Weapons

anisword
anisword

Shortsword
The common Gorean shortsword, designed to be used with the round battle shield
used by Gorean warriors, is described as a leaf-shaped, double-edged blade with
a short single-handed grip. The grip is typically either of polished ka-la-na or
temwood, either unadorned or wrapped in leather, cloth or cord. The blade of this
weapon is between twenty and twenty-four inches in length, and it is worn either in
a belt scabbard on the left hip or alternately in the same scabbard, slung over the
left shoulder for travel. In later books this weapon is described as a gladius, which
implies that rather than a typical crossguard assembly it sports a simple sculpted or
disk-shaped hilt, without lengthy quillions, and either a plain disk-shaped or
knobbed pommel. Always honed to razor sharpness. The best use of a
shortsword is by rank and file army troops, since one of its primary uses is for it to
be wielded by a standing formation of men in matched ranks.

Longsword
The longsword can vary in size from 35 to 47 inches, depending upon the reach
and preference of the user. It is carried in a belt-scabbard or leather support loop
on the wielders off side, or strapped across its user's back over his right shoulder.
It is primarily used for slashing, to batter an enemy's shield to pieces, after which
the wielder follows through with a killing stroke.

Scimitar
A long curved sword used either one-handed or with two-hands, depending upon
the situation. It has a curved, single-edged blade, honed to razor-sharpness. Even
a light stroke of a Tahari scimitar will pass effortlessly through the flesh, leaving a
carved mark 1/4" inch deep in the bone beneath. The overall blade length is
perhaps thirty or more inches, with an 8" inch long false-edge across the back of
the tip, for backhanded slashes. The best and normal use is by mounted troops
e.g. kaillaback but used by foot troops it is just as deadly.

Killing Knife
A throwing knife, typically used only in the larger cities such as Ar, and used by
those of the Caste of Assassins. It is much smaller than the quiva, approximately
six to eight inches in length, and its blade is tapered on only one side. Sometimes
used in conjunction with poison Kanda paste smeared upon the blade, though
trained Assassins typically disdain the use of poison. It is rarely used in
hand-to-hand combat, designed primarily to be thrown at the body of an
unsuspecting victim.

Hook Knife
Though never described in detail, its usage seems to suggest that it is a short
weapon, consisting of a thick, ridged fighting handle and a wide curved blade,
sharpened on both sides. The blade is perhaps stubby and crescent shaped. Its hilt
and pommel can be either fancy or plain and unadorned. The hook knife is often
seen in duels and ritual combats.

Whip Knife
The use of this weapon is widely regarded as a difficult and delicate art to master.
The whip knife consists of a twelve-foot long braided leather whip of the bullwhip
type commonly found on Earth. Set into the final eighteen inches of its length are
twenty thin, narrow blades, woven into the leather and arranged in sets, four such
blades to a set. Each such weapon is tipped either with a double-edged knife
blade approximately seven or eight inches long, or a "stunning tip," a lead weight
which is designed to incapacitate the victim when he is struck. Rarely used in
actual warfare, this weapon is said to be unique to the Delta City of Port Kar and
is often used in the fighting of duels.

Sleen Knife
This is a broad bladed, flat, double-edged utility knife equipped with a simple
stubby crossguard and unadorned pommel. Much favoured by hunters and
woodsmen, it is equally suited for use as a camping and skinning knife.

Tarn Knife
This is a short bladed, single edged utility knife typically used by tarnsmen and
generally. Included among their saddle equipment. Some versions of such knives
are designed so that the blade folds into the handle for safety when not in use.

Quiva
A balanced knife, usually part of a set of seven such weapons. It consists of a
narrow double-edged blade of between 9 and 12 inches in length mounted on a
shaped handle of wood, bone, or horn. It is honed to razor sharpness, and its
blade tapers to a needlepoint. Designed for use primarily as a missile weapon, the
quiva is also perfectly functional as a hand weapon and general utility knife.

Knife Gauntlets
A pair of thick leather gauntlets, upon which are mounted crescent shaped knife
blades.

Spear
The common Gorean battle spear, designed to be used both in single combat and
thrown, though it is typically depicted primarily as a missile weapon. Aided by the
lighter gravity of the Counter-Earth, it is deadly when thrown, quite capable of
penetrating thick shields and even passing in to the body of its victim. The typical
Gorean spear is approximately seven feet in length, with a fitted wooden handle up
to two inches thick, capped by a leaf-shaped, tapering bronze spear head eighteen
inches in length. Also this spearhead can be made of steel, which is probably true
in many cases. Nevertheless, many spears in use on Gor do retain the traditional
bronze tip. The handle itself is usually made from ka-la-na wood, and can be
banded with metal near the juncture of the spearhead socket to prevent the handle
from shearing when thrown.

