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I removed the number 1 source for the Gladius Hispaniensis because it opened to a "file not found" screen, and renamed the other two as no. 1 & 2 respectively. Spartan198 ( talk) 11:13, 24 May 2008 (UTC) Spartan198
The picture seen on the right used to be on this page. However, comparing it with the pictures in the external links, the proportions are totally wrong - this is a knife, not a sword. It is also inscribed with what appears to be Tengwar. I think it's better to have no picture than a misleading one, but in case someone disagrees I'm preserving it here. -- Andrew 21:57, Apr 10, 2005 (UTC)
Tengwar - IBYP!? The inscription is "700 Jahre eidgenossenschaft". At the base of the blade, there is also the emblem of the Swiss Confederation (i.e. Eidgenossenschaft). "Jahre" means "years", so this was obviously crafted for the 700th anniversary of the SC in 1991. The one thing we can agree on is that this is, of course, not a Gladius. Aragorn2 12:42, 9 January 2006 (UTC)
Indeed it is a Swiss dagger. Initially it was designed by Hans Holbien and it was popular with the Swiss Pikemen. Later it was copied by the Third Reich.
The blade was held flat, relative to the ground, so as to slip through ribs or ribbed armor
I have serious doubts about this claim. Stabbing was the main tactic of Roman legionaries, but sources and depictions show that gladii were also used for slashing which would have been awkward with a blade held horizontally. Furthermore the Romans favourite target was the stomach were there are no ribs to worry about; as for vertically segmented armour, that was mostly carried by themselves and there was relatively little legionary vs legionary combat in the imperial period. This tactic could of course have been used in certain situations, but the article seems to suggest it was the standard method of a Roman legionary.
I understood it to be held with the blade vertically, so that a failed thrust could be followed by a downward chop. It would also fit more easily between a formation's shields. I've never heard this horizontal bit before and suggest it be changed unless a cite is forthcoming. --Michael Z. Williamson
I thought that the Gladius was derived from improvements on the greek short leaf patter sword of whose name I am temporarily ignorant. The article suggests that the Gladius was derived from the CeltIberian long sword. I believe that this is factually incorrect because the CeltIberian long sword was the basis for the spatha not the gladius. The spatha being of course the longer, slashing weapon carried by the later legions of the empire on campaigns such as Emperor Valens and his tragedy at Adrianople in the early fifth century. I am simply wondering as to the historical accuracy of stating that the Gladius was derived from the CeltIberian long sword. -Gaius
Perphaps the gladius was derived from the short sword carried by the hoplites as a side arm. Unfourtunately the name currently escapes me but the general dimensions are very similar. Furthermore, as the greeks colonized both Iberia and Italy, I believe that it makes sense that the gladius was patterned of the early grecian sword pattern. I suggest the romans adopted the pattern from the Celtiberians, who had aquired the pattern from the greek colonies in cletic territory(Marsailles). The Celts were certainly among the best metalurgists of thier age, and it would by no means a stretch to accept that the Celts could have taken the Greek pattern and transmogrified it into the longsword like blade of the 3rd and 4th century BC. Jim mentioned that the pattern was of course associated with the punic wars. Naturally this makes sense because the Carthaginians were actively colonizing Celtiberia at the breaking out of hostilities. To support this I cite Robert B. Asprey's work War in the Shadows wherein he mentions that Hannibal Barca's father died in a guerilla (pardon the pun) raid on a carthaginian collum. This is all by way of supporting my theory that the gladius was patterned (indirectly) from the earlier (Pelopenisian War era) pattern. -Gaius
Hi. I want do a contribution with these two links, can you read spanish? (Sorry, my english is very poor)
http://celtiberia.net/articulo.asp?id=1021&cadena=gladius http://celtiberia.net/articulo.asp?id=1503&cadena=gladius
Summary and conclusion: Many advances happen since 1980, now we have archeological pieces of "gladius hispaniense" in celtiberic context and GH in roman context; the origin of the gladius is not the Falcata and not the celtics sword. Weaponry of La Téne I has been discovered in Cataluña with dates of later half of the IV century BC; then, the same weapons appear in archeological places of the "Meseta". The inhabitants took that weapons and progressively transformed it following their own tradition. At the half of the III century BC we have the final model of Gladius Hispaniensis, exactly equals to the roman gladius of the early II century.
That is: the gladius hispaniensis is a sword developed by the celtiberians between IV-III centuries BC from a type of La Téne I's sword.
-Fco
Indeed, the Carthaginians adopted the gladius hispaniensis after they settled there, using it against the Romans. When Scipio Africanus caught a number of Spanish swordsmiths he forced them to teach Roman swordsmiths how to make them. Unlike other swords up to that period the Spanish had unknowingly been somehow removing the useless lesser grade iron before forging the sword. One reference implies that they buried iron in the ground and left it. After some time (a couple of weeks maybe) they returned knowing that what was left was of high quality, one source stating it could be placed on top of the head and pulled down either side to touch the shoulders. When released it would spring back to shape, and do so after repeatedly testing in that way. Essentially, it seems to have broken new ground in sword technology, and they were much sought after by Roman soldiers.
I have no idea where the definitive statement in the article stating the gladius was hardened with charcoal comes from?! Sounds like a very suspicious factoid to me, and should be reworded drastically to make it clear that it is only a possibility. The spatha was also most certainly the descendant of the gladius, as the original gladius hispaniensis was almost twice as long as 2nd C Pompeii pattern examples, kept long for and adapted for cavalry use. Almost every expert will also tell you the Viking broadsword is a descendant of the spatha.
The article needs a serious rewrite, and also omits the later types all came from the original Hispaniensis.
-Jim.
I can pretty much guarantee the flex test described is mythical. Not only will a piece of steel that shape not bend readily in the hands, that kind of arc would almost certainly deform a gladius totally. They had nothing approaching spring steel.
Carburizing was done with charcoal, not coal, though the standard method was to pack the steel and charcoal dust into a ceramic pipe of clay and seal it before heating. Using the face of the anvil would just cause surface inclusions of slag without any real carbon migration. --Michael Z. Williamson
Well folks I read through this part of the Wikipedian commentary and was totally struck by the lack of any specific source. I for one would like to see some here. We read a lot on the Internet about what Scipio did after the battle of Zama and it seems to be based on the conjectures of some 19th century writers but no one anywhere that I can find can cite an ancient author. Polybius says that they used the Spanish sword against the Carthaginians, but if they did that, how could they have adopted it after the 2nd Punic War, and if they won the war without it (neglecting Polybius) why on earth would they adopt it? And yet the sites all blithely describe how Scipio had these great swords made and distributed to the Roman army after the battle. Not in anything documentary I can find. Only in the words of enthusiasts. Anyone got anything? And, for the manufacture, I found a study refuting the notion that the swords were not steel or that the iron age knew no steel. But the method of carburization escapes me at the moment. "I think this" and "no, I think that" isn't going to do it here. What evidence is there of the method of carburization? Anyone got the source? Thanks. Dave 00:09, 17 December 2006 (UTC) The swords made of wooden and rocked —Preceding unsigned comment added by 167.86.132.105 ( talk) 19:28, 10 May 2011 (UTC)
How much did gladii weigh? This should be added. -- Simetrical 19:05, 9 Jan 2005 (UTC)
I dunno, weight is a difficult issue because they are unlikely to be standardized even in the days for the Empire--it had been theorized that the different styles of differing lenghts and weights might have been produced at the same time at different parts of the imperium.
