The iklwa that you have forged has the incorrect shaft shape. The longer throwing spears had the tapered shaft like the one you produced and this ensured no disruption as it left the hand when throwing. However the short stabbing iklwa had the opposite taper with the shaft getting wider towards the end. Many of them would also have a “knob” at the end. This was required because the stabbing spear would become slippery from all the blood and the thickening shaft or knob at the end would help the warrior hold on to the spear as he pulled it out of the body and became bloody and slippery.
The spear head also looks a bit smaller than differently shaped than the ones I've familiar with. The short fighting ones I've seen tend to have a much larger balade on them, almost the size of a small short sword, not that little thing that was made in the video.
Hi, I stay in South Africa, where the Zulus are also situated. If I remember my history classes correctly, the black tribes of Southern Africa at first used throwing spears in their wars, keeping the fighting at a bit of a distance. The leader of the Zulus, I can't remember his name now, decided to make a stabbing spear, which was more dangerous, but much more accurate. His warriors also took to wearing sandals, which protected their feet in rough and thorny terrain. They approached their enemy in a pincer movement, thus encircling them and killing them off.
SHAKA was the name of fierce warrior leader of various African tribes that created this very affective short spear for face-to face combat, that even made British troops have a very hard time in combat, to say the least.
And I think he forced his guys not to wear sandals. From what I recall he forced them to walk over thorns to harden their feet because bare feet were quieter than shoes.
@6:35, after leveling out your handle with a bubble level, put a keyring on your drill bit. When you drill and the ring stays put, it means your level is true. You can then focus on the horizontal alignment.
I love how the light black color contrasts with the clear shine of the edges, on the blade, and the work on the handle, all great detail. Excellent work as always, thank you very much for sharing, I send you greetings from southern Argentina.
I believe I could hunt with that beautiful spear. I waisted too much of my life playing with stupid computers. This is a skill I'd so enjoy having. Fantastic work yet again. So impressing.
The spear was king of the battlefield for a very long time, not just because of the low cost and ease of training, but also because it gives great reach advantage over other weapon types, can punch through armor, and can also be a ranged weapon.
Awesome spear and I loved that you had the kid in the backpack while wrapping the raw hide. I can relate to dad life getting mixed in to bladesmith life.
I'm glad someone mentioned "dad life" and mixing that with your passion! Well done and great craftsmanship. I will be making one of these with my 17yr old son as my garage gets cooler! 😁
More spears! Boar spear for sure, has the socket, 2 lugs on it to keep the boars from running up the shaft at you which can be decorative as well and a longish spearhead on them. Side note, what were the dimensions of the spear head? Might be worth looking into selling just the spear heads. Avoids the length penalty the mail system and handles are easy enough to make yourself
Hay brother it looks great good job it's always a good day when I get to watch one of your videos u have just a great attitude in what u do ty u and can't wait to see what you come up with next till then stay safe
Pine pitch works amazingly well I'm saying really really well.... a lot better than one might think.... not as good as epoxy but it does pretty close to it... believe it or not... I did not realize how good it worked till I tried it.. and boy howdy it holds up extremely well... the best thing about it is I have a piece of property that r slammed full of Pine trees... so it's there pretty much when ever I need it....
Assegai my vriend . That is what they call the short handled spear. Was brought into use by the great Zulu leader and king Chaka .Come visit us in Africa . 🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦 . The blade would be much braoder . Exelent weapon you made.
Spears and Axes were dominant in ancient wars for 2 simple reasons. 1: Less metal material. (most important). 2: You could use them when not in war... Spears for hunting, axes for forest/woodwork. Nice little spear. =)
I think they are also just pretty good weapons. Like you can smack people pretty frickin hard with spears and longer axes and they are fairly versatile. Especially spears imo.
At one time I had an original Zulu spear I purchased in Houston, Tx. The look of your spear is similar with the main difference is the handle was made of an African wood that had a carmel color. The spear head was attached by a cone shaped shaft on the bottom and was apparently hammered down upon the handle and attached with two small nails. Also, the spear was rounded on the bottom.
A beautiful bit of work! I've forged a dozen or so spears of different types. I read somewhere that many traditional spears were made of Iron rather than steel. Warriors often preferred that the point bend rather than break if it struck something hard, such as a rock. A broken point is useless but a bent point can be straightened in the fork of a tree or hammered straight with a rock. Of course that might not be so of a short spear wielded like a sword.
Thats wicked cool. Ive done martial arts for a long time and spears are underated they can be brutal effective in the right hands. Thats a boar killer right there.
