate armor, which blunted slashing weapons. Eastern influences, particularly from steppe nomads and Islamic regions, facilitated the introduction of flanged and knobbed variants to Europe around the 10th–12th centuries, while indigenous developments persisted in Asia and the Americas. These weapons were favored for their simplicity, portability, and ability to incapacitate without requiring advanced metallurgy for the shaft, often wielded by infantry, cavalry, or as secondary arms by knights.[12][4]Europe
In medieval Europe, maces proliferated from the 12th century onward, with knobbed heads dominating finds across regions from the Balkans to Scandinavia, peaking in use during the 12th–14th centuries as countermeasures to armored foes. Archaeological evidence from Transylvanian collections includes three flanged mace heads dated to this era, imported via Eastern trade routes and adapted for crushing blows that could deform helmets or mail links. Croatian museum artifacts similarly attest to widespread distribution, often paired with one-handed grips for versatility in close-quarters melee. By the late medieval period, flanged designs like the Gothic mace enhanced penetration against plate, though primary accounts remain sparse, with depictions in illuminated manuscripts suggesting elite cavalry employment. Post-classical persistence into the 15th–17th centuries saw ceremonial and battlefield overlap in Eastern Europe, such as Polish buzdyn or Hungarian variants.[12][37][4]Asia and Middle East
Maces remained integral to warfare in Asia and the Middle East, with Persian and Ottoman forces employing rounded gurz (pear-shaped heads) and flanged lakhti types for anti-armor roles from the 13th century, influenced by Mongol incursions that standardized crushing weapons across Eurasia. In medieval Georgia, under Ilkhanid sway, these variants symbolized authority while functioning practically, with iron heads weighing 1–2 kg mounted on wooden hafts up to 60 cm long. Ottoman spahis utilized smooth-headed maces for cavalry charges against European plate, as evidenced by armory survivals, emphasizing blunt trauma over cutting. Indo-Persian regions featured elaborate flanged shishpar maces, often all-steel constructions with hinged edges for enhanced impact, persisting into the 17th–18th centuries as both combat tools and status symbols.[4][38]Americas
Pre-Columbian societies in the Americas independently developed mace-like bludgeons during the post-classical era, with stone or copper-alloy heads attached to wooden shafts for infantry combat. The Inca Empire (c. 1438–1533 CE) incorporated macana clubs akin to maces, sometimes fitted with star-shaped or discoid stone heads for concussive effect against unarmored opponents, alongside slings and spears in highland warfare. Earlier Moche culture (c. 100–700 CE) artifacts reveal ceramic and stone mace heads, likely used in ritual or skirmish contexts, while Mesoamerican groups like the Maya employed similar wooden bludgeons with embedded stones, though obsidian-edged variants blurred lines with cutting weapons. These tools relied on local materials, delivering force via momentum rather than metallurgy, with archaeological recoveries confirming regional adaptations absent Eurasian armor influences.[39]Europe
In medieval Europe, maces served as versatile bludgeoning weapons, transitioning from rudimentary wooden clubs used by infantry for close-quarters combat to sophisticated metal variants employed by knights against armored foes. Early forms, such as knobbed maces, concentrated impact force to cause blunt trauma through chainmail or padded armor, with archaeological evidence from Transylvanian sites indicating their prevalence between the 13th and 15th centuries for maximizing damage via localized strikes.[12] By the 14th century, flanged maces emerged as a response to the spread of plate armor, their protruding edges designed to deform helmets and breastplates rather than slice, making them effective secondary weapons alongside swords or lances during mounted charges.[40] Flanged maces gained prominence among Western European nobility and mercenaries, including Italian condottieri who adopted them as standard arms from the mid-14th century onward for their ability to deliver high-impact blows without requiring the thrusting precision of polearms.[40] Surviving artifacts, such as a late 15th-century steel mace possibly from France with triangular flanges, attest to their use by horsemen in tournaments and battles, where the weapon's compact design allowed quick draws from belts or saddles.[22] Similarly, German examples from the same period feature multifaceted shafts and reinforced heads, underscoring adaptations for one-handed wielding in armored combat.[41] In Eastern Europe, multi-flanged variants like the pernach proliferated from the 12th century, spreading westward and influencing designs across the continent for their enhanced penetration against riveted armor joints.[23] During conflicts such as the Hundred Years' War (1337–1453) and the Wars of the Roses (1455–1487), maces functioned as infantry sidearms and knightly backups, prized for concussive force that could stun or fracture bones even through full plate, though their effectiveness diminished against massed archery or early firearms by the late 15th century.[42] Post-classical refinements, including hinged or reinforced shafts, extended their utility into the 16th century among German and Italian landsknechts, but they were gradually supplanted by pollaxes and halberds for greater reach in pike-and-shot formations.[18]Asia and Middle East