Given any alloy of iron and the proper dimensions, the finished weight should be close, and that's about 2 pounds/1 kilo. The much longer Viking blades didn't usually top 3 pounds. It seems far too heavy for most gladii, though a thick section Mainz might come close. --Michael Z. Williamson
Yeah, based on techniques used, alloys used etc most ppl in the know, bladesmiths etc, seem to agree that most replicas are way too heavy. Compare to late bronze swords cast in bronze of the same blade design and length as a later gladius(i.e. 50cm blade or shorther!!!), see http://www.bronze-age-craft.com/swords_for_sale.htm. Look at his ewart park sword, the 68cm finished version sword. It weighs 700g, his castings has been deemed as very realistic. Bronze is heavier than iron or steel, but the sword lacks a hilt. At least that gives you an estimate of what is realistic. Albions roman swords are very realistic, all under 1 kg. In fact their mainz(heaviest late gladius) is only 760g with hilt and everything, see http://www.albion-swords.com/swords/albion/nextgen/sword-roman-mainz.htm. The fulham and pompeii are both under 700g. Replicas over 1 kg are not realistic imo. The first link mentions bronze sword over 1kg as bad casts or "lemons" :) Heavy swords replicas tend to be cheap...
The length and weights of the gladii are still wrong I'd say. Hispaniensis was a lot longer than mainz, fulham and pompeii. The long later pompeii was really a hybrid between a spatha, the cavalry sword, and the gladius. Here'sa link to a nice replica of an actual museuem gladius hispaniensis. http://www.myarmoury.com/nateb_swor_var_gladh.html - this one is slightly over 1kg, but it is a very long and broad hispaniensis(i.e. early gladius), this one looks on the virge of being a spatha lengthwise.
I also find it ironic that ppl seem to assume the greeks developed the leaf-shaped blade, seems to me that the greeks got it from the "celts".. Maybe the greeks got it during the "sea peoples"(yeah I know they get "blamed" for everything...) invasion of the area ca 1200BC, the urnfield culture before halstatt had already developed leaf-shaped blades when the mycenaeans, the pre-greeks, were using the thrusting sword. Then again maybe I shouldnt be calling them celts, seeing that that name is associated with la tene that came after halstatt. So the pre-pre celts seem to have developed the blade that the greeks called xiphos. Look at the urnfield sword Nigel has made and compare to a xiphos....or a mainz gladius... Urnfield culture lasted approx 1300BC - 800BC... Go see that sword in british museum. http://www.bronze-age-craft.com/swords_for_sale.htm- here's the replica again
Sorry about the ranting :)
Jesper D(jeppepeppepop) late at night 16 jan 2009 —Preceding unsigned comment added by Jeppepeppepop ( talk • contribs) 03:01, 16 January 2009 (UTC)
I've added standard infoboxes and created captions for each of the gladius swordtypes. Please expand the with detailed text under each caption to get all info on the roman swords.
We also should consider having the spatha within the gladius sword series, as it is a development of those swords only longer and adapted for cavalry. Searching "spatha" must then enter "gladius".
How did the chart come to list the gladius as an "Arming sword"? That's a medieval designation for certain single handed swords.~~Michael Z. Williamson
The gladius was not a slashing sword. That was not its major use. You could of course slash with it, as when some praetorian slashed off Cicero's head when he stuck it out. That is one of the reasons for the armor. The combatants were heavily armored. You could slash all you like and only end up with a broken sword. Does the article not say soft iron? No, you formed a shield wall and then you thrust the sword out into chinks in the other fellow's armor. The purpose of the pila was to disorder the enemy ranks so you could get an opening.
Livy is cited in the article. The Romans fought a leisurely battle, says Livy. They pushed in at their pace. It became a shoving match, with the points of the swords coming out from the shields. When faced with the Greek rows of spearpoints the Romans could not hack off the points so they did not fare well. The Greek spear was long, thick and heavy with big points for shoving. Now, that one place in Livy where the wounds are described does NOT state how they were acquired. The worst were the abdominal. They could not have got there by slashing. Then there were the dismembered heads. However they were certainly not dismembered in battle. You couldn't even get at the head and as soon as you raised an arm to slash, whoops, someone pushed a stupid spear into your stupid underarm right into your stupid lungs. I once knew someone personally who in fencing with the epee (I used to fence myself but it wasn't me) lifted his arm and had one of those practice points run into his lungs through a little tiny tear in the jacket. He was in the hospital for a while.
Now if you are on the deck of a ship or riding a charger into a disordered mob then you might cut people down with the sabre, or if you happen to have a Japanese sword of the finest steel then you might cut through the barrel of a machine gun with one blow, as we hear was done in the Russo-Japanese war. Other than that forget it. But, there is another issue here. We don't make up ancient history as we go along. Both primary and secondary sources state over and over that the Romans adopted the Spanish sword for its utility in stabbing. It is not up to you to decide, well, gee, it was just as good for slashing. In ranks you could not and did not slash for the reason I mentioned as well as the danger of taking off your buddy's head beside you. The shield was held up close and overlapped on the people next to you. There was no room at all to slash. So, I'm going to tone down or take out that slashing stuff. If you find a source of the slashing we can put a note or a sentence back in. Otherwise let us take the sources at their word.
The gladius was not a slashing sword. See under pugio for one of the strongest sources, Vegetius. Dave 05:23, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
Botteville has added the following to the opening paragraph: Gladius' was originally a short sword, ... The word soon became the general word for "sword" among the Romans, replacing ensis and various Greek names for swords. (Footnote: See Smith's article on gladius in Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, page 577, which is online at ancientlibrary.com.) It even came to refer to the dagger, pugio. I don't believe Smith is actually saying what you claim. First of all, he lists ensis as a poetic term ("by the Latin poets called ensis"), not as the original generic term (and certainly, by the time of Quintilian they could be considered absolute synonyms--10.1.11).