I did research project in high school and have seen paintings of examples of the Ikiwas where the bolster turns more into fins than tapering like you had. I hand carved the spear head from wood and painted it silver when I presented the project going with the fin design.
It was invented by Shaka Zulu, who pioneered the design to be a more aggressive weapon of war than the previously used long throwing spears. It is the assegai that Shaka and his zulu impis used to expand the zulu empire. VERY formidable weapon !
He actually said “ why throw your best weapon at the enemy? What use is it to you then?” He told his impis to wait until the opposition threw theirs at them, then go ahead and march up to them and stab away! All they had left were their knopkieries, a stick with a bulge at the end, no good if your opponent has a spear! Shaka actually made them REMOVE their sandals, as he said it made their feet soft and if they were to come off in battle, that impi would be of no use, so they trained without.
The Zulu spear was the Assegai! The Assegai was a short thrusting spear used in close combat. It was used with great effect by the Zulu Impi, their marching formation. The Assegai formed an integral part with their cowhide shields. An Impi of Zulu was 10 men wide and 1000 warriors long. Their march was a run, and they could do it all day. The British had great respect for the Assegai, the Impi, and the Zulu warriors as a whole. The battle at Roarkes Rift was biblical. 100,000 Zulu faced off against a brigade of British soldiers, modern weapons held the day, but not by much. Shaka, the Zulu king who held his court in Bulawayo, surrendered to the British and was going to be hung by them for the warriors disemboweling dead British soldiers. When the British found out that this was the highest form of military honor a Zulu warrior could bestow on a vanquished enemy, releasing his soul to paradise, the British spared him. A very interesting time in Africa to be sure! Both of the Assegai I own are attached to the shaft by a rolled tang covering approximately 2 feet of the five foot or so shaft. Not to criticize, the Assegai has a large leaf shape at the back, or widest part of the blade, the edges were not angled, but rounded. The rolled tang protected the ironwood haft from chopping attacks by your enemy. The prelude to a Zulu attack was signaled by the thrumming of Assegai against the cowhide shields, all 6 foot of it, and in an instant, 100,000 warriors stopped instantly, the commander coming forward, and with all of his will and lung, would scream “BAYETE ZULU!” You knew you were in for a fight as the attack formation of several Impi was called the “Bulls Head”, one Impi to the right, one Impi to the left, the Bulls Forehead in the middle. The right and left Impi would flank the enemy forcing, or crushing, them on the Bulls Forehead. And always, the ASSEGAI the killing weapon!
The ikwla was the hand to hand spear and the assegai was the throwing javelin. The Zulus tactic was very much like the Roman legionaries. First, they would throw their pila/assegai to encumber the enemy's shields and or break up their formation. Then the Roman/Zulus would close to hand to hand range and the gladius/ikwla would be employed to savage effect. Also your information on the Battle of Rourke's Drift is slightly off. Earlier that day, 20,000 Zulus had pretty much destroyed 1600 British regulars at the Battle of Isandlwana. About 4,000 Zulus had been held in reserve and decided to bloody their spears by attacking 140 British soldiers and 350 Natal irregulars guarding a mission at Rourke's Drift. The 500 Brits and native auxiliaries were warned of the Zulu's impending attack and were able to fortify their position. When the Zulus did finally attack, the Brits held them off for hours until a final Zulu charge was repelled by volley fire. The Zulus retreated with an estimated 800 casualties while the Brits sustained 32 casualties.
Greetings!! to drill exactly horizontally, insert the shank of the drill into the scissors, if they are in one place, then exactly, and if they move forward or backward, then they have left the horizon!!!! Greetings from Russia, the product is super!!!
Put a largish washer on your drill bit. Right in the middle. That will help with your up/down centering as it'll float forward/backward if not level. Left/right is easier to eyeball down the length of the staff.
Very nice work! I've never been able to get that center ridge so crisp and clean!! If I might suggest - for wood preservation, you'll find nothing better and more traditional than good ol' Pine Tar. I buy the Tenda brand from tractor supply because it has a nice consistency already. Thinned with turpentine, it really does a number on the wood. And because it has natural anti-microbial stuff in it, you don't have to worry about boring bugs or mold growing on it. You can make your own, but buying a tin is just a lot easier. In the olden days, it was called Stockholm Tar and was used by the sailors to keep everything waterproof and water tight. Sailors use it still, often mixing it with boiled linseed oil (yuck) to stretch it out since the pine tar can be pricey in the quantities they use. The stuff gives your white woods a very nice coloration and protects it against the elements. I use it on all my tool handles whether they're for the yard or smithy.
