- Batty - Bladerunner.
The weapons stand at attention, dressed in bayonet wear, ready. Ready for simply a polish, a cleaning, perhaps one or two fired without bayonet on a weekend that's not 20 degrees out, with winds and snow moving in. Long time warriors standing at still attention. Pictured, a Yougoslav M48b Mauser, Lee Enfield #4 mk II, Chinese type 56 SKS, Mosin Nagant 91/30, and a Turkish Mdl 38 Mauser.
Someone is there, too close to get a shot off, an exclamation in foreign tongue, sung under a rocket glare that lights up the sky, smoky death. The enemy, caught in the act of creeping into your line, no time to think, only a visceral reaction of base survival, your bayonet goes into his throat. Death up as close as it can be, the body shaking, the bayonet advancing seemingly on its own, a thrust, a cry, he falls back. Time stops in that moment, your blade embedded in his crumbling body, pulling you forward as you cling to the only thing keeping you alive, pulling on it, wresting it free, as if shaking a sausage from a forkThat night, while a man lays open eyed, throat torn, a stray poppy blooming blood red in churned cabbage fields, you write a letter home. A letter written by candles light to your wife, asking her to hold the baby you have yet to see, asking about the farm and telling her things are fine, words in a letter she may never get, or may take four months to arrive. You write after you wipe the blood from your blade.
Warfare of old. Warfare with a bayonet - a thing of historical significance, formed into an instrument of killing. A last resort weapon, for close quarter battle. A weapon as old as firearm warfare.
The term bayonet came from the French baïonnette - a knife, dagger, sword or spike shaped weapon that fits over the muzzle of a rifle barrel. Typically they are "custom" in that they are made to fit a specific firearm, not much different than the accessories we buy for our modern weapons.The origins of the bayonet are, like most battlefields, a bit smokey. The Chinese were believed to have first used them in the 13th century, when the developer of the musket found they were ineffective in killing at close range. They then introduced two types of firearm, one with an attached knife and the other a spear. Owning more than one Mauser and being drawn like a fly to them, I have more than one bayonet in the household now, as I do Mausers, always looking for new ones when I'm out and about like these up in Minneapolis.
It is also rumored that during the mid-17th century irregular military conflicts in rural France, the Basque peasants of Bayonne, depleted of powder and shot, shoved their long-bladed hunting knives into the muzzles of their primitive muskets to form a spear and whether by luck or design, created an ancillary weapon. In any case, the first mentioned use of the bayonet as an instrument of war that I could find was in the memoirs of General Maréchal de Puységure, the weapon being introduced into the French Army in 1647 and becoming common in most European armies by the 1660s.
The bayonet was originally a defensive instrument. A good long bayonet, extending to a regulation 17 inches during the Napoleonic period, on a 5 foot tall musket ending up with a reach comparable to an infantry spear. Steady infantry, standing two or three men deep, could adopt a defense "square" formation, an defence to a sudden rush of cavalry with a reach that could defend against a man mounted upon a horse, though the combination was much heavier than a polearm of the same length and would take some real strength, not just skill.You see the problem here. You plug it, you can't fire it. During the act of fitting the soldier was virtually unarmed. It's like having your 1911 in the bottom of your briefcase when the robber/murderer says howdy. Not a good place to be. Even more annoying, you plug it in too tightly, you won't be able to get it out short of damaging the weapon (anyone got any WD40??. . and. . uh. . duct tape)? Yet, in 1671, plug bayonets were happily issued to the French regiment of fusiliers and later to part of an English dragoon regiment that disbanded in 1674, and to the Royal Fusiliers in 1685.