Second of all, when he says "Gladius was sometimes used in a wide sense, so as to include Pugio (A. Gell. IX.13)" I believe what he is getting at is not the gladius (as used in English) vs. pugio (as used in English), but sword vs. dagger. I.e. he's not saying that gladius originally meant one type of sword, and came to be used for others, he's saying that gladius originally meant "a bladed weapon of a certain length" and ended up meaning "any bladed weapon." I'm not sure where he sees a pugio in that Aulus Gellius passage, but Gellius lived in the second century... not that late. If you want earlier examples, Curtius, who lived in the first century, said "Copidas vocabant gladios leviter curvatos, falcibus similes "They called their lightly curved, sickle-like swords (gladios) ' copides'" (surely this cannot mean gladii in the English sense of the term).
My dear Justinus, how do you do? There are two categories of issue here, first the introduction the way you have it, which actually is not very accurate in English, and second is your comments on what I said previously. In the spirit of good fellowship I will address the first first. I am sure once you see what I mean you will agree and we will be of one mind about this. "Gladius is the name now given to a type of Roman sword." You can't say that. The implication is that the name was not then given to it, which is completey false. This type of sword always had that name as long as the Romans named it. We use the name now because the Romans used it then. Your statement implies we moderns assigned this name to a weapon the Romans did not call that. You can see that, I'm sure. So, I'm giving it a slight fix.
"In Latin gladius is a general term, and does not necessarily refer to this sword specifically." I'm sorry but this is totally wrong. Gladius primarily and originally meant this weapon, but you might lump other weapons into this type. Here again this is a matter of implication. You imply that gladius always or primarily had a general connotation and that is not true. Time is clearly important. As long as there were legionaries who used this weapon that is primarily what the term meant. So if you do not mind I will alter the wording to get that point across. Now for your other points. Dave 00:36, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
I see this is prime Wiki time and you are all at work so fast I cannot keep up with you. Here is more of what I was going to say. That is true, Smith tags the use of ensis as poetic, but you place too much credibility in that. He does not say there were not other uses or that it was made up by the poets. While you were answering my previous I was busy looking it up in Persus. Most of the references are in the poets: Ovid, Vergil, Lucan, Propertius, Horace, Lucretius. But there is a significant use in prose: Livy, Cato, Cicero, Pliny the Elder, the Vulgate and Bede. But now, when we try to find what the previous word for sword was we find a situation I was trying to point out before: ensis and the Latinized Greek words are about it. Here is a good ref: ref from the place where you wake up the echoes shouting her name. You can see we don't have much of a choice. Now, I suggest that Smith notwithstanding the word was not originally poetic but because of its archaic nature after the gladius came along became so. The use in prose supports that view. I don't see anyone else having much of a problem with ensis as sword. Ferrum is poetic too but it gets used by the military men. Maybe soldiers are poets. I think that I shall never see a poem as lovely as a tree. Perhaps indeed I was trying to strain more out of Smith than he had in him. But there ought to be a note about the words for sword and how gladius came to predominate. I think we got enough for that. More later if I can just keep up with you. PS Mr. Stanham, you could use a user page here. PPS Oh by the way xiphos and spatha are the two main Greek terms I was talking about. There's also a machaera and other Greek weapons. Didn't the Romans arm themselves without having to buy from the Greeks? Dave 01:53, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
What no conflicts? Installement 3. I suppose "early" and "late" are relative. 2nd century AD - OK, 5 centuries after 3rd BC. I think of gladius as a term coming from the growth of the republic but once it was grown, say the empire, then it acquired the general use you have supported with sources. Lat's see if we can't get all this together without implying the wrong meanings. Dave 02:06, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
Okay, I have tried to take everything into account for a revised introduction. It's not particularly good, but I think it is clearer than what was there before. I would like to incorporate more of what you are saying, Dave. I think alternate Latin words for sword (borrowed or not), such as Ensis, Xiphos, Spatha and Ferrum, should perhaps be presented and referenced here or perhaps in an expanded Etymology section. Of course, I agree that consensus is preferable to a revision war, I am open to suggestions. Dave, I know I should probably have a User Page! I will have to get round to doing something about that.-- M.J.Stanham 02:38, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
We seem to just be getting started here on this article. Whew, tough going. Eventually it will end up being a decent sourced article. But, we aren't getting there too fast. I might duck out for a while. Oh by the way I had the same thoughts about the etymology section. As for your user page, unless you go off in a huff you appear to have Wikipeditis like the rest of us, so you might as well put one in. Join the hordes. Dave 03:20, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
I'm glad that you both seem to approve of the revised introduction. Thanks to Dave for inserting the citation requests and uncapitalising my nouns (Internet habit for discussing arms and armour, I'm afraid.) and thanks to Iustinus for answering the requests. Dave, I think I moved your references to the etymology section, but I might be mistaken.
With regard to the minor edits that include Pugio and Plumbata as definite arms carried by the Roman Soldier, I think we must be careful. The discussion is better left to the Roman Legionary article, but the up and down of it is that Pugio, and Plumbata particularly, may not have been carried by every soldier, even as part of his full panapoly. My suggestion, at this point, would be to say 'probably a Pugio' and 'perhaps a number of Plumbata'. This allows the question to remain open, whilst still implying an answer. I would like to see some more information in the Etymology section and some revisions made to the general, scabbard and typology discussion. I would also like to see the captions largely removed, as the information required is not best set out in this manner, in my opinion. I would like to hear opinions before altering anyting, however. It might be nice to have a picture for each type. I wonder if Legio XX would be aminiable to letting us use some of their pictures / drawings?