In the medieval Islamic world, maces served as effective bludgeoning weapons for cavalry and infantry, particularly valued for their ability to penetrate armor through concussive force. Illustrations from Khurāsān and Turkistān depict simple round-headed maces wielded by warriors during the early Islamic period, with evidence of their use extending into Fatimid (909–1171 CE) and Ayyubid (1171–1260 CE) eras by Arab, Turkic, and African troops.[43][44] Persian and Ottoman forces favored the buzdygan (or bozdogan), a flanged mace designed for heavily armored knights, where its penetrating flanges proved as lethal as swords or axes against mail and plate. These iron or steel weapons, often with pear-shaped heads divided into multiple flanges, were employed in battle from the 16th century onward, though earlier variants trace to Timurid and Safavid influences. Ottoman examples from the 16th century measured around 71 cm in length, underscoring their role in mounted combat.[45][46] In India, the gada, a heavy wooden or metal-headed mallet swung two-handed, persisted from ancient traditions into medieval usage under Hindu kingdoms and later sultanates, prized for its destructive impact in close-quarters fighting and training regimens like gada-yuddha. Flanged variants such as the shishpar emerged prominently during the Delhi Sultanate (1206–1526 CE) and Mughal Empire, featuring all-steel construction with 8–9 knife-edged flanges for enhanced armor-piercing capability; a 17th-century Mughal example weighed approximately 4.4 kg and measured 51.5 cm. These Indo-Persian hybrids, sometimes combined with axes as tabar-shishpar, reflected cultural exchanges across the Hindu Kush and Deccan regions.[47][48][49]Americas
Pre-Columbian cultures in the Americas, particularly in the Andean region of South America, employed maces as key blunt-force weapons in warfare. These implements typically consisted of wooden hafts fitted with heavy stone or metal heads designed to deliver crushing blows. Archaeological evidence indicates mace heads were produced by highland Chavín and coastal Cupisnique cultures around 3000 BP, with usage expanding during the Early Intermediate Period (circa 200 BCE–600 CE), including among the Moche. Moche iconography on pottery depicts warriors armed with maces, helmets, and shields in combat scenes, often alongside trophy heads signifying ritualistic violence.[50] By the Late Intermediate and Late Horizon periods (circa 1000–1533 CE), maces persisted in use among successor states like the Chimú and within the Inca Empire. Chimú artifacts include copper mace heads dated 1200–1500 CE, likely hafted for battle or ceremony.[51] The Inca favored the champi or macana, a mace with a wooden handle and star-shaped head of stone, copper, or bronze, featuring protruding spikes for enhanced lethality in hand-to-hand fighting. These weapons complemented slings, spears, and clubs, enabling infantry to engage enemies effectively despite the absence of iron. Provincial Inca variants, such as six-pointed bronze mace heads from Ecuador, reflect local adaptations under imperial influence.[52][53] In Mesoamerica, mace usage was less emphasized compared to edged clubs, though Aztec forces incorporated mace-like bludgeons such as the quauholōlli alongside dominant obsidian-edged macuahuitl. Stone mace heads appear in Costa Rican sites, suggesting broader regional adoption for close-quarters combat across diverse indigenous groups.[54]Early Modern to Contemporary Applications
In the early modern era, maces retained utility in cavalry charges and close combat where armor persisted, particularly in Eastern Europe and Asia. In the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the buława, a pear-shaped metal-headed mace, functioned as both a battlefield weapon and emblem of authority for hetmans and senior officers from the 15th to 18th centuries, with commanders wielding it to signal leadership during engagements. These short-hafted bludgeons, often 50-80 cm long, allowed for quick strikes in mounted or dismounted fighting, complementing sabers and pistols among winged hussars and Cossack forces. The advent of matchlock and wheellock firearms from the mid-16th century, however, initiated a decline in mace prevalence across Europe, as massed volleys and improved mobility favored ranged weapons over blunt trauma tools.[18] In South Asia, flanged maces like the shishpar endured longer, employed by Mughal and Rajput warriors into the 18th and 19th centuries for penetrating chainmail and plate equivalents in regional conflicts. Crafted from steel with multiple edged flanges—often eight or more—for enhanced cutting and crushing, these all-metal weapons measured around 60-80 cm, suitable for one-handed use by infantry or horsemen.[55] Their design maximized kinetic force against protected foes, though British colonial firearms ultimately marginalized them by the mid-19th century amid the Indian Rebellion of 1857 and subsequent disarmament.[18] The 20th century saw maces revert to improvised forms in exceptional circumstances, notably during World War I trench warfare, where static frontlines necessitated silent melee weapons for raids. Both Entente and Central Powers troops fabricated "trench maces" from hardwood clubs studded with hobnails, spikes, or flanges, mimicking medieval patterns to deliver concussive or penetrating blows without alerting sentries via gunfire.[56] Examples include Austro-Hungarian and German variants, approximately 45 cm long with reinforced heads for smashing helmets or skulls in no-man's-land assaults.[57] Post-1918, such bludgeons vanished from conventional militaries, supplanted by automatic weapons and grenades, rendering maces irrelevant to modern combat applications beyond historical replication.[18]Combat Applications