You do not need a forge to make a fun little spear, (or knife or sword or what ever fun). an old sawblade works fine if you cut it into shape. I put bolts through mine, but you can fasten the spearhead in many different ways.
Best freehand axial bore alignment method I've found: lay the shaft on a bench, have a long bit started centered, lay a shim between the drill shank and the benchtop so the drill runs level.Looking down on the arrangement from the top for alignment, feed the wood shaft onto the running drill.
Pitch glue was the primitive answer to epoxy. It served the exact same function of "molding" the arrow/spearhead into the slot. Then they'd wrap it in sinew and bake it over over a fire to dry it out. The heat would keep the pitch malleable as the sinew began to contract, and the glue cooled under compression after the heat was removed, making for an extremly stout bond. This was the way it was done for tens of thousands of years before modern science allowed us to engineer better materials. Our neolithic ancestors were every bit as smart as we are, they just didn't have the broader base of cumulative knowledge that modern technology is based on.
Yo he vivido muchos años en Sudáfrica, en Durban en Kwazulu-Natal. Por mi trabajo visito mucho las comunidades zulúes y he visto esa arma. Creo que la hiciste bastante bien aunque las que yo ví eran de hoja un poco más corta y hecha en hierro. Por supuesto ya no se usan las ikwla para la guerra aunque es normal ver que se usan para la caza. La historia del Iklwa es antigua, de la época de Shaka quien organizó a sus impis (escuadrones militares) y los dotó de esta arma apta para la lucha corta y era acompañada de un escudo de cuero llamado isihlangu. Buen video, me gustó.
THE STEEL ONLY DIFFERS. .BECAUSE. IN THE. OLD DAYS..IRON ORE.WAS. USED..THE STEEL WAS.EXTRACTED FROM.RAW.IRON.ORE..AND. THE HARDENING OF THE STEEL WAS VERY UNIQUE. .THIS GAVE THE BLADE UNBELIEVABLE STRENGTH
Very nice reproduction of this spear.(Assegai) Shaka Zulu would have been very chuffed with that. Short powerful weapon... Very hard to deal with something like that close up. Especially in times past... Look forward to your next video....
The word Iklwa is really only the sound of the weapon being withdrawn Rom the wound it has created. They then called this weapon by the sound it makes.
Shaka Zulu also introduced much bigger shield and taught his warriors to get in close lock shields lift the opponents shield so they could then stab the enemy, by the way the Iklwa pronounced Ischlwa was so named as it was believed that was the sound the spier made when withdrawn from a body.
Great! Some accounts say that the spear was named for the sound it made when being, ...uhhh..., "introduced" into an enemy and then quickly withdrawn. Everybody can try to imitate the sound once, but don't obsess! 😵💫
When I worked in Africa, I was told anecdotally that the name was due to the sound it made when thrust into and then pulled out of an enemy...IKH, LWA. I have no idea if they were having me on, but I do posses two beautiful, longer thrusting spears that were made in the village I worked in and used for hunting. Too bad we can't upload pictures here. Later in your video, you discuss mounting methods. Both of my spears are cone mounts on both ends which can be secured with a nail. One end is the business end, the other is a maybe 1/8th" flared digging or chipping tool for harvesting roots etc. The wooden shaft is maybe 3' long.
@@FireCreekForge I'll send you some photos of them. I assure you that they are real tools, they look identical to the ones the locals carried. Keep in mind that the smith lives in a grass hut and works with a clay forge. People that carry rifles there are considered poachers and shot on sight.
On a trip to South Africa, I bought a spear at a Green Market Square in Cape Town. It was an antique, and it had a rolled socket for attachment, as did the spike on the butt of the spear. So, no primitive African spears do not use a tang for attachment, not in my experience.
The Zulu tactics were very much like the Roman Legionary. First, they Romans/Zulus would throw their pilum/assegai to encumber the enemy's shields and or break up their formation. Then the Roman/Zulus would close to hand to hand range and the gladius/ikwla would be employed to savage effect., aiming for the thigh, groin, or thorax.
@@michaelfromparis No, the Ikwla is a hand to hand weapon. The assegai is the throwing spear. You throw the assegai from a distance then advance to melee range and stab and thrust with the Ikwla.
I want to build something similar to this but with a longer blade. And slightly shorter handle. So it could be use as a sword or for thrusting. Very nice build and would definitely do well on a hog hunt. Never thought of using the lower carbon steels for this. I was thinking of going the 5160 route. I’ll have to keep this steel choice in mind.