Yes, indeed. My personal opinion is that it would be very unlikely that any Ancient or Medieval soldier would choose to go into combat without a dagger of some sort. Unfortunately, it is one thing to think that and quite another to prove it. Polybius makes no mention of a pugio when he descibes the Roman soldier of his time, though he goes into detail about their arms and armour; this could be an oversight on his part or it might reflect the reality of the times (as a sidenote he indicates that the Velites carry swords, but this comment precedes and is seperate from his comments on the spanish sword borne by the Hastati, Principes and Triarii. He may even mean dagger). Josephus says that the footmen wore short swords on their right and long swords on their left (an interesting reversal of the normal configuration; he may be observing Centurions or Auxilia or may mean those who wore short blades did so on the right and those who wore long blades did so on the left), but as to the horsemen only swords on their right. Trajan's Column depicts only short swords worn on the right for all Roman soldiers, both foot and horse, as do a number of other sculptures and reliefs; artistic license, perhaps, it is a noticable analogue that the Bayeux Tapestry also features no daggers. Grave reliefs, though, tend to show both pugio and gladius, though obviously a soldier wealthy enough to have such an image made might not be 'typical' or representative. Vegetius tells us that each soldier wore a shorter and longer blade. Over a period of six hundred years it is difficult, and perhaps dangerous, to generalise, but, in my opinion, the explanation that best fits the evidence is that daggers were probably worn by any who could afford them (which might be the majority). As for plumbata, I cannot think of any source off hand that talks of these except for Vegetius. However, I think there are occasional references and it seems like a reasonable sort of item for a soldier to carry who expects protracted ranged engagement. Hard to say for sure how widespread. There is less evidence for general issue than the pugio, so I usually err on the side of caution over it.-- M.J.Stanham 15:12, 10 December 2006 (UTC)
Perhaps after this we might address the spatha article? -- M.J.Stanham 14:15, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
Yeah, ineptitude on my part I am afraid. A good point as to whether it is a challenge or nuisance. I think too much of a challenge for a Wikipedia Article...-- M.J.Stanham 15:12, 10 December 2006 (UTC)
Heh. Quite true, of course, but not quite my meaning. The kind of specific and definitive answers that the caption boxes appear to require seem to me an impossible challenge even for funded academic research. -- M.J.Stanham 12:25, 11 December 2006 (UTC)
Here's hoping! Good work. I'm glad to be rid of those.-- M.J.Stanham 16:10, 13 December 2006 (UTC)
We currently have the Celtic root for sword listed as *kladyos, which agrees with the Online Etymological Dictionary citation we have listed. The online Pokorny citation gives *kladi¸os -- I don't know what the ¸ is meant to represent, perhaps I should check this in a print copy. The OED s.v. glaive lists the Celtic root as *cladivo-. Now, this last form make a lot more sense to me: the v presumably represents [w], which could easily be dropped in a borrowing, and yet still account plausibly for the [v] (or similar sound) seen in Welsh and Goidelic. Of course the article as written explains the [v] as a Brythionic innovation that was borrowed into Old Irish. I don't have anywhere near the knowledge of Celtic etymology to figure this out, but I thought I should mention it. -- Iustinus 04:25, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
"Contrary to common belief, the gladius was not used by gladiators, who used a version with a shorter blade (30 cm – 35 cm/12 in. – 14 in. long)."
Hey Dave. You are really making some great improvements to this article. I wish I had more time to help you out. Have you considered asking some questions over on RomanArmyTalk? It is really a very good forum that gets a fair amount of academic traffic. I'm not sure where the Gladiator thing comes from, though I have a vague feeling it might be to do with artistic representations. Not the best evidence. Still, if I can find anything, I will let you know. [Edit] Looks like it's nonesense. Gladiators used a wide range of weaponry, apparently, including the Gladius. -- M.J.Stanham 17:21, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
The term "Gladius" is a latin word and doesn't come from the Celtic term. The second is considered a distortion. Historically speaking the Latin word is mentioned and appears in ancient writings and before the Celtic term (eg. read Andronicus writings, III cent. BCE). Theories are different according to the different etymologists. Gladius has a latin prefix, "Cla", or "Kla", or "Cal", or "Kal" meaning to beat, to break, the same "klao" that you could find in Magna-Graecia (Southern Italy and Sicily) which is connected to the word "Cla-va" (literally club) or even to "Cla-des", meaning slaughter. It was later adopted by the Slavs, becoming "Kla-ti", and by the Celts of Italy, becoming "Cla-ideb". Almost probably, the Italian Celts located in North-West were the first to distorce it, perhaps when they were assimilated into the Roman army. Dictionaries: Garzanti and Zanichelli; Testimonianza della cultura Latina, B.Riposati, Società alighieri, 1988; Classici Latini, AAVV, Le Monnier, 1983. Jack 23:30 11 February 2007 (UTC)
I have one already, extensive but not complete. Problems: (1) the list itself does not meet wikipedia source standards (no regular publication, etc.) though the individual entries can (they cite their own sources). (2) as new entries are added, any citation of the list as a whole would fall apart. Jacob Haller 21:04, 24 March 2007 (UTC)
Can we see a source for the claim that these coats of arms are depicting gladii? The Polish one in particular looks more like a pair of spatha or perhaps transitional period arming swords, and I question why coats of arms developed in Suisse, Belarus and Poland at a later period would depict ancient Roman swords when gladii were not widely used there. It's a bit of a stretch. 71.204.204.249 13:36, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
I have discovered large scale and improper changing of the AD/BC time references in articles. This article is a case in point: The original dating methodology used by various editors was the AD/BC format. Later editors came in and changed this format to the "politically correct" CE/BCE format. This change from AD/BC to CE/BCE is improper for a number of reasons: 1) Wiki policy expressly prohibits these types of changes without adequate jusitification; and, 2) The AD/BC format is more culturally appropriate since the article deals with Roman historical concepts and the AD/BC format is a latin derivative. Should this change back to AD/BC be controversial, I invite a conversation on the topic. Jpetersen46321 18:33, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
I prefer the CE/BCE system, too, on the same grounds: religious neutrality. Spartan198 ( talk) 11:09, 24 May 2008 (UTC) Spartan198
This is not a joke. The article should mention that Gladius was Roman slang for schlong. Haha, that's funny. But seriously, yeah. 76.191.219.24 ( talk) 07:21, 17 July 2008 (UTC)
The person above me is more or less correct. The word
vagina means sheath or scabbard. Gladius was not slang, but the proper word for penis. Its the sword that goes in the sheath. The gladius that goes into the vagina. IIRC it was at the beginning of the dark ages when gladius was changed to penis (little tail) to help repress sexuality.
24.155.22.84 (
talk) 23:41, 2 December 2009 (UTC)
There is no mention of how thick the blade was.
Also, while the article mentions a rhomboidal (diamond shaped) or channeled cross section, there is no source for this claim and pics on the web show ancient gladii that might have been flat. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 87.165.49.181 ( talk) 22:37, 5 May 2011 (UTC)
The article states that the high carbon steel was used at the core and the outer steel was low carbon. That seems the reverse of what would be needed for a sword. Longinus876 ( talk) 15:18, 9 March 2019 (UTC)
As I pointed years ago in this thread, recent archeological findings favour the Celtiberian origen of the sword. The findings of early 2th century BC Roman gladius clearly shows that they are copies of Celtiberian swords, instead of Gallic or other types. Celtiberians developed the weapon from La Téne I models, adaptating the sword to older Celtiberian techniques and types around the 4-3th centuries BC. Here is a proffesional account of the subject http://www.ffil.uam.es/equus/warmas/online/Quesada%20gladius%20ROMEC%20rd.pdf
-- Bentaguayre ( talk) 19:01, 9 December 2013 (UTC)
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The links that were put on the actual article are correct, but the ones listed here are inaccurate (specifically for the PDFs). Probably a bug. -- Pokechu22 ( talk) 22:30, 4 September 2015 (UTC)
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I removed the number 1 source for the Gladius Hispaniensis because it opened to a "file not found" screen, and renamed the other two as no. 1 & 2 respectively. Spartan198 ( talk) 11:13, 24 May 2008 (UTC) Spartan198
The picture seen on the right used to be on this page. However, comparing it with the pictures in the external links, the proportions are totally wrong - this is a knife, not a sword. It is also inscribed with what appears to be Tengwar. I think it's better to have no picture than a misleading one, but in case someone disagrees I'm preserving it here. -- Andrew 21:57, Apr 10, 2005 (UTC)
Tengwar - IBYP!? The inscription is "700 Jahre eidgenossenschaft". At the base of the blade, there is also the emblem of the Swiss Confederation (i.e. Eidgenossenschaft). "Jahre" means "years", so this was obviously crafted for the 700th anniversary of the SC in 1991. The one thing we can agree on is that this is, of course, not a Gladius. Aragorn2 12:42, 9 January 2006 (UTC)
Indeed it is a Swiss dagger. Initially it was designed by Hans Holbien and it was popular with the Swiss Pikemen. Later it was copied by the Third Reich.