The outcome of the Battle of Killiecrankie in 1689 was due, in some part, to the use of the plug bayonet; as a sudden rush of Scottish Highlanders overwhelmed them as they were fixing bayonets. Shortly afterwards, the defeated leader, Hugh Mackay, is said to have introduced a ring-bayonet of his own design. These "socket" bayonets offset the blade from the musket barrel's muzzle with a bayonet that attached over the outside of the barrel with a ring-shaped socket, secured on later models by a spring-loaded catch on the muzzle of the musket barrel. With the socket bayonet the blade would lay below the axis of the barrel, leaving sufficient clearance to permit the weapon to be loaded and fired while the bayonet was fixed.Many of the socket bayonets were triangular in cross-section. It was said in some history books that this was designed so they'd wield wounds "that were difficult to stitch when attended to by a medic, as it is more difficult to stitch a three-sided wound than a two-sided one thus making the wound more likely to become infected". This is more of an urban legend than reality, for surgeons have sewn up jagged wounds using more stitches when needed, since field surgery began. Instead, three sided bayonets were designed to provide flexing strength in the blade without much increase in weight in case a bayonet struck a hard object. For in that event it's better to have it bend and be repairable then to have it be so stiff it shatters on impact.
Shortly after the Peace of Ryswick in 1697 the English and Germans both abolished the pike and introduced these bayonets, but owing to a military cabal they were not issued to the French infantry until 1703. Thereafter, the bayonet became, with the musket or other firearm, the typical weapon of infantry.
The long type of bayonets for early rifles were designed with the same intent as the medieval pike, the rifle and bayonet becoming a long pole with a lethal spear on the business end. As warfare evolved, so did the bayonet. Mass collisions of troops were less frequent, and the blades became shorter, becoming secondary to fighting knifes. The idea of using a short sword as a bayonet was tried on occasion, but the first regular users of the sword-type blade appear to have been the British rifle regiments in the early 1800s. But, with the onset of breech-loading, and then magazine arms providing infantry with a firepower capable of beating off cavalry, the bayonet evolved even further, from a primarily defensive weapon to one of offense.For this, a knife-like blade was of more use than a spike blade, and so from the middle of the 19th century, the use of knife or sword blade increased, though a few armies still hung on to spike blades.
All nations boast of their prowess with the bayonet, but few men really enjoy a hand-to-hand fight with the bayonet. English and French both talk much of the bayonet but in Egypt in 1801 they threw stones at each other when their ammunition was exhausted and one English sergeant was killed by a stone.
At Inkerman again the British threw stones at the Russians, not without effect; and I am told upon good authority that the Russians and Japanese, both of whom profess to love the bayonet, threw stones at each other rather than close, even in this twentieth-century."
-J.W.Fortescue, Military History
18th and 19th century military tactics included various massed bayonet charges and defenses. The Russian Army used the bayonet the most frequently in any Napoleonic conflict. Their motto was "The Bullet is foolish, the Bayonet wise." Given that the bullet of the smoothbore musket of the time had Dick Cheney-like accuracy, almost unpredictable beyond 50 yards, they believed that in a bayonet fight you were less likely to miss, though in actuality, many soldiers reverted to using bayonet-mounted rifles as clubs, primitive fighting at its best.
The experimentation of bayonets continued through much of the 18th and 19th centuries. Prior to the Civil War, the U.S. Navy tried their hand at affixing bayonet blades to single-shot pistols, which soon proved useless for anything but making dinner. Cutlasses remained the preferred flat edged weapon for the navies of the time, though Queen Victoria's Royal Navy gave up the pikes once used to repel attacks by my ancestors in favor of the cutlass bayonet.
The 19th century gave us the sword bayonet, a long-bladed weapon with a single- or double-edged blade that could also double as a shortsword. Its initial purpose was to make sure that the riflemen, while holding ranks with musketmen (whose weapons were longer), could form square properly to stave off cavalry attacks, when sword bayonets were fitted. Though the sword bayonet on the Infantry Rifle needed to be removed before firing, as the weight at the end of the barrel affected balance and stability (and you all know what that does to accuracy, it was a decent combat side arm when dismounted. When attached to the musket or rifle, it would turn almost any long arm into an effective spear, useful for not just thrusting but for slashing.
The inherent problems of fixing bayonets in the middle of a heated battle led some armies to adopt permanently-attached bayonets. These folded above or below the barrel of the weapon and could be released and locked into place very quickly when required. A singularity of the Imperial Russian Army, which carried over into the Soviet Army, was the permanently fixed bayonet; no scabbards were issued, and the bayonet remained on the rifle muzzle at all times. The Soviet blades, now made of steel, were stiffened with a small cross-section in the form of a cross, in order to make them more compact in form and fold better onto the sides of their rifles, such as the 1944 Mosin Nagant. It was said that self-inflicted wounds made by soldiers to get themselves out of the line of battle would be recognized as such and bring them greater disciplinary punishment.