I would love to have an example of the Zulu short stabbing spear made with a Damascus pattern. I hope the dimensions of this forging were given by the client, because it seems to me that the blade didn't seem long or wide enough. Also, I vaguely remember an original having something of a 'pommel'
Are you not thinking of a metal end to the spear or a flared end? I can't recall ever seeing a metal pommel on any assegai, though I do recall them on Lion Spears from Kenya.
Yep, the correct shaft is one that widens out towards the end or has a “knob” at the end. This is to ensure that the warrior does not loose the weapon as it become slippery from all the blood while he is stabbing. Some just had the shaft widening towards the end - none would ever taper towards the end as the warrior would easy loose grip as it became bloody and slippery.
The assagai was a spear shaped blade about as large as a Roman sword, with a short wooden shaft and was used in the same way as the Romans soldiers behind a large shield. It was not used for threwing. The threwing spear had a small head and a long thin shaft.
A boar spear needs a cross piece, because without one a tusker will run right up the shaft of a spear, impaling itself, to carve a chunk out of you with its teeth.
Iron can not harden, for that you need the introduction of carbon to the iron, which makes it steel. One method is to case harden iron, which makes the outer layer of the iron into steel, leaving a hardened or hardenable "skin".
Nice work for your first I wonder did you do a Rockwell hardness test on your spear head . Another question you used 1045 is that steel used mainly for railway lines ? .
Interesting fact: the Iklwa spear was named after the sound it made when being pulled out of a human body.
Thats kinda like calling a sword "Shing" after the sound it makes leaving its sheathe LOL
Hmmm.... doubts...
@@moehoward01 Well, that is what was stated by a Zulu warrior shortly before the Zulu people were nearly wiped out.
@@moehoward01 The smith mispronounced the name. The correct way to pronounce it is with a particular tongue click, which imitates that sound.
this is my favorite knife making channel
The best part is you carrying your chikd while working love it!!!
The iklwa that you have forged has the incorrect shaft shape. The longer throwing spears had the tapered shaft like the one you produced and this ensured no disruption as it left the hand when throwing. However the short stabbing iklwa had the opposite taper with the shaft getting wider towards the end. Many of them would also have a “knob” at the end. This was required because the stabbing spear would become slippery from all the blood and the thickening shaft or knob at the end would help the warrior hold on to the spear as he pulled it out of the body and became bloody and slippery.
YES...AND EVEN THE STEEL QUALITY WAS FAR MORE STRONGER THEN MILD STEEL
The spear head also looks a bit smaller than differently shaped than the ones I've familiar with. The short fighting ones I've seen tend to have a much larger balade on them, almost the size of a small short sword, not that little thing that was made in the video.
iklwa/assegai blade 16"-18" long , shaft 30"- 34" long and swells toward base
Hi, I stay in South Africa, where the Zulus are also situated. If I remember my history classes correctly, the black tribes of Southern Africa at first used throwing spears in their wars, keeping the fighting at a bit of a distance. The leader of the Zulus, I can't remember his name now, decided to make a stabbing spear, which was more dangerous, but much more accurate. His warriors also took to wearing sandals, which protected their feet in rough and thorny terrain. They approached their enemy in a pincer movement, thus encircling them and killing them off.
SHAKA was the name of fierce warrior leader of various African tribes that created this very affective short spear for face-to face combat, that even made British troops have a very hard time in combat, to say the least.
And I think he forced his guys not to wear sandals. From what I recall he forced them to walk over thorns to harden their feet because bare feet were quieter than shoes.
@@markklinkert3477 Can confirm except it was hot coals, not just thorns.
@@markklinkert3477 you are right. I left school about 52 years ago!
I vaguely recall from QI that Shaka Zulu also did some thing to improve their body armour, boiled leather maybe ?
This is my spear being made! Can't wait to get it the beginning of the month! Looks great! Thanks Elijah!!!
Thanks man!
How much did it run you?
@@vincentdawn9689- $500 bucks!
I love that you're wearing a shirt that says This shirt is illegal in other countries. Love it ☺️
Your video and narration are top notch as is your craftsmanship
Thank you
The Iklwa is my favourite weapon. It's so incredible and practical.
Beautiful !!! Great Craftsmanship as always..
@6:35, after leveling out your handle with a bubble level, put a keyring on your drill bit. When you drill and the ring stays put, it means your level is true. You can then focus on the horizontal alignment.
Thanks for the tip!
good one to try thanks for sharing
Interesting build
Most excellent work, brother 👊
I love how the light black color contrasts with the clear shine of the edges, on the blade, and the work on the handle, all great detail.