The blade was held flat, relative to the ground, so as to slip through ribs or ribbed armor
I have serious doubts about this claim. Stabbing was the main tactic of Roman legionaries, but sources and depictions show that gladii were also used for slashing which would have been awkward with a blade held horizontally. Furthermore the Romans favourite target was the stomach were there are no ribs to worry about; as for vertically segmented armour, that was mostly carried by themselves and there was relatively little legionary vs legionary combat in the imperial period. This tactic could of course have been used in certain situations, but the article seems to suggest it was the standard method of a Roman legionary.
I understood it to be held with the blade vertically, so that a failed thrust could be followed by a downward chop. It would also fit more easily between a formation's shields. I've never heard this horizontal bit before and suggest it be changed unless a cite is forthcoming. --Michael Z. Williamson
I thought that the Gladius was derived from improvements on the greek short leaf patter sword of whose name I am temporarily ignorant. The article suggests that the Gladius was derived from the CeltIberian long sword. I believe that this is factually incorrect because the CeltIberian long sword was the basis for the spatha not the gladius. The spatha being of course the longer, slashing weapon carried by the later legions of the empire on campaigns such as Emperor Valens and his tragedy at Adrianople in the early fifth century. I am simply wondering as to the historical accuracy of stating that the Gladius was derived from the CeltIberian long sword. -Gaius
Perphaps the gladius was derived from the short sword carried by the hoplites as a side arm. Unfourtunately the name currently escapes me but the general dimensions are very similar. Furthermore, as the greeks colonized both Iberia and Italy, I believe that it makes sense that the gladius was patterned of the early grecian sword pattern. I suggest the romans adopted the pattern from the Celtiberians, who had aquired the pattern from the greek colonies in cletic territory(Marsailles). The Celts were certainly among the best metalurgists of thier age, and it would by no means a stretch to accept that the Celts could have taken the Greek pattern and transmogrified it into the longsword like blade of the 3rd and 4th century BC. Jim mentioned that the pattern was of course associated with the punic wars. Naturally this makes sense because the Carthaginians were actively colonizing Celtiberia at the breaking out of hostilities. To support this I cite Robert B. Asprey's work War in the Shadows wherein he mentions that Hannibal Barca's father died in a guerilla (pardon the pun) raid on a carthaginian collum. This is all by way of supporting my theory that the gladius was patterned (indirectly) from the earlier (Pelopenisian War era) pattern. -Gaius
Hi. I want do a contribution with these two links, can you read spanish? (Sorry, my english is very poor)
http://celtiberia.net/articulo.asp?id=1021&cadena=gladius http://celtiberia.net/articulo.asp?id=1503&cadena=gladius
Summary and conclusion: Many advances happen since 1980, now we have archeological pieces of "gladius hispaniense" in celtiberic context and GH in roman context; the origin of the gladius is not the Falcata and not the celtics sword. Weaponry of La Téne I has been discovered in Cataluña with dates of later half of the IV century BC; then, the same weapons appear in archeological places of the "Meseta". The inhabitants took that weapons and progressively transformed it following their own tradition. At the half of the III century BC we have the final model of Gladius Hispaniensis, exactly equals to the roman gladius of the early II century.
That is: the gladius hispaniensis is a sword developed by the celtiberians between IV-III centuries BC from a type of La Téne I's sword.
-Fco
Indeed, the Carthaginians adopted the gladius hispaniensis after they settled there, using it against the Romans. When Scipio Africanus caught a number of Spanish swordsmiths he forced them to teach Roman swordsmiths how to make them. Unlike other swords up to that period the Spanish had unknowingly been somehow removing the useless lesser grade iron before forging the sword. One reference implies that they buried iron in the ground and left it. After some time (a couple of weeks maybe) they returned knowing that what was left was of high quality, one source stating it could be placed on top of the head and pulled down either side to touch the shoulders. When released it would spring back to shape, and do so after repeatedly testing in that way. Essentially, it seems to have broken new ground in sword technology, and they were much sought after by Roman soldiers.
I have no idea where the definitive statement in the article stating the gladius was hardened with charcoal comes from?! Sounds like a very suspicious factoid to me, and should be reworded drastically to make it clear that it is only a possibility. The spatha was also most certainly the descendant of the gladius, as the original gladius hispaniensis was almost twice as long as 2nd C Pompeii pattern examples, kept long for and adapted for cavalry use. Almost every expert will also tell you the Viking broadsword is a descendant of the spatha.
The article needs a serious rewrite, and also omits the later types all came from the original Hispaniensis.
-Jim.
I can pretty much guarantee the flex test described is mythical. Not only will a piece of steel that shape not bend readily in the hands, that kind of arc would almost certainly deform a gladius totally. They had nothing approaching spring steel.
Carburizing was done with charcoal, not coal, though the standard method was to pack the steel and charcoal dust into a ceramic pipe of clay and seal it before heating. Using the face of the anvil would just cause surface inclusions of slag without any real carbon migration. --Michael Z. Williamson
Well folks I read through this part of the Wikipedian commentary and was totally struck by the lack of any specific source. I for one would like to see some here. We read a lot on the Internet about what Scipio did after the battle of Zama and it seems to be based on the conjectures of some 19th century writers but no one anywhere that I can find can cite an ancient author. Polybius says that they used the Spanish sword against the Carthaginians, but if they did that, how could they have adopted it after the 2nd Punic War, and if they won the war without it (neglecting Polybius) why on earth would they adopt it? And yet the sites all blithely describe how Scipio had these great swords made and distributed to the Roman army after the battle. Not in anything documentary I can find. Only in the words of enthusiasts. Anyone got anything? And, for the manufacture, I found a study refuting the notion that the swords were not steel or that the iron age knew no steel. But the method of carburization escapes me at the moment. "I think this" and "no, I think that" isn't going to do it here. What evidence is there of the method of carburization? Anyone got the source? Thanks. Dave 00:09, 17 December 2006 (UTC) The swords made of wooden and rocked —Preceding unsigned comment added by 167.86.132.105 ( talk) 19:28, 10 May 2011 (UTC)
How much did gladii weigh? This should be added. -- Simetrical 19:05, 9 Jan 2005 (UTC)
I dunno, weight is a difficult issue because they are unlikely to be standardized even in the days for the Empire--it had been theorized that the different styles of differing lenghts and weights might have been produced at the same time at different parts of the imperium.
