e/Changdao (sword)

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has glosseng: Changdao , literally meaning "long knife," was a type of anti-cavalry sword used in China during the Ming Dynasty. Sometimes called Miao dao (a similar but more recent weapon), the blade greatly resembles a Japanese ōdachi in form. This weapon was adopted by General Qi Jiguang, who acquired a Kage-ryū (Aizu) manual from Japanese wokou, studied and modified it for his troops and used against enemies on the Mongol border circa 1560. It replaced the zhǎn mǎ dāo as a "horse slaying" weapon; it is interesting to note that as the Japanese blades may have been derivatives of the zhǎnmǎdāo, the changdao would effectively be a third-generation replacement of the original sword. At the time of General Qi it had a specified length of 1.95 meters, which rivaled the Japanese ōdachi in length. Its handle was long, apparently slightly more than one third of its total length, and its curve more shallow than that of Japanese swords. Commanding up to 100,000 troops on the Mongol border, General Qi found this so effective that up to forty percent of his commandos had it as a weapon; it stayed in service throughout the late Ming dynasty.
lexicalizationeng: Chang dao
lexicalizationeng: Changdao
instance of(noun) a weapon with a handle and blade with a sharp point
knife
Meaning
Chinese
has glosszho: 長刀是擁有較長刃部的刀種,在明代與腰刀 相對而稱。漢代的環首刀、唐代的橫刀、日本刀、明代的苗刀、倭刀都可被歸類為長刀。
lexicalizationzho: 長刀

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Word: (case sensitive)
Language: (ISO 639-3 code, e.g. "eng" for English)


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