Excellent work as always, thank you very much for sharing, I send you greetings from southern Argentina.
I believe I could hunt with that beautiful spear. I waisted too much of my life playing with stupid computers. This is a skill I'd so enjoy having.
Fantastic work yet again. So impressing.
Never to late to start.
That turned out awesome!
Finally!! I love the Zulu spear design! Thank you for making one so much
Nice work! If you ever visit Africa, you will be ready for whatever you find in the wild.
Hell of a rough forge there sir, well done
The Assegai has always fascinated me.
Nice choice!
The spear was king of the battlefield for a very long time, not just because of the low cost and ease of training, but also because it gives great reach advantage over other weapon types, can punch through armor, and can also be a ranged weapon.
As always.. beautiful work
Awesome spear and I loved that you had the kid in the backpack while wrapping the raw hide. I can relate to dad life getting mixed in to bladesmith life.
I'm glad someone mentioned "dad life" and mixing that with your passion! Well done and great craftsmanship. I will be making one of these with my 17yr old son as my garage gets cooler! 😁
What other historical weapon build do you want to see..?
More spears! Boar spear for sure, has the socket, 2 lugs on it to keep the boars from running up the shaft at you which can be decorative as well and a longish spearhead on them. Side note, what were the dimensions of the spear head? Might be worth looking into selling just the spear heads. Avoids the length penalty the mail system and handles are easy enough to make yourself
All of them
Looks really good, now I want to make a spear or spearhead knife. Awesome job
Hay brother it looks great good job it's always a good day when I get to watch one of your videos u have just a great attitude in what u do ty u and can't wait to see what you come up with next till then stay safe
Thanks I appreciate it
Pine pitch works amazingly well I'm saying really really well.... a lot better than one might think.... not as good as epoxy but it does pretty close to it... believe it or not... I did not realize how good it worked till I tried it.. and boy howdy it holds up extremely well... the best thing about it is I have a piece of property that r slammed full of Pine trees... so it's there pretty much when ever I need it....
Assegai my vriend . That is what they call the short handled spear. Was brought into use by the great Zulu leader and king Chaka .Come visit us in Africa . 🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦 . The blade would be much braoder . Exelent weapon you made.
Man, those hydraulic hammers sure make drawing out a billet look easy.
I definitely see more spears in your future, awesome job.
Spears and Axes were dominant in ancient wars for 2 simple reasons.
1: Less metal material. (most important).
2: You could use them when not in war... Spears for hunting, axes for forest/woodwork.
Nice little spear. =)
Not to mention, as primitive weapons get bloody, they become slippery. No one wants to slip onto a blade.
I think they are also just pretty good weapons. Like you can smack people pretty frickin hard with spears and longer axes and they are fairly versatile. Especially spears imo.
I can tell that you are doing your work as to the Lord Jesus 👍 beautiful spear!
Thank you
Is it me or is that a sexy spear?
Cool build!
The word Iklwa was the name given to these short stabbing spears , it was the noise it made when being withdrawn from their opponents body.
beautiful spear
At one time I had an original Zulu spear I purchased in Houston, Tx. The look of your spear is similar with the main difference is the handle was made of an African wood that had a carmel color. The spear head was attached by a cone shaped shaft on the bottom and was apparently hammered down upon the handle and attached with two small nails. Also, the spear was rounded on the bottom.
Very well done!
Nice build.
Thanks!
I just noticed at 9:56th minute “The Lil Champion” at your back 😍
Love a good blade. I enjoy your videos. The learning opportunities are great 👍
A beautiful bit of work! I've forged a dozen or so spears of different types. I read somewhere that many traditional spears were made of Iron rather than steel. Warriors often preferred that the point bend rather than break if it struck something hard, such as a rock. A broken point is useless but a bent point can be straightened in the fork of a tree or hammered straight with a rock. Of course that might not be so of a short spear wielded like a sword.
Thats wicked cool. Ive done martial arts for a long time and spears are underated they can be brutal effective in the right hands. Thats a boar killer right there.
For sure!
Looks great
Amazing craftsmanship, as always!
P.S. Great shirt.
Glad you like it!
I did research project in high school and have seen paintings of examples of the Ikiwas where the bolster turns more into fins than tapering like you had. I hand carved the spear head from wood and painted it silver when I presented the project going with the fin design.
Interesting note: The name is onomatopoetic, it is meant to sound like the sound it makes while removing it, disemboweling an opponent.
It was invented by Shaka Zulu, who pioneered the design to be a more aggressive weapon of war than the previously used long throwing spears. It is the assegai that Shaka and his zulu impis used to expand the zulu empire. VERY formidable weapon !