Techniques and Tactics
Mace techniques relied on the weapon's mass and leverage to produce concussive impacts, with users swinging the head in overhead or lateral arcs to maximize momentum against targets. Both one- and two-handed grips were employed, the former often paired with a shield for defensive coverage during advances. Flanged variants allowed for secondary hooking or piercing motions to exploit armor gaps, though primary emphasis remained on blunt force transmission. In medieval judicial duels and battlefield melee, techniques adapted from staff and club fighting involved footwork to maintain distance, followed by timed strikes to unarmored joints or helmeted heads for incapacitation via shock or fracture. Historical fencing reconstructions note sparse primary depictions, inferring methods from analogous short weapons where balance compensation and rapid recovery prevented counterattacks.[58][59] Tactically, maces functioned as close-combat sidearms after spear engagements, deployed by infantry to disrupt cavalry charges or by knights to shatter infantry shields and helmets from horseback, capitalizing on extended reach and charging velocity for amplified force. In ancient Assyrian reliefs dated 744-727 BCE, soldiers integrated mace use with ranged weapons, employing it for rapid blunt trauma in opportunistic strikes during infantry clashes.[60][18]Effectiveness Against Armor and Opponents
The mace excels in delivering concentrated blunt force trauma, making it particularly effective against opponents clad in flexible armors such as chainmail or lamellar, where it deforms protective links and crushes underlying flesh and bone without requiring penetration. Historical evidence from medieval European and Persian battle accounts describes maces shattering mail defenses, as the weapon's mass and momentum allow it to transmit kinetic energy through gaps in rigid structures.[18][2] Against rigid plate armor, the mace's effectiveness diminishes but persists through deformation of metal plates and transmission of shock to the wearer, potentially causing concussions, rib fractures, or joint disruption upon repeated impacts. Experimental reconstructions by historical European martial arts (HEMA) practitioners, using period-accurate replicas on tempered steel plates, show that while high-quality 15th-century plate resists outright penetration, mace strikes can dent breastplates and induce debilitating blunt trauma, especially to the head or limbs, by exploiting the armor's rigidity to amplify internal forces.[61][62] Flanged mace heads, with their protruding edges, further enhance this capability by focusing impact on smaller areas, capable of breaching thinner sections or rivets in articulated armor joints, as evidenced in archaeological finds from 14th-century battlefields.[18] Versus unarmored or lightly protected foes, the mace proves devastatingly lethal, routinely fracturing skulls, shattering long bones, and inducing fatal internal hemorrhaging with a single well-placed blow due to its high-impact velocity and unyielding design. Comparative analyses of medieval weapon treatises, such as those from 13th-century German fechtbücher, highlight the mace's superiority over edged weapons in close-quarters brawls against infantry lacking heavy protection, where cutting implements falter on clothing or glancing blows.[2] Limitations arise in prolonged engagements against fully plated knights, where the mace's short reach and reliance on raw power demand superior positioning, often favoring pole-mounted variants like the pollaxe for greater leverage in armored melees.[61]Advantages and Drawbacks
The mace's primary advantage in combat lay in its capacity to deliver concussive blunt trauma, effective against armored opponents by transmitting force through protective layers to cause internal injuries, bone fractures, or helmet concussions without requiring penetration.[63] This made it particularly suited to chainmail and transitional plate armors common from the 11th to 14th centuries, where edged weapons often glanced off or failed to inflict decisive harm.[64] Flanged designs concentrated impact on narrow ridges, enabling dents in plate or exploitation of joints and weaker points, enhancing lethality in close-quarters knightly engagements.[39] Additional strengths included simplicity of manufacture from readily available materials like wood, iron, or steel, rendering it inexpensive, durable, and resistant to breakage under stress—unlike tempered swords prone to chipping or snapping.[65] Its solid construction also favored mounted use, where a rider's momentum amplified striking power, and served as a reliable backup if primary weapons failed.[18] However, the mace suffered from limited reach, with one-handed variants typically measuring 60-80 cm, exposing wielders to attacks from longer spears, polearms, or swords at a distance.[65] Weighing 2-3 kg for common models, as noted by arms historian Ewart Oakeshott, it demanded considerable strength for effective swings, leading to rapid fatigue in extended battles or against agile foes.[66] Further drawbacks encompassed reduced versatility compared to swords or axes, lacking thrusting capability or cutting potential, which diminished utility against unarmored targets where slashing wounds proved faster and more debilitating.[67] Against advanced full plate armor by the late 15th century, its impacts could often be mitigated by articulated joints and padded underlayers, prompting a decline in favor of specialized tools like warhammers; this evolution reflected broader tactical shifts toward reach and precision over raw bludgeoning force.[68]Symbolic and Ceremonial Uses
