An urumi (Malayalam: uṟumi; Sinhalese: ethunu kaduwa; Hindi: āra) is a sword with a flexible, whip-like blade, originating in modern-day Kerala in the Indian subcontinent. It is thought to have existed from as early as the Sangam period. [~600BC-300AD]

The urumi is handled like a flail but requires less strength since the blade combined with centrifugal force is sufficient to inflict injury. As with other “soft” weapons, urumi wielders learn to follow and control the momentum of the blade with each swing, thus techniques include spins and agile manoeuvres.

These long-reaching spins make the weapon particularly well suited to fighting against multiple opponents. When not in use, the urumi is worn coiled around the waist like a belt, with the handle at the wearer’s side like a conventional sword.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urumi

  • @FPSkra
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    419 months ago

    While Urumi did exist, this is not a picture of one. This is a Celtic sword likely bent when placed in the grave of a dead soldier. Ancient celts would bend the swords before burying the soldiers with them so, they couldn’t be used again.

    • @FireTowerOPM
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      249 months ago

      Updated the image. Had seen the original one labeled as such elsewhere. I’m far from sword expert but I recognize there’s a big number of sword fans here so I try to share when I come across odd ones.

      For anyone curious this was the original:

      • @itwasawednesday
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        39 months ago

        Ok seeing this now, wouldn’t the flailing action not land the the cutty bit on the soft bits the right way?

        • @[email protected]
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          79 months ago

          As with pretty much all weapons it depends if you know how to use it, and the armor available to your foes.

    • @Blue_Morpho
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      99 months ago

      Thank you because I was having trouble seeing how the sword in the picture could possibly work.

  • @EdibleFriend
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    309 months ago

    It’s supposed to be like that

    -Some drunken blacksmith.

    • @j4k3
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      59 months ago

      … A sword made for an older man.

      • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️
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        9 months ago

        To clarify my position on whips: I primarily play for invasions and PvP. The whips suck in PvP mostly because it’s rare to run against someone using a shield, which is where the whips really shine. In PvE everything is decent enough to beat the game, and there are way more NPCs with shields than actual players in my experience.

      • Shield whip?

        Is that a weapon that is a whip but also a shield the way the urumi is a whip and also a sword, or do you just mean using a shield along with a whip and I’m overthinking it? 🤔

        • @[email protected]
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          28 months ago

          Shield in offhand. Specifically I’d recommended a sheild with the no skill ash of war so you can use lightning bolt. The range and damage on the counter attack are pretty good. The urumi also has a unique charged heavy that has basically spear range for poking.

  • gullible
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    79 months ago

    Given that spears and halberds exist, what’s what’s the utility? Hidden for assassin shenanigans?

    • Shirasho
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      109 months ago

      Same reason cannons exist when guns also exist. They serve different purposes by having different profiles.

      • gullible
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        49 months ago

        I mean, if a military were to have the financial means to offer a cannon to every soldier, they would. Economics are the backend of every war. In 600 BC, a flexible sword would be both far more expensive and less effective than a spear, which is the crux of my question. I only read the wiki after my comment so I take back halberds. 7355608 proposed an interesting use case in a casual carry belt that feels reasonable.

        • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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          79 months ago

          But if they did that, a light infantry squad would grab their rifles, run around to the side of the cannon squad, and completely destroy them.

          • gullible
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            39 months ago

            “Thaddiffer, I do say, what are those Frenchmen doing across the hill?”

            “My dear Billiam, I believe they’re attempting to flank us. Shall we preemptively prepare a ceaseless 500 grape shot barrage to render them, the landscape, and everything else within a quarter mile into an unidentifiable vapor?”

            “No, no, we shan’t be rude, we simply must offer them first volley. Anyone for tea in the meantime?”

            *raucous agreement*

            (Yes, I know what you’re referencing but this is magic “everyone gets a cannon” canon)

        • @[email protected]
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          39 months ago

          It was basically a weapon so that when you got in a bar fight, you could grab the band saw off your waist lol

    • @7355608
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      99 months ago

      You could use it as a belt maybe?

      Like the canesword, it’s a belt first and when hooligans are up to hooligan things you can give them what for. . .

      . . .as your pants fall down.

    • @[email protected]
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      69 months ago
      • Easy to carry
      • Easy to conceal
      • When slashed around, creates a very dangerous bubble around the user that can keep multiple enemies at bay
      • Can be several meters long, giving it more reach than most polearms
      • Effective against shields since the end can wrap around the shield to hit the enemy
      • Look badass

      It’s not meant to be a mass produced weapon that gets distributed to everyone in the militia. Spears are far and away a better choice for that. It takes years and years of training before a fighter should even consider learning how to use one. But in the hands of an elite warrior they can be incredibly deadly.