Interesting, thanks you
He actually said “ why throw your best weapon at the enemy? What use is it to you then?” He told his impis to wait until the opposition threw theirs at them, then go ahead and march up to them and stab away! All they had left were their knopkieries, a stick with a bulge at the end, no good if your opponent has a spear! Shaka actually made them REMOVE their sandals, as he said it made their feet soft and if they were to come off in battle, that impi would be of no use, so they trained without.
The Assegai is the long lightweight javelin, while the Iklwa is the short heavy duty stabbing and slashing spear. Two different weapons.
The Zulu spear was the Assegai! The Assegai was a short thrusting spear used in close combat. It was used with great effect by the Zulu Impi, their marching formation. The Assegai formed an integral part with their cowhide shields. An Impi of Zulu was 10 men wide and 1000 warriors long. Their march was a run, and they could do it all day. The British had great respect for the Assegai, the Impi, and the Zulu warriors as a whole. The battle at Roarkes Rift was biblical. 100,000 Zulu faced off against a brigade of British soldiers, modern weapons held the day, but not by much. Shaka, the Zulu king who held his court in Bulawayo, surrendered to the British and was going to be hung by them for the warriors disemboweling dead British soldiers. When the British found out that this was the highest form of military honor a Zulu warrior could bestow on a vanquished enemy, releasing his soul to paradise, the British spared him. A very interesting time in Africa to be sure! Both of the Assegai I own are attached to the shaft by a rolled tang covering approximately 2 feet of the five foot or so shaft. Not to criticize, the Assegai has a large leaf shape at the back, or widest part of the blade, the edges were not angled, but rounded. The rolled tang protected the ironwood haft from chopping attacks by your enemy. The prelude to a Zulu attack was signaled by the thrumming of Assegai against the cowhide shields, all 6 foot of it, and in an instant, 100,000 warriors stopped instantly, the commander coming forward, and with all of his will and lung, would scream “BAYETE ZULU!” You knew you were in for a fight as the attack formation of several Impi was called the “Bulls Head”, one Impi to the right, one Impi to the left, the Bulls Forehead in the middle. The right and left Impi would flank the enemy forcing, or crushing, them on the Bulls Forehead. And always, the ASSEGAI the killing weapon!
The Iklwa is a shorter variant of the assegai, used in closer range engagement... Interesting history, thanks for watching!
@@FireCreekForge Some interesting information...the name Iklwa comes from the noise it makes going in "ik" and the noise coming back out "lwa".
@@louwrensbekker8948 Geeez! 😬
The ikwla was the hand to hand spear and the assegai was the throwing javelin. The Zulus tactic was very much like the Roman legionaries. First, they would throw their pila/assegai to encumber the enemy's shields and or break up their formation. Then the Roman/Zulus would close to hand to hand range and the gladius/ikwla would be employed to savage effect. Also your information on the Battle of Rourke's Drift is slightly off. Earlier that day, 20,000 Zulus had pretty much destroyed 1600 British regulars at the Battle of Isandlwana. About 4,000 Zulus had been held in reserve and decided to bloody their spears by attacking 140 British soldiers and 350 Natal irregulars guarding a mission at Rourke's Drift. The 500 Brits and native auxiliaries were warned of the Zulu's impending attack and were able to fortify their position. When the Zulus did finally attack, the Brits held them off for hours until a final Zulu charge was repelled by volley fire. The Zulus retreated with an estimated 800 casualties while the Brits sustained 32 casualties.
@@louwrensbekker8948 Can confirm!!!
That looks amazing
Hang an open end wrench from the drill bit and you can check level while you drill. Works really well once you get the hang of it
Fantastic build. Looks incredible and willing to bet it's deadly. 👍👍👍
One thing I learned watching machinist is if you turn the stock keep the drill bit still, it will naturally center itself on the axes of the stock.
Greetings!! to drill exactly horizontally, insert the shank of the drill into the scissors, if they are in one place, then exactly, and if they move forward or backward, then they have left the horizon!!!! Greetings from Russia, the product is super!!!
Put a largish washer on your drill bit. Right in the middle. That will help with your up/down centering as it'll float forward/backward if not level. Left/right is easier to eyeball down the length of the staff.
2 washers connected by a string will make it very obvious if your not strait even better
Thanks for the tip!
@@FireCreekForge I mean, I learned that on youtube as it is :)
Bro when are we going spear hog hunting in south Texas?!?! You know how to reach me…
Very nice work! I've never been able to get that center ridge so crisp and clean!!
