Makibishi

The term makibishi (撒き菱 or 撒菱) refers to the Japanese version of the caltrop.

Japanese "makibishi" iron spikes, a type of caltrop

Description

Makibishi (igadama), sharp spiked objects that were used in feudal Japan to slow down pursuers and also were used in the defense of samurai fortifications.[1][2]Makibishi were one of the items supposedly used by ninja. Iron makibishi were called tetsubishi while the makibishi made from the dried seed pod of the water chestnut formed a natural type of makibishi called tennenbishi. Both types of makibishi could penetrate the thin soles of the shoes such as the waraji sandals that were commonly worn in feudal Japan when the makibishi was dropped on the ground or planted in advance.[3] [4] Makibishi could be carried in a bag attached to a belt along with other commonly carried weapons and/or tools such as shuriken and kaginawa. [5]Makibishi could be thrown like a shuriken [6]and could also be used against an enemy on horseback.[7]

gollark: Bee lifespans (🐝 in ABR).
gollark: People mostly don't notice because calculators don't do that many digits.
gollark: dπ/dt = 0.000000000000000000000000000000000000000000006, actually.
gollark: Apologies for the inconvenience.
gollark: We cancel most time in 2446 anyway, for budget reasons, although we do keep operating a few years like 2446.5.

References

  • Media related to Makibishi at Wikimedia Commons
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.