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The Book of the Sword

Chapter 19: CONCLUSION.
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About This Book

The author traces the development of edged weapons from prehistoric stone and wooden arms through copper, bronze, and iron metallurgy, describing construction, regional forms, and battlefield use. Chapters discuss cultural and ritual roles of the sword, its symbolism in religion, law, and chivalry, and its presence in myth and ceremony across Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. Technical aspects such as types, forging, and fencing conventions are considered alongside literary and iconographic references, while historical anecdotes and comparative analysis link material technology to the social and moral meanings attached to the weapon.

CONCLUSION.

We have now assisted at the birth of the Sword in the shape of a bit of wood, charred and sharpened. We have seen its several stages of youth and growth to bone and stone, to copper and bronze, to iron and steel. When it had sufficiently developed itself Egypt gave it a name, SFET; and this name, at least fifty centuries old, still clings to it and will cling to it. In the hands of the old Nilotes the Sword spread culture and civilisation throughout adjoining Africa and Western Asia. The Phœnicians carried it wide and side over the world then known to man. The Greeks won with it their liberty and developed with it their citizenship. Wielded by the Romans, it enthroned the Reign of Law, and laid the foundation for the Brotherhood of Mankind. Thus, though it soaked earth with the blood of her sons, the Sword has ever been true to its mission—the Progress of Society.

In Part II. we shall see the Sword attain the prime of life, when no genius, no work of art was too precious to adorn it; and when, from a weapon of offence, it developed exceptional defensive powers. Here begins the Romance of the Sword.