If I might suggest - for wood preservation, you'll find nothing better and more traditional than good ol' Pine Tar. I buy the Tenda brand from tractor supply because it has a nice consistency already. Thinned with turpentine, it really does a number on the wood. And because it has natural anti-microbial stuff in it, you don't have to worry about boring bugs or mold growing on it. You can make your own, but buying a tin is just a lot easier. In the olden days, it was called Stockholm Tar and was used by the sailors to keep everything waterproof and water tight. Sailors use it still, often mixing it with boiled linseed oil (yuck) to stretch it out since the pine tar can be pricey in the quantities they use.
The stuff gives your white woods a very nice coloration and protects it against the elements. I use it on all my tool handles whether they're for the yard or smithy.
Thanks!! I'll keep that in mind!
Supposedly the word ikwla is because of the sound the spear makes when it goes into your enemy's belly.
That's so freaking cool! I've always wanted to make one of these since I saw it on FIF. Well done!
You do not need a forge to make a fun little spear, (or knife or sword or what ever fun). an old sawblade works fine if you cut it into shape.
I put bolts through mine, but you can fasten the spearhead in many different ways.
loving ur shirt my man!
Thanks!
Excellent
Best freehand axial bore alignment method I've found: lay the shaft on a bench, have a long bit started centered, lay a shim between the drill shank and the benchtop so the drill runs level.Looking down on the arrangement from the top for alignment, feed the wood shaft onto the running drill.
Pitch glue was the primitive answer to epoxy. It served the exact same function of "molding" the arrow/spearhead into the slot. Then they'd wrap it in sinew and bake it over over a fire to dry it out. The heat would keep the pitch malleable as the sinew began to contract, and the glue cooled under compression after the heat was removed, making for an extremly stout bond. This was the way it was done for tens of thousands of years before modern science allowed us to engineer better materials. Our neolithic ancestors were every bit as smart as we are, they just didn't have the broader base of cumulative knowledge that modern technology is based on.
Amazing 😱👍👍👍
Beautiful work. I think, it's a little short...
Thanks! The Iklwa is a shorter version of the assegai
Yo he vivido muchos años en Sudáfrica, en Durban en Kwazulu-Natal.
Por mi trabajo visito mucho las comunidades zulúes y he visto esa arma. Creo que la hiciste bastante bien aunque las que yo ví eran de hoja un poco más corta y hecha en hierro.
Por supuesto ya no se usan las ikwla para la guerra aunque es normal ver que se usan para la caza.
La historia del Iklwa es antigua, de la época de Shaka quien organizó a sus impis (escuadrones militares) y los dotó de esta arma apta para la lucha corta y era acompañada de un escudo de cuero llamado isihlangu.
Buen video, me gustó.
Nice work. Would love to own one!
THE STEEL ONLY DIFFERS. .BECAUSE. IN THE. OLD DAYS..IRON ORE.WAS. USED..THE STEEL WAS.EXTRACTED FROM.RAW.IRON.ORE..AND.
THE HARDENING OF THE STEEL WAS VERY UNIQUE. .THIS GAVE THE BLADE UNBELIEVABLE STRENGTH
Very nice reproduction of this spear.(Assegai) Shaka Zulu would have been very chuffed with that. Short powerful weapon... Very hard to deal with something like that close up. Especially in times past... Look forward to your next video....
Thank you sir
Pretty Badass!!!
Love the shirt. 👍🇺🇸
The word Iklwa is really only the sound of the weapon being withdrawn Rom the wound it has created. They then called this weapon by the sound it makes.
Shaka Zulu also introduced much bigger shield and taught his warriors to get in close lock shields lift the opponents shield so they could then stab the enemy, by the way the Iklwa pronounced Ischlwa was so named as it was believed that was the sound the spier made when withdrawn from a body.
Great! Some accounts say that the spear was named for the sound it made when being, ...uhhh..., "introduced" into an enemy and then quickly withdrawn. Everybody can try to imitate the sound once, but don't obsess! 😵💫
Nice spear
When I worked in Africa, I was told anecdotally that the name was due to the sound it made when thrust into and then pulled out of an enemy...IKH, LWA. I have no idea if they were having me on, but I do posses two beautiful, longer thrusting spears that were made in the village I worked in and used for hunting. Too bad we can't upload pictures here.
Later in your video, you discuss mounting methods. Both of my spears are cone mounts on both ends which can be secured with a nail. One end is the business end, the other is a maybe 1/8th" flared digging or chipping tool for harvesting roots etc. The wooden shaft is maybe 3' long.