Given any alloy of iron and the proper dimensions, the finished weight should be close, and that's about 2 pounds/1 kilo. The much longer Viking blades didn't usually top 3 pounds. It seems far too heavy for most gladii, though a thick section Mainz might come close. --Michael Z. Williamson
Yeah, based on techniques used, alloys used etc most ppl in the know, bladesmiths etc, seem to agree that most replicas are way too heavy. Compare to late bronze swords cast in bronze of the same blade design and length as a later gladius(i.e. 50cm blade or shorther!!!), see http://www.bronze-age-craft.com/swords_for_sale.htm. Look at his ewart park sword, the 68cm finished version sword. It weighs 700g, his castings has been deemed as very realistic. Bronze is heavier than iron or steel, but the sword lacks a hilt. At least that gives you an estimate of what is realistic. Albions roman swords are very realistic, all under 1 kg. In fact their mainz(heaviest late gladius) is only 760g with hilt and everything, see http://www.albion-swords.com/swords/albion/nextgen/sword-roman-mainz.htm. The fulham and pompeii are both under 700g. Replicas over 1 kg are not realistic imo. The first link mentions bronze sword over 1kg as bad casts or "lemons" :) Heavy swords replicas tend to be cheap...
The length and weights of the gladii are still wrong I'd say. Hispaniensis was a lot longer than mainz, fulham and pompeii. The long later pompeii was really a hybrid between a spatha, the cavalry sword, and the gladius. Here'sa link to a nice replica of an actual museuem gladius hispaniensis. http://www.myarmoury.com/nateb_swor_var_gladh.html - this one is slightly over 1kg, but it is a very long and broad hispaniensis(i.e. early gladius), this one looks on the virge of being a spatha lengthwise.
I also find it ironic that ppl seem to assume the greeks developed the leaf-shaped blade, seems to me that the greeks got it from the "celts".. Maybe the greeks got it during the "sea peoples"(yeah I know they get "blamed" for everything...) invasion of the area ca 1200BC, the urnfield culture before halstatt had already developed leaf-shaped blades when the mycenaeans, the pre-greeks, were using the thrusting sword. Then again maybe I shouldnt be calling them celts, seeing that that name is associated with la tene that came after halstatt. So the pre-pre celts seem to have developed the blade that the greeks called xiphos. Look at the urnfield sword Nigel has made and compare to a xiphos....or a mainz gladius... Urnfield culture lasted approx 1300BC - 800BC... Go see that sword in british museum. http://www.bronze-age-craft.com/swords_for_sale.htm- here's the replica again
Sorry about the ranting :)
Jesper D(jeppepeppepop) late at night 16 jan 2009 —Preceding unsigned comment added by Jeppepeppepop ( talk • contribs) 03:01, 16 January 2009 (UTC)
I've added standard infoboxes and created captions for each of the gladius swordtypes. Please expand the with detailed text under each caption to get all info on the roman swords.
We also should consider having the spatha within the gladius sword series, as it is a development of those swords only longer and adapted for cavalry. Searching "spatha" must then enter "gladius".
How did the chart come to list the gladius as an "Arming sword"? That's a medieval designation for certain single handed swords.~~Michael Z. Williamson
The gladius was not a slashing sword. That was not its major use. You could of course slash with it, as when some praetorian slashed off Cicero's head when he stuck it out. That is one of the reasons for the armor. The combatants were heavily armored. You could slash all you like and only end up with a broken sword. Does the article not say soft iron? No, you formed a shield wall and then you thrust the sword out into chinks in the other fellow's armor. The purpose of the pila was to disorder the enemy ranks so you could get an opening.
Livy is cited in the article. The Romans fought a leisurely battle, says Livy. They pushed in at their pace. It became a shoving match, with the points of the swords coming out from the shields. When faced with the Greek rows of spearpoints the Romans could not hack off the points so they did not fare well. The Greek spear was long, thick and heavy with big points for shoving. Now, that one place in Livy where the wounds are described does NOT state how they were acquired. The worst were the abdominal. They could not have got there by slashing. Then there were the dismembered heads. However they were certainly not dismembered in battle. You couldn't even get at the head and as soon as you raised an arm to slash, whoops, someone pushed a stupid spear into your stupid underarm right into your stupid lungs. I once knew someone personally who in fencing with the epee (I used to fence myself but it wasn't me) lifted his arm and had one of those practice points run into his lungs through a little tiny tear in the jacket. He was in the hospital for a while.
Now if you are on the deck of a ship or riding a charger into a disordered mob then you might cut people down with the sabre, or if you happen to have a Japanese sword of the finest steel then you might cut through the barrel of a machine gun with one blow, as we hear was done in the Russo-Japanese war. Other than that forget it. But, there is another issue here. We don't make up ancient history as we go along. Both primary and secondary sources state over and over that the Romans adopted the Spanish sword for its utility in stabbing. It is not up to you to decide, well, gee, it was just as good for slashing. In ranks you could not and did not slash for the reason I mentioned as well as the danger of taking off your buddy's head beside you. The shield was held up close and overlapped on the people next to you. There was no room at all to slash. So, I'm going to tone down or take out that slashing stuff. If you find a source of the slashing we can put a note or a sentence back in. Otherwise let us take the sources at their word.
The gladius was not a slashing sword. See under pugio for one of the strongest sources, Vegetius. Dave 05:23, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
Botteville has added the following to the opening paragraph: Gladius' was originally a short sword, ... The word soon became the general word for "sword" among the Romans, replacing ensis and various Greek names for swords. (Footnote: See Smith's article on gladius in Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, page 577, which is online at ancientlibrary.com.) It even came to refer to the dagger, pugio. I don't believe Smith is actually saying what you claim. First of all, he lists ensis as a poetic term ("by the Latin poets called ensis"), not as the original generic term (and certainly, by the time of Quintilian they could be considered absolute synonyms--10.1.11).