Spear
(Red hunters/savages)
Similar in most respects to the common Gorean spear, though often it is found
tipped with carved bone or shaped stone, rather than metal. It is also highly carved
and decorated, according to tribal custom.

War Spear
(Kurii)
Constructed similarly to the common Gorean war spear, only much larger and
heavier. The Kur war spear is some12 feet in length, with a long, tapering bronze
head. The shaft of the Kur war spear is 3" in diameter, and the bronze head
weighs up to twenty pounds.

Harpoon
A long slender javelin-type spear, fitted with a barbed head and used with an
attached line for getting it back after thrown.

Trident
The three-pronged spearing fork used by fishermen and sailors of the island
Ubarates of Gor. Can be utilised both as a thrusting weapon and as a missile
weapon. Also used, in conjunction with a hooked net, in various gladiatorial arenas
throughout Gor. It is briefly described as being approximately seven feet in overall
length, with prongs of 10" inches or more. Often used with a lanyard or line
attached, for retrieval should it be throw.
 

Shields
Several different types of shield are described in the series. Typically they are
round in shape, though they range in size from the huge shield used by the
Gor-bound Kurii to the small bucklers wielded by gladiators in the Stadium of
Blades in Ar. The most common shield in use upon Gor is the standard warrior
shield. This is a largish round shield comprised of many concentric overlapping
layers of dried shaped leather, probably stretched over a wooden or metal frame,
and banded for extra strength with brass or iron bands.

It is fitted with a pair of straps whereby it can be worn upon the user's arm,
typically the left one, and is worn slung across the back for ease of movement
while its user in travelling from place to place. Among the civilised armies of Gor
such shields are normally painted boldly and have infixed in them some device for
identifying the bearer's city. The Warriors of the southern city of Turia are known
for their usage of distinctive shields that are oval, rather than circular, in shape.
Helmets: There are various types of helmets in use by soldiers and warriors upon
Gor. The most commonly used is the standard Gorean war helmet. It is describe
as being a close-faced helmet, which encloses the entire head, with a distinctive
"Y", shaped opening. As described in the books they are hammered and riveted
together in several pieces, though the pierced faceplate itself is depicted as "a
single piece of iron."

Due to the highly developed metalworking capabilities of the Goreans, however, it
is a safe assumption that they are actually of tempered steel, which is lighter and
stronger, and that Cabot's reference to them as iron is merely a fanciful allusion on
the part of the author. Additionally such helmets can be hammered from bronze,
also an inferior metal, According to Cabot each such helmet is fitted with
removable padding of rolls of leather, stuffed with softer material and laced into the
helmet to insure a superior fit. These helmets are often stripped of their crests and
padding to be used as crude cooking vessels by soldiers on the march.

Another example of a Gorean helmet is that often worn by the desert tribesmen
and denizens of such southern cities as Turia and Tor, as well as by the nomadic
warriors of the Wagon Peoples. It is a cone-shaped steel defence worn atop the
head, often fitted with a nasal guard of narrow flat construction. Such helmets may
be adorned with a ring of fur or fabric, which encircles the browband area, and
can also be found mantled with either a cloth covering or a camail of linked chain.
These helmets are closely fitted to the wearer's head, padded with a thick cloth
cap, which laces into it, and are often fitted with leather or cord chinstrap to secure
the device in place. A final example of Gorean helmet is the Spangenhelm worn by
northern warriors, which is in effect a steel or iron bowl, constructed from heavy
metal strapping.

A single metal browband encircles the head, with two or more curved metal straps
attached to it in the pattern of an "X", covering much of the wearer's skull. Curved
plates are riveted in place to fill the gaps between the strapping, resulting in a
layered metal cap with covers the entire head. These helmets are often fitted with
cheek and neck guards, chainmail camails or even metal faceplates, which conceal
the face or portions of it, like a metal mask. The horns of animals or metal spikes
may be attached to the helmet as decoration or to add some measure of protection
to the apparatus, though this usually makes them rather bulky and difficult to wear
in combat. These helmets are padded with leather or lined with thick fur, and can
also be fitted with a leather or cord chinstrap to insure a reliable fit.

Spiked Hand Wraps
Similar to the Earth Cestus, or heavy cloth or leather strips bound about the hand,
with projecting spikes which cover the wearer's knuckles e.g. knuckle dusters.

Spiked Leather
A pair of spiked leather balls, which are worn upon the hands of gladiatorial
fighters; the spikes of these devices can be very long.

Knife Gauntlets
A pair of thick leather gauntlets, upon which are mounted crescent shaped knife
blades.