In All Quiet on the Western Front, author Eric Maria Remarque stated that in WWI, French Soldiers killed German prisoners who had serrated blade bayonets, as they assumed they were for cutting off the limbs of Allied soldiers. Whether this was true or not, World War I did see the bayonet being shortened even further into knifed weapons useful for some very bloody hand to hand fighting or as trench knives, so the majority of modern bayonets you will find are knife bayonets.
In any case, it was not a weapon you hoped ever to have to use. Despite the support of military leaders, the practical use of the bayonet was somewhat rare. At Inkerman during the Crimean War in 1854, only 6% of casualties were attributed to the bayonet. In World War I, the ‘Spirit of the Bayonet’ was a mantra of combat instructors, but not popular in its actuality. Of the 13,691 men of the American Expeditionary Force killed in the war, only 5 died from bayonet wounds. Still for military strategists, the morale that interfaced with the fixing of bayonets was generally considered to outweigh their drawbacks, which included restriction of movement and lack of real utility. Modern bayonets are normally knife-shaped with either a socket or a handle, or are permanently attached to the rifle as with the"SKS". Depending on where and when a specific SKS was manufactured, it may have a permanently attached bayonet with a knife-shaped blade (early Chinese, Russian, Yogoslavian or Romanian)or a cruciform (late Chinese) or triangular (Albanian) spike type, or no bayonet at all.
The development of repeating firearms greatly reduced the combat value of the bayonet though they were still retained through World Wars I and II.
With the adoption of modern short assault rifles, the utility of the old style bayonet as a weapon was doubtful, the combination being simply not suited to fighting, yet modern versions of bayonets are still in use. The British Army performed bayonet charges during the Falklands War and the second Gulf War. United States Marine trainees at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in San Diego still get their first instruction in using the bayonet as a lethal weapon on their 10th day.
In a modern concept of warfare, bayonets are used for controlling prisoners or as a "last resort" weapon for close quarters combat, such as when a soldier is out of ammo or has a weapon jam. However they are not normally fitted to most weapons, as the bayonet impairs long range accuracy even more so in modern weapons.
Bayonets, whether you consider them a hindrance or a lethal fighting tool, many of them are rapidly becoming collectors items. I've just a few, as the bayonets for some of these weapons cost more than the weapon itself. But I still like to hold on to them.
Pieces of history that point to freedoms still threatened.
24 comments:
Well ... an excellent, brief history of the bayonet, Brigid. This, and similar, postings of yours have a consistent, thorough and readable nature. (That you used photos of your own examples lends added depth.)
Thanks for this one ... especially that little section on bayonet deaths. I would have thought more deaths were caused through bayonet use in WW I ... but I would have been wrong.
Regards.
Nice collection of ol' bolt guns there, Brigid! But you need to get a Finn...they're ever so much nicer than the 91/30's... ;)
Vic303
"Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser Gate."
Didn't the Scots Guards have a bayonet charge in Iraq a few years back?
Although they aren't used as much now, they have been employed somewhat recently: http://www.leatherneck.com/forums/showthread.php?t=14911
More here: http://defensetech.org/2010/01/29/bayonets-hit-the-mark/
I love my Garand with the bayonet fixed. It may be "unbalanced" with it's long sharp pointy tooth but it is a hunk of steel and wood to be reckoned with.
RB
I love a good piece of sharp steel on the end of my rifles. I recently bought an old but brand-new in the wrapper bayonet for my K31, and if I ever find a reasonably priced 16 incher for my Garand (birthdate 04-43, so it's accurate for the rifle) every one built for blade shall have one.
I think it's a disservice (nay, heresy!) that bayonet training is no longer considered a necessary skill taught in basic.
Bladerunner must be my favorite. Only DVD I had to buy because my VHS copy had worn out.
Great article Brigid.
I saw the title and went "Woah!"