Second of all, when he says "Gladius was sometimes used in a wide sense, so as to include Pugio (A. Gell. IX.13)" I believe what he is getting at is not the gladius (as used in English) vs. pugio (as used in English), but sword vs. dagger. I.e. he's not saying that gladius originally meant one type of sword, and came to be used for others, he's saying that gladius originally meant "a bladed weapon of a certain length" and ended up meaning "any bladed weapon." I'm not sure where he sees a pugio in that Aulus Gellius passage, but Gellius lived in the second century... not that late. If you want earlier examples, Curtius, who lived in the first century, said "Copidas vocabant gladios leviter curvatos, falcibus similes "They called their lightly curved, sickle-like swords (gladios) ' copides'" (surely this cannot mean gladii in the English sense of the term).
My dear Justinus, how do you do? There are two categories of issue here, first the introduction the way you have it, which actually is not very accurate in English, and second is your comments on what I said previously. In the spirit of good fellowship I will address the first first. I am sure once you see what I mean you will agree and we will be of one mind about this. "Gladius is the name now given to a type of Roman sword." You can't say that. The implication is that the name was not then given to it, which is completey false. This type of sword always had that name as long as the Romans named it. We use the name now because the Romans used it then. Your statement implies we moderns assigned this name to a weapon the Romans did not call that. You can see that, I'm sure. So, I'm giving it a slight fix.
"In Latin gladius is a general term, and does not necessarily refer to this sword specifically." I'm sorry but this is totally wrong. Gladius primarily and originally meant this weapon, but you might lump other weapons into this type. Here again this is a matter of implication. You imply that gladius always or primarily had a general connotation and that is not true. Time is clearly important. As long as there were legionaries who used this weapon that is primarily what the term meant. So if you do not mind I will alter the wording to get that point across. Now for your other points. Dave 00:36, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
I see this is prime Wiki time and you are all at work so fast I cannot keep up with you. Here is more of what I was going to say. That is true, Smith tags the use of ensis as poetic, but you place too much credibility in that. He does not say there were not other uses or that it was made up by the poets. While you were answering my previous I was busy looking it up in Persus. Most of the references are in the poets: Ovid, Vergil, Lucan, Propertius, Horace, Lucretius. But there is a significant use in prose: Livy, Cato, Cicero, Pliny the Elder, the Vulgate and Bede. But now, when we try to find what the previous word for sword was we find a situation I was trying to point out before: ensis and the Latinized Greek words are about it. Here is a good ref: ref from the place where you wake up the echoes shouting her name. You can see we don't have much of a choice. Now, I suggest that Smith notwithstanding the word was not originally poetic but because of its archaic nature after the gladius came along became so. The use in prose supports that view. I don't see anyone else having much of a problem with ensis as sword. Ferrum is poetic too but it gets used by the military men. Maybe soldiers are poets. I think that I shall never see a poem as lovely as a tree. Perhaps indeed I was trying to strain more out of Smith than he had in him. But there ought to be a note about the words for sword and how gladius came to predominate. I think we got enough for that. More later if I can just keep up with you. PS Mr. Stanham, you could use a user page here. PPS Oh by the way xiphos and spatha are the two main Greek terms I was talking about. There's also a machaera and other Greek weapons. Didn't the Romans arm themselves without having to buy from the Greeks? Dave 01:53, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
What no conflicts? Installement 3. I suppose "early" and "late" are relative. 2nd century AD - OK, 5 centuries after 3rd BC. I think of gladius as a term coming from the growth of the republic but once it was grown, say the empire, then it acquired the general use you have supported with sources. Lat's see if we can't get all this together without implying the wrong meanings. Dave 02:06, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
Okay, I have tried to take everything into account for a revised introduction. It's not particularly good, but I think it is clearer than what was there before. I would like to incorporate more of what you are saying, Dave. I think alternate Latin words for sword (borrowed or not), such as Ensis, Xiphos, Spatha and Ferrum, should perhaps be presented and referenced here or perhaps in an expanded Etymology section. Of course, I agree that consensus is preferable to a revision war, I am open to suggestions. Dave, I know I should probably have a User Page! I will have to get round to doing something about that.-- M.J.Stanham 02:38, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
We seem to just be getting started here on this article. Whew, tough going. Eventually it will end up being a decent sourced article. But, we aren't getting there too fast. I might duck out for a while. Oh by the way I had the same thoughts about the etymology section. As for your user page, unless you go off in a huff you appear to have Wikipeditis like the rest of us, so you might as well put one in. Join the hordes. Dave 03:20, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
I'm glad that you both seem to approve of the revised introduction. Thanks to Dave for inserting the citation requests and uncapitalising my nouns (Internet habit for discussing arms and armour, I'm afraid.) and thanks to Iustinus for answering the requests. Dave, I think I moved your references to the etymology section, but I might be mistaken.
With regard to the minor edits that include Pugio and Plumbata as definite arms carried by the Roman Soldier, I think we must be careful. The discussion is better left to the Roman Legionary article, but the up and down of it is that Pugio, and Plumbata particularly, may not have been carried by every soldier, even as part of his full panapoly. My suggestion, at this point, would be to say 'probably a Pugio' and 'perhaps a number of Plumbata'. This allows the question to remain open, whilst still implying an answer. I would like to see some more information in the Etymology section and some revisions made to the general, scabbard and typology discussion. I would also like to see the captions largely removed, as the information required is not best set out in this manner, in my opinion. I would like to hear opinions before altering anyting, however. It might be nice to have a picture for each type. I wonder if Legio XX would be aminiable to letting us use some of their pictures / drawings?