Kurii beam Projector
A handheld device of some kind, big enough to fit comfortably in the hand of a
Kur. This missile weapon fires a highly concussive heat blast, which strikes its
target fiercely, often leaving a 3/4" wide hole at the point of impact, and an exit
wound of upwards of ten inches across, where applicable. It is described as
having only a limited number of charges, similar to a revolving cartridge weapon.
Used only by the Kurii.

Kurii Dart Thrower
A breech loading missile weapon which fires a six inch long conical gas propelled
dart. Its configuration is similar to an Earth rifle. Kurii Dart Throwers have carved
wooden stocks, upon which are incised eccentric designs. These tubular weapons
discharge with a hiss, which is not particularly loud. Several types of darts may be
fired from such a weapon, including poison tipped explosive tipped, and
tranquilliser darts. The actual firing button is located on the forepart of the stock,
and the weapon itself seems to be a one-shot weapon, requiring reloading after
every firing.

Silver Tube
This is a charged, cylindrical weapon, perhaps two feet in length, manually aimed
and operated; it incorporates principles much like those of the Priest-King's Flame
Death mechanism. When not in use, it is encased in a sealed plastic quiver for
storage. When fired it generates a fierce blast of blue flame from its tip, as the air
within the path of its beam ignites into flame. It is effective at distances of up to
100 meters, and its use can be aurally detected by the audible hiss caused by the
ignition of the air in the beam's path.

Any living creature within the path of the beam, as well as any organic matter
caught therein, will instantly erupt into a ball of bright blue flame as the target
consumes itself from within. A silver tube will sputter and become inert once its
charge is fully expended; though a typical charge will last for literally hundreds of
firings. These weapons can only be found within the Nest Complex of the Sardar,
and none that do not dwell there can possess them. An additional example of this
type of weapon also makes an appearance in the series, and is described as a
narrow, cylindrical, silverish object small enough to be concealed in the palm of a
human hand. When used upon its lowest setting, such an object produces a small
flame suitable for igniting brush and kindling; however, it can be reset to fire one
short burst of high intensity blue flame, after which the weapon's charge is
expended.

Quiva
A balanced knife, usually part of a set of seven such weapons. It consists of a
narrow double-edged blade of between 9 and 12 inches in length mounted on a
shaped handle of wood, bone, or horn. It is honed to razor sharpness, and its
blade tapers to a needlepoint. Designed for use primarily as a missile weapon, the
quiva is also perfectly functional as a hand weapon and general utility knife.

Great Bow
A long bow typically made from the wood of the ka-la-na tree or sometimes of
temwood. Unstrung it is over six feet in length, and can require a pull of up to 120
lbs., depending upon the strength of the user. The bowstring itself is usually made
of hemp or sinew lashed with silk thread. Armed with such a weapon, a highly
skilled archer can accurately strike a target the size of a man's head at distances of
up to 100 yards, and by arcing his line of fire upward to allow for gravity can fire a
shaft into a ten foot diameter circle at up to 300 yards.

The arrows of such a bow are temwood, metal-piled and fletched with the
feathers. Each such arrow is approximately three feet in length, and can be tipped
with several different types of arrowhead. Special arrowheads such as ones fitted
with whistles or noisemakers for signalling or reservoirs for flammable liquids are
not unknown.

It is commonly carried slung or strapped over the shoulder of the archer when not
in use, and is accompanied by a belt or shoulder quiver containing forty (or more)
shafts. Its use requires the archer to wear a bracer of thick leather upon the
forearm of his bowarm, and to utilise a special ar
cher's glove or leather finger tab
to protect his hands and arm from friction caused by the motion of the string when
fired. It is a difficult weapon to master, though despite that fact it is widely used by
both many members of the Caste of Peasants.

Crossbow
The standard infantry missile weapon of Gor. It consists of a heavy, flexible bow
of tempered steel, perhaps 18" across (when bent), mounted on a heavy wooden
stock about two feet long, with a trigger mechanism built into the shaped handle. It
can fire several types of spiked, smooth tipped or broad bladed quarrels, with
enough force to penetrate wooden walls, doors or human bodies with relative
ease. It has an effective range of approximately 150 meters for aimed fire, and can
strike a target at up to 200 meters when fired into a mass of bodes Slow to reload,
it is commonly redrawn through use of a foot hook or a bow crank Quarrels, or
bolts are carried by the user in a belt-case or quiver. The preferred weapon of the
Caste of Assassins

Crossbow
(Cavalry)
Similar in most respects to the larger crossbow, though instead of possessing a
heavy metal bow, it has a much lighter bow of layered wood and horn. It is slightly
smaller in overall size than its heavy cousin, and is equipped with a metal stirrup at
the firing end, enabling it to be more quickly restring and drawn from kailla or
tarnback.