I've never seen the movie, but just last night saw a couple of clips from it on youtube. Hopefully they weren't representative of the whole flick, as they were pretty depressing and just weird to watch without knowing any of the rest of the story.
Brigid,
I believe the serrated blades you mentioned in your history were usually issued to "pioneer" units, and supposedly used to cut wood, rope, etc.
Must be getting close to bayonet season?
I've seen things you people wouldn't believe....
Yup, one of the really great flicks.
As George said, consistent, through, and readable. I would have ended with enjoyable.
It's odd. I have a house filled with guns, but no bayonets. I had a Swiss sawtooth years ago that recieved ritual used every December, when the kids and I went to cut the Christmas tree, but I let a buddy with a 1911 Schmidt-Rubin carbine swap me out of it.
And I really, really liked pugil sticks. I had the speed, the balance, and enough of the killer edge that I scared the crap out of much bigger guys.
Putting that toad sticker on the end of an M-14, even an M-16, changed everything about the weapon you held in your hand, and about the man holding it. Lew Millet and the Wolfhounds found that out in Korea. One of the few Army operations the Marine Corps admitted were done competently, and used as an example.
My cousin Ritchie was at Inchon, and he said the Koreans, some of the physically and emotionally toughest men in the world, froze in their holes when they saw the American bayonets.
He came ashore in the third wave, and couldn't understand what the guys were doing upslope, poking around in the Communist foxholes with the ends of their rifles.
When he got there he found that they were bayonetting locals who wouldn't come out of their holes.
I suspect one reason bayonet casualties are rare is that many people would give up or run when faced by troops who really wanted to use them. And having it there on the pointy end does make you want to use it.
Do you have any figures on how many WWI casualties were done with trench knives and sharpened E-Tools? I've heard sea-stories from older members of the family, including one with a really nasty, puckered scar across his cheek, but I haven't ever seen any numbers on it.
And did you know Michael Collins stopped to fix a bayonet on his Lee-Enfield before charging out at the men who eventually killed him?
A pity they didn't put that in the movie. But I imagine the idea of the National Minister of Defense dieing in hand to hand combat while screaming "Come on boys, follow me" would have seemed far too Hollywood.
East Windsor Marksmen Club used to have a bayonet charge after military rifle matches. The first guy to nick the paper got an extra 10 points.
I won once, but was disqualified because I didn't have a real pig-sticker. I only extended the cleaning rod on my buddy's '95 Mauser.
A true 'assault rifle' would be one that you could assault someone with when the magazine is empty.
The "what would it have been like" feeling when picking up a an old warrior of wood and steel can be found in other places as well. Take a ride on a flying B-17 and just imagine the sky filled with a thousand just like it. I did a hop on Aluminum Overcast, and it is still the best money I've spent.
Killiecrankie - I don't think it mattered that much. When Scotts wielding 2 meters of sharpened pig-sticker get within reach it's going to get messy if you're the British.
That only leaved one question then: Classic Bladerunner with voice-over, or Directors cut without?
on a semi-related note...
In 1984, I went on my first, and last, Boar Hunt, with boar spears. What made it poignant, was the book I brought along. Enchanter's End Game by David Eddings. An earlier book in the series detailed the hero's thoughts and attitudes on a boar hunt. It were ironic because I didn't read the other books until two to three years later.
Belgarion's thoughts about the whole thing mirrored mine so precisely, that I pretty much consider Eddings' characters close acquaintances....
I'd rather face down Torak, One-eyed god of the Angaraks, than face down a pissed off pig with a sharp stick.
I'm almost sure I wouldn't enjoy bayoneting some poor schlub who found himself opposite me in a cow pasture or poppy field......
Brigid,
Love your collection! Both the rifles and the blades.
On the other hand, you need one with a really impressive bayonet.
Something like a US M1917 or Pattern '14 with appropriate bayonet, a No. 1 Mk. III with it's appropriate bayonet or maybe the M1911 rifle ancestor of the K31 with it's issue blade. Or even a nice old M1891 Mosin-Nagant with it's lock ring bayonet rather than the later spring latch bayonet on the M91/30.