Interesting, thanks for watching and sharing
@@FireCreekForge I'll send you some photos of them. I assure you that they are real tools, they look identical to the ones the locals carried. Keep in mind that the smith lives in a grass hut and works with a clay forge. People that carry rifles there are considered poachers and shot on sight.
Another awesome protect that turned out amazing! Thanks for sharing!
On a trip to South Africa, I bought a spear at a Green Market Square in Cape Town. It was an antique, and it had a rolled socket for attachment, as did the spike on the butt of the spear. So, no primitive African spears do not use a tang for attachment, not in my experience.
Imagine how long it took for the Zulus to make Iklwa for an entire impi
I learn the IsiZulu language at school and it's great to see some amazing history, Ngiyabonga umnumzane!
Very cool, thanks!
Have you ever forged anything starting from ore?
No, I haven't
@@FireCreekForge does something like that interest you? I would love to see you try.
very cool, I am seeing photos with darker wood handles and some a bit longer. Blade itself looks like it will definitely keel......
i'm surprise it's very short, i would be curious to know how they used it
The Zulu tactics were very much like the Roman Legionary. First, they Romans/Zulus would throw their pilum/assegai to encumber the enemy's shields and or break up their formation. Then the Roman/Zulus would close to hand to hand range and the gladius/ikwla would be employed to savage effect., aiming for the thigh, groin, or thorax.
@@kharilane1340 interesting ! thanks ! so it was used as a cast weapon ? but wrriors had several in that case, otherwise they shouted only once ?
Just watch the Forged and Fire episode of it on TH-cam! Explains everything! This is my spear being made!
@@michaelfromparis No, the Ikwla is a hand to hand weapon. The assegai is the throwing spear. You throw the assegai from a distance then advance to melee range and stab and thrust with the Ikwla.
@@kharilane1340 yes it makes sens,
No testing futage?
Awesome
How much to have another one made?
This is my spear and it was $500!
I want to build something similar to this but with a longer blade. And slightly shorter handle. So it could be use as a sword or for thrusting. Very nice build and would definitely do well on a hog hunt. Never thought of using the lower carbon steels for this. I was thinking of going the 5160 route. I’ll have to keep this steel choice in mind.
5160 would be a great choice too. usually harder to come by in thicker dimensions though.
Yeppers, most places only go up to about a quarter inch or so. Anything thicker usually is special order and thus more price.
beautiful weapon, could you make an egyptian battle sickle that is a damascus chopesh for example
I would love to have an example of the Zulu short stabbing spear made with a Damascus pattern.
I hope the dimensions of this forging were given by the client, because it seems to me that the blade didn't seem long or wide enough.
Also, I vaguely remember an original having something of a 'pommel'
Are you not thinking of a metal end to the spear or a flared end? I can't recall ever seeing a metal pommel on any assegai, though I do recall them on Lion Spears from Kenya.
@@FuzzykidSA the handle end.
Nice to see someone use the assegai terminology
Yep, the correct shaft is one that widens out towards the end or has a “knob” at the end. This is to ensure that the warrior does not loose the weapon as it become slippery from all the blood while he is stabbing. Some just had the shaft widening towards the end - none would ever taper towards the end as the warrior would easy loose grip as it became bloody and slippery.
Now that's sweet..!!
Question.. Where did you get the breathing/filter dust mask?
Thanks for the video...
I bought my Resp-O-Rator off Amazon but they haven't been available for a while..
So, not having power hammers, how did the Zulu make their spears? Where did they get the iron to forge
Have you ever made a blade or just experimented with lathe turnings? Thank you
The assagai was a spear shaped blade about as large as a Roman sword, with a short wooden shaft and was used in the same way as the Romans soldiers behind a large shield. It was not used for threwing. The threwing spear had a small head and a long thin shaft.
The assagai was the throwing spear. The ikwla was the short stabbing spear.
A boar spear needs a cross piece, because without one a tusker will run right up the shaft of a spear, impaling itself, to carve a chunk out of you with its teeth.
Yep
How much was that to commission? If it's ok to ask?
What angles did you use for the bevels?
How could I harden iron.
Iron can not harden, for that you need the introduction of carbon to the iron, which makes it steel. One method is to case harden iron, which makes the outer layer of the iron into steel, leaving a hardened or hardenable "skin".
@@FireCreekForge thank you.
Mild steel same problem
Of course the did have grinding stones to help form the edge
Nice work for your first I wonder did you do a Rockwell hardness test on your spear head . Another question you used 1045 is that steel used mainly for railway lines ? .
OK, how much for one to be made I like it 😊
Are you wearing a type of ventilator?