Crossbow
(Cavalry)
This weapon is heavily used upon Gor for hunting, sport and warfare. Among its
users are the warriors of the Wagon Peoples, the panther girls (or Talunas), the
Red Hunters and the Red Savages. It is much smaller in size than the great bow,
and is better suited for use from the back of a kailla, tharlarion or tarn. It is often
carved from a single, flexible piece of tem wood or ka-la-na wood, though such
peoples as the Wagon Peoples and the Red Savages can craft shortbows of
layered wood and horn, which gives such bows much greater strength and
durability. The shortbow can fire as many different types of arrowheads as can its
larger cousin, though with substantially less range and penetrating power. The
arrows used by the shortbow are also much shorter than those employed by the
great bow, due to the shorter range of the weapon. These bows come in all shapes
and sizes, and are found throughout Gor.

Short (Bone) Bow
This weapon is heavily used upon Gor for hunting, sport and warfare. Among its
users are the warriors of the Wagon Peoples, the panther girls (or Talunas), the
Red Hunters and the Red Savages. It is much smaller in size than the great bow,
and is better suited for use from the back of a kailla, tharlarion or tarn. It is often
carved from a single, flexible piece of tem wood or ka-la-na wood, though such
peoples as the Wagon Peoples and the Red Savages can craft shortbows of
layered wood and horn, which gives such bows much greater strength and
durability. The shortbow can fire as many different types of arrowheads as can its
larger cousin, though with substantially less range and penetrating power. The
arrows used by the shortbow are also much shorter than those employed by the
great bow, due to the shorter range of the weapon. These bows come in all shapes
and sizes, and are found throughout Gor.

Bola
(Take into consideration, that when this weapon is used, One can very easily kill
the victum, or break bones with it's use)
It consists of three long straps of leather, each about five feet long, each
terminating in a leather sack which contains, sewn inside, a heavy round metal
weight. Developed for hunting fleet-footed and flighted game it is also used as a
weapon of war. Thrown low the long straps, with their approximate ten-foot
sweep, strike the victim and the weighted balls, as soon as resistance is met, whip
about the victim's legs, tangling and tightening the straps. Thrown high it can pin a
man's arms to his sides; thrown at the throat it can strangle him; thrown at the head
the whipping weights can crush his skull. Once a victim is entangled with the bola,
typically another weapon, usually a quiva, is then utilised to dispatch the victim if he
or she still lives.

Tharlarion Lance
A thick spear, normally fashioned of ka-la-na or needle wood, approximately ten
to fourteen feet long. It tapers from a metal tip (either steel, iron or bronze) to a
much thicker handguard type grip... at the thickest part it is four inches in width
and is often fluted to lighten it while preserving its strength. Carried couched
beneath the right arm of the user, the length of the lance itself crossing over and
above the neck of the mount, to menace its target, often supported by a lance-rest
which is either attached to the saddle or worn strapped to the user's chest.

Kaiila Lance
(Wagon Peoples)
A long slender spear, eight to ten feet long, designed to be used from the saddle of
a rider on kaillaback. These lances are not used couched, but rather carried in the
right fist, easily, and are flexible and light. Used primarily for thrusting. They are
black in colour, cut from the poles of young tem trees, and so flexible that they
may be bent almost double before they break. A loose loop of boskhide, wound
twice about the right fist, helps the user to retain the weapon in mounted combat.

Kailla Lance
Hunting
(Red savages)
Similar in many respects to the kailla lance of the wagon peoples, though the
hunting lance of thread Savages is commonly longer, heavier and thicker than the
war lance. They are commonly undecorated or adorned only with a knot or tuft of
feathers. The point of a hunting lance is typically longer and narrower than the war
lance, designed to pierce deeply enough to strike a kailiauk's heart. The shaft is
shaped temwood. The tip is either metal, carved bone or shaped stone, lashed to
the shaft with boiled sinew or rawhide, or attached with metal trade rivets. Leather
grips, hand loops, and decorations are often present also.

Kailla Lance
War
(Red savages)
This weapon is almost identical to the kailla lance of the Wagon Peoples, though it
is more heavily carved and decorated.

Tarn Lance
(Red savages)
Similar in most respects to the war lance, except that it is longer and more slender,
for easier use from tarnback.
 

War Club
A carved, shaped club of wood or bone, often mounted with a stone or metal
head of some sort. This weapon is probably approximately two to three feet in
length.

Battle Axe
This weapon is described as a single-bladed axe of hardened iron, with a blade of
anywhere from 8 to 14 inches in width. It is mounted on a