I try to get a proper bayonet for each and every rifle in my collection. Thinking about it I have not managed a bayonet for my Finn M39 Mosin-Nagants and I need a few more for my M91/30 Mosin-Nagants. Pretty much everything else has it's proper bayonet, or as close as I can possibly come.
Now I just need to find an authentic pugil stick to go with the collection!
;^)
Buckshot
I'd disagree that the bayonet is of no practical use today.
Three scenarios where I would definitely want one fixed are :
1) Fighting in towns/urban areas. Coming around a corner, an enemy will try to grab the muzzle of your rifle - a sharpened bayonet makes this a bit more tricky for him and if he does manage to grab the rifle, then you stand a good chance of being able to skewer him with the point.
2) If you have over run an enemy position (trench, house or whatever) and you have any doubt about how frisky one of the "dead" soldiers might be, a simple stab of the bayonet into his thigh and a good wiggle will determine in fairly short order if he's playing possum... and if he is, a stab wound to the thigh will slow him down somewhat.
3) Advancing to contact with the enemy. Most likely you will be under fire and will want to do the "Up, run for a count of three, down and roll". It is the "Down" bit that is the danger - it is easy to plug the muzzle of the rifle with soil or mud. A fixed bayonet will protect the muzzle from this.
They are also good for opening ammo boxes, picking your teeth and other such activities which demand a strong knife which is paid for by someone else.
Bloodthirsty little blighter, aren't I?
Very nice post, informative, well put together and smooth. I like your style!
Blessings.
I have an old bayonet that I do not know what weapon was supposed to fit. Would you possibly be able to identify it.. or point me to a source that could?
-robbie in florida
Humans... at least well adjusted, socialized ones have a predisposition for not killing each other. For most, it takes considerable training, (or a sociopathic nature) to overcome that basic hardwiring. Many who have studied fighting during wartime or violence in society (or have personal experience in such matters) have shown this to be true time and again.
Killing at close range is particularly difficult, (as opposed to long range killing say from artillery as an example). The sights, sounds and smell of death and dying up close are repugnant. The closer you are to someone, the harder it is for you to kill them.
I heartily approve of this post, even with no mention of pistol bayonets... ;)
All my military rifles have bayonets.
Alas not all my bayonets have rifles.
Need (NEED!) a full size G98 to go with the bayonet my Grandfather Smith brought back from the trenches of WWI.
Jay G. has been kind enough to post some of my collection on his sight should you care to see them.
Don't forget about Josua Chamberlain's famous bayonet charge in the defense of Little Round Top during the Civil War Battle of Gettysburg!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joshua_Chamberlain
Very nice with lots of Bio to go with, not much to add other than the 16" bayonets are the most natural throwing knifes I have ever handled, and I cannot remember the reference, but an American Indian, was in a special unit in WW2, put together, supposedly for their excellent night vision, he killed a German Sentry at 25 yards, at night with a full moon and snow covered background, with a thrown 16" bayonet to the back of the neck. He later performed in Knife and Hatchet throwing shows and his knife rating was high, but he was #1 with a hatchet/Tomahawk in the world. I will try to find this exact reference.
Also the 16" knife, regardless of bayonet or just a knife, is considered the minimum length that will absolutely reach the vitals from any angle or body size, such as a 400lb adversary or a down angle shot through the collar bone and still reach the heart or connections thereof.
According to Bill Bagwell, knifemaker, taken with a grain of Kosher salt, but seems reasonable to me.
Lovely post. But an Army Reserve friend of mine who as an MP has been to the Gulf three times has another use for the bayonet: Riot Control and Prisoner Transfer. For some reason, the Iraqis would sometimes surround their Humvees while they were picking up suspects from other units. He would tell his men to fix bayonets, and the crowd, upon seeing the fixed bayonet would suddenly disperse. It seems that if you are raised on "war stories" about great swordsmen, and you are suddenly facing a bladed enemy and you are without your own sword....
One of my favorites I've owned was an 1894 Swedish carbine & bayonet. There was so much nickel in the Swedish steels that the rifle would scarcely take a blued finish. The bayonet was untarnished and had a sheen quite unlike modern stainless steels.
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