Institutional and Parliamentary Maces
Institutional and parliamentary maces represent the evolution of the medieval bludgeon from a weapon into a symbol of authority and order. By the 14th century, maces had transitioned into ceremonial staffs carried by officials to signify royal or legislative prerogative, often featuring ornate silver-gilt designs with crowns or heraldic elements.[69][70] In parliamentary settings, the mace embodies the Speaker's authority and the assembly's legitimacy, requiring its presence on the table for official business to commence. The United Kingdom's House of Commons mace, crafted in 1672 during the reign of Charles II, is carried by the Serjeant-at-Arms in procession and placed before the Speaker, with historical records noting its symbolic role as early as 1344 when Commons members protested civic maces infringing on parliamentary rights.[69][71] Similarly, the Canadian House of Commons mace, a silver-gilt staff approximately four feet long featuring panels with the Arms of Canada, the English rose, Irish harp, and Scottish thistle, serves as a replica of one destroyed in the 1916 Centre Block fire and underscores the Crown's authority exercised through the elected body.[72][71] In Australia, the House of Representatives' gilded silver mace, borne by the Serjeant-at-Arms, symbolizes both the Speaker's command and the House's collective sovereignty, tracing its ritual to British traditions adapted post-federation.[73] Universities and other institutions employ maces in academic ceremonies to denote administrative governance and continuity. Originating as wooden staffs for beadles in medieval Europe, these evolved into metal emblems paraded before chancellors during commencements or inaugurations, present only when senior leadership attends.[74][70] For instance, the University of Notre Dame's mace reflects this heritage as an early sign of university officials' distinction, while the University of Washington's version underscores regental oversight in formal events.[70][74] Such maces, often customized with institutional motifs, maintain procedural dignity without martial function, echoing broader ceremonial uses in learned societies like the Royal Society.[75]Religious and Processional Maces
In Christian liturgical traditions, particularly within the Roman Catholic Church, mazzieri pontifici served as papal mace-bearers who carried ornate silver maces during processions and ceremonies, functioning both as symbols of authority and practical tools for crowd control. These maces, known historically as mazze or virgae, trace their origins to at least the twelfth century, when they were wielded by the pope's bodyguard, originally termed servientes armorum or halberdiers, to protect the pontiff and clear paths through gatherings. The mazzieri's role emphasized the mace's evolution from a combat weapon to a ceremonial emblem, often topped with papal insignia, and their presence underscored the security and dignity of Vatican processions until the corps was disbanded in the twentieth century.[76][77] In the Anglican Communion and Episcopal churches, vergers employ a virge—a staff derived from the ceremonial mace—to lead ecclesiastical processions, marshaling clergy, choir, and congregation while symbolizing institutional order. The virge, etymologically from the Latin virga meaning "rod" or "staff," historically enabled vergers to physically clear obstacles, such as animals or disorderly individuals, from the path of worshippers, a practice rooted in medieval customs where lay assistants preceded dignitaries. Today, in cathedrals and parishes, the verger's virge precedes the procession, often elaborately designed with ecclesiastical motifs, and is laid upon the altar during services to denote the completion of the entry rite, maintaining a continuity with its origins as a mace of authority.[78][79] These processional maces, across both Catholic and Anglican contexts, embody a transition from utilitarian enforcement to purely symbolic veneration of hierarchical and sacred authority, devoid of combat function since the late medieval period, and continue to feature in formal liturgies as markers of tradition rather than active defense.[80][81]Heraldic and Emblematic Representations