Yes, indeed. My personal opinion is that it would be very unlikely that any Ancient or Medieval soldier would choose to go into combat without a dagger of some sort. Unfortunately, it is one thing to think that and quite another to prove it. Polybius makes no mention of a pugio when he descibes the Roman soldier of his time, though he goes into detail about their arms and armour; this could be an oversight on his part or it might reflect the reality of the times (as a sidenote he indicates that the Velites carry swords, but this comment precedes and is seperate from his comments on the spanish sword borne by the Hastati, Principes and Triarii. He may even mean dagger). Josephus says that the footmen wore short swords on their right and long swords on their left (an interesting reversal of the normal configuration; he may be observing Centurions or Auxilia or may mean those who wore short blades did so on the right and those who wore long blades did so on the left), but as to the horsemen only swords on their right. Trajan's Column depicts only short swords worn on the right for all Roman soldiers, both foot and horse, as do a number of other sculptures and reliefs; artistic license, perhaps, it is a noticable analogue that the Bayeux Tapestry also features no daggers. Grave reliefs, though, tend to show both pugio and gladius, though obviously a soldier wealthy enough to have such an image made might not be 'typical' or representative. Vegetius tells us that each soldier wore a shorter and longer blade. Over a period of six hundred years it is difficult, and perhaps dangerous, to generalise, but, in my opinion, the explanation that best fits the evidence is that daggers were probably worn by any who could afford them (which might be the majority). As for plumbata, I cannot think of any source off hand that talks of these except for Vegetius. However, I think there are occasional references and it seems like a reasonable sort of item for a soldier to carry who expects protracted ranged engagement. Hard to say for sure how widespread. There is less evidence for general issue than the pugio, so I usually err on the side of caution over it.-- M.J.Stanham 15:12, 10 December 2006 (UTC)
Perhaps after this we might address the spatha article? -- M.J.Stanham 14:15, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
Yeah, ineptitude on my part I am afraid. A good point as to whether it is a challenge or nuisance. I think too much of a challenge for a Wikipedia Article...-- M.J.Stanham 15:12, 10 December 2006 (UTC)
Heh. Quite true, of course, but not quite my meaning. The kind of specific and definitive answers that the caption boxes appear to require seem to me an impossible challenge even for funded academic research. -- M.J.Stanham 12:25, 11 December 2006 (UTC)
Here's hoping! Good work. I'm glad to be rid of those.-- M.J.Stanham 16:10, 13 December 2006 (UTC)
We currently have the Celtic root for sword listed as *kladyos, which agrees with the Online Etymological Dictionary citation we have listed. The online Pokorny citation gives *kladi¸os -- I don't know what the ¸ is meant to represent, perhaps I should check this in a print copy. The OED s.v. glaive lists the Celtic root as *cladivo-. Now, this last form make a lot more sense to me: the v presumably represents [w], which could easily be dropped in a borrowing, and yet still account plausibly for the [v] (or similar sound) seen in Welsh and Goidelic. Of course the article as written explains the [v] as a Brythionic innovation that was borrowed into Old Irish. I don't have anywhere near the knowledge of Celtic etymology to figure this out, but I thought I should mention it. -- Iustinus 04:25, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
"Contrary to common belief, the gladius was not used by gladiators, who used a version with a shorter blade (30 cm – 35 cm/12 in. – 14 in. long)."
Hey Dave. You are really making some great improvements to this article. I wish I had more time to help you out. Have you considered asking some questions over on RomanArmyTalk? It is really a very good forum that gets a fair amount of academic traffic. I'm not sure where the Gladiator thing comes from, though I have a vague feeling it might be to do with artistic representations. Not the best evidence. Still, if I can find anything, I will let you know. [Edit] Looks like it's nonesense. Gladiators used a wide range of weaponry, apparently, including the Gladius. -- M.J.Stanham 17:21, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
The term "Gladius" is a latin word and doesn't come from the Celtic term. The second is considered a distortion. Historically speaking the Latin word is mentioned and appears in ancient writings and before the Celtic term (eg. read Andronicus writings, III cent. BCE). Theories are different according to the different etymologists. Gladius has a latin prefix, "Cla", or "Kla", or "Cal", or "Kal" meaning to beat, to break, the same "klao" that you could find in Magna-Graecia (Southern Italy and Sicily) which is connected to the word "Cla-va" (literally club) or even to "Cla-des", meaning slaughter. It was later adopted by the Slavs, becoming "Kla-ti", and by the Celts of Italy, becoming "Cla-ideb". Almost probably, the Italian Celts located in North-West were the first to distorce it, perhaps when they were assimilated into the Roman army. Dictionaries: Garzanti and Zanichelli; Testimonianza della cultura Latina, B.Riposati, Società alighieri, 1988; Classici Latini, AAVV, Le Monnier, 1983. Jack 23:30 11 February 2007 (UTC)
I have one already, extensive but not complete. Problems: (1) the list itself does not meet wikipedia source standards (no regular publication, etc.) though the individual entries can (they cite their own sources). (2) as new entries are added, any citation of the list as a whole would fall apart. Jacob Haller 21:04, 24 March 2007 (UTC)
Can we see a source for the claim that these coats of arms are depicting gladii? The Polish one in particular looks more like a pair of spatha or perhaps transitional period arming swords, and I question why coats of arms developed in Suisse, Belarus and Poland at a later period would depict ancient Roman swords when gladii were not widely used there. It's a bit of a stretch. 71.204.204.249 13:36, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
I have discovered large scale and improper changing of the AD/BC time references in articles. This article is a case in point: The original dating methodology used by various editors was the AD/BC format. Later editors came in and changed this format to the "politically correct" CE/BCE format. This change from AD/BC to CE/BCE is improper for a number of reasons: 1) Wiki policy expressly prohibits these types of changes without adequate jusitification; and, 2) The AD/BC format is more culturally appropriate since the article deals with Roman historical concepts and the AD/BC format is a latin derivative. Should this change back to AD/BC be controversial, I invite a conversation on the topic. Jpetersen46321 18:33, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
I prefer the CE/BCE system, too, on the same grounds: religious neutrality. Spartan198 ( talk) 11:09, 24 May 2008 (UTC) Spartan198
This is not a joke. The article should mention that Gladius was Roman slang for schlong. Haha, that's funny. But seriously, yeah. 76.191.219.24 ( talk) 07:21, 17 July 2008 (UTC)
The person above me is more or less correct. The word
vagina means sheath or scabbard. Gladius was not slang, but the proper word for penis. Its the sword that goes in the sheath. The gladius that goes into the vagina. IIRC it was at the beginning of the dark ages when gladius was changed to penis (little tail) to help repress sexuality.
24.155.22.84 (
talk) 23:41, 2 December 2009 (UTC)
There is no mention of how thick the blade was.
Also, while the article mentions a rhomboidal (diamond shaped) or channeled cross section, there is no source for this claim and pics on the web show ancient gladii that might have been flat. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 87.165.49.181 ( talk) 22:37, 5 May 2011 (UTC)
The article states that the high carbon steel was used at the core and the outer steel was low carbon. That seems the reverse of what would be needed for a sword. Longinus876 ( talk) 15:18, 9 March 2019 (UTC)
As I pointed years ago in this thread, recent archeological findings favour the Celtiberian origen of the sword. The findings of early 2th century BC Roman gladius clearly shows that they are copies of Celtiberian swords, instead of Gallic or other types. Celtiberians developed the weapon from La Téne I models, adaptating the sword to older Celtiberian techniques and types around the 4-3th centuries BC. Here is a proffesional account of the subject http://www.ffil.uam.es/equus/warmas/online/Quesada%20gladius%20ROMEC%20rd.pdf
-- Bentaguayre ( talk) 19:01, 9 December 2013 (UTC)
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The links that were put on the actual article are correct, but the ones listed here are inaccurate (specifically for the PDFs). Probably a bug. -- Pokechu22 ( talk) 22:30, 4 September 2015 (UTC)
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