Roman Spears and Axes
Most of the artefacts excavated at Hedemünden Fort were shown in the local museum of Northeim, a small town north of Göttingen. Photographing in museums is a challenge, if allowed at all, but I managed to get a few decent pics.
Spear points found at Hedemünden
The iron
hasta points were attached to wooden shafts. In the right upper corner you can see the iron butt spikes of the shaft end, and the yellowish one in the middle of the pic has been left uncleaned after finding to show what the archaeologists deal with.
Hasta points would be more permanently fixed to the shaft than in case of the
pila because those lances are used for stabbing rather than throwing.
Same display seen from the other side
The three points in the middle are classified as
iaculum points.
Iacula were smaller javelins used by the cavalry. The exhibit to the very right is a spear point as it would look like when it comes fresh out of the earth. TV documentaries showing archaeologists digging out
shiny stuff are always edited for the public. Those artefacts need professional cleaing and conservation first.
To the left is the drawing of a fully equipped 1st century legionary (taken from one of the tablets at Hedemünden). They were called '
Marius' Mules' after the consul Gaius Marius (175 - 86 BC) who restructured the Roman army and standardised the equipment. Note that during Marius' time the soldiers would still have been wearing a mail shirt; the
lorica segmentata came into fashion only in the first century AD.
The legionary is equipped with the traditional two
pila, and you can clearly see the points differ from the
hasta ones. The
pilum has a solid pyramidal point at the end of a slender iron shank; the shank is then attached to the wooden haft. The idea is that, when thrown, the
pilum will continue to penetrate whatever it hits, to a greater depth than a spear. It may even punch through a shield and continue into the body of the shield-bearer. Nice, eh?"
Oh yes, very nice - depending what side you're on. *grin*
The points are also designed to break off the shaft after they got stuck which makes removal even more difficult.
Here is a more recent post about
pila, showing a display of
pilum points.
Below are some photos of
doloabrae. A
dolabra is a so called pioneer axe, used to fell trees and such, though it could also be used as weapon if needs be. What is left nowadays are the iron parts; the wooden handles usually have decayed. But the design hasn't changed much over times.
Dolabrae (left) and part of a shovel blade (right) from the Hedemünden finds.
Shovels were needed for digging trenches which formed part of Roman forts and marching camps. It is amazing to imagine that the Romans - according to the sources - on the first night of the Varus battle, after the German attack had already begun albeit not yet full scale, still managed to build a proper marching camp complete with entrenchments and walls. Says something about Roman discipline.
dolabrae
The pic shows some pioneer axes from the Hedemünden finds that were presented in an exhibition in
Hannoversch-Münden in 2009 - the year of the 2000 year anniversary of the Varus battle.