In heraldry, the mace functions as a charge on escutcheons or as external ornamentation, embodying symbols of authority, dignity, and martial prowess derived from its historical role as a battlefield bludgeon. Following the third quarter of the 14th century, heraldic depictions often stylized the mace with a metal-flanged or spiked head atop a shaft, reflecting its evolution from a simple wooden club into a more sophisticated weapon while retaining connotations of unyielding power and enforcement.[82] This symbolism extended to secular governance, where the mace signified the bearer's right to execute royal commands, such as arrests by serjeants-at-arms, whose emblems bore royal arms as visual warrants of authority in pre-literate societies.[82][83] Historical examples include the flanged mace appearing in the mid-15th-century arms of the Italian di Veccii family, oriented hilt to base without proper tincture, underscoring its association with defensive or combative heritage.[83] In Central European contexts, particularly Polish heraldry, the buzdygan—a pear-shaped, often "feathered" mace with radiating vanes—served as an ensign for hussar officers and rotmistrze (cavalry captains), appearing in noble and military blazons to denote command rank and Eastern-influenced martial tradition.[84] Such representations persisted in armigerous families like the Radziwiłł, where ornate buzdygan variants symbolized hetman-level authority.[84] Emblematic uses beyond strict heraldry incorporate the mace into institutional seals and supporters, as seen in 19th-century English parliamentary arms granted to Speakers, featuring paired maces as crested supporters to evoke legislative sovereignty rooted in medieval enforcement tools.[85] These motifs emphasize causal continuity from the weapon's practical utility in crushing armor—leveraging kinetic mass for deformation—to abstracted icons of coercive order, unadorned by later ceremonial elaborations like orbs or crowns unless contextually specified.[82]Modern Relevance
Replicas and Historical Reenactments
Replicas of medieval maces, crafted to replicate the form, weight, and balance of originals from the 13th to 16th centuries, are widely used in historical reenactments to simulate period combat. Manufacturers such as Windlass Steelcrafts produce battle-ready versions from high-carbon steel, drawing on archaeological evidence to ensure functional authenticity for sparring and demonstrations.[86] Similarly, Deepeeka's flanged mace reproductions are modeled directly after artifacts in the British Museum, incorporating historical proportions for accurate handling in reenactment scenarios.[87] In full-contact events like Buhurt, hosted by international reenactment organizations, participants employ reinforced mace replicas to recreate armored melee, with designs emphasizing concussive impact over penetration to mimic anti-armor tactics.[88] Historical European Martial Arts (HEMA) practitioners integrate these replicas into training regimens, using them alongside treatises like those of Fiore dei Liberi to analyze thrusting, swinging, and blocking techniques against shielded opponents.[2] Safety adaptations, such as blunted flanges or added padding, are standard for public demonstrations and lighter reenactments, preventing injury while preserving tactical fidelity.[89] Beyond combat simulation, mace replicas serve educational purposes in museum exhibits and living history events, where groups like the Company of Saynte George demonstrate their role in late medieval warfare.[90] These reproductions, often certified for authenticity by producers, aid in scholarly reconstruction of battlefield dynamics, highlighting the mace's effectiveness in close-quarters engagements.[91] Commercial availability through outlets like Kult of Athena ensures accessibility for reenactors, with models ranging from pear-shaped heads weighing 2-3 pounds to flanged variants suited for one- or two-handed use.[92]Collectibility and Legal Considerations
Antique mace heads and complete historical examples command varying prices among collectors, with Bronze Age Western Asiatic specimens fetching around $995 at specialized arms dealers.[93] Medieval replicas and functional bludgeons for display or reenactment typically range from $200 to over $1,000, depending on craftsmanship and materials like forged steel.[92] High-end auction sales of Gothic or early medieval maces have reached estimates of €2,500 to €3,500, reflecting demand from enthusiasts valuing authenticity and provenance over mere decoration.[94] In the United States, ownership of maces as collectible artifacts or replicas is federally unrestricted, but state laws classify bludgeons akin to billy clubs, prohibiting possession in places like California except for law enforcement.[95] New York penalizes unauthorized possession of certain clubs under misdemeanor statutes, though private home display often evades scrutiny absent intent to harm.[96] Recent Second Amendment challenges have invalidated some bans, arguing such arms bear historical militia relevance, yet carrying maces publicly risks charges if deemed for offensive use.[97] In the United Kingdom, maces fall under the Offensive Weapons Act 2019 and Criminal Justice Act 1988, where any bludgeon intended or adapted for injury constitutes an offense in public without lawful excuse, though private collection of historical pieces remains permissible if not brandished threateningly. Enforcement focuses on context, exempting antiques in museums or homes but prohibiting concealed carry, with penalties up to seven years imprisonment for aggravated possession. Comparable restrictions apply across EU nations, prioritizing intent over mere ownership for blunt instruments.[98]References
- https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/mace
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Indo-Persian_bozdogan_or_buzdygan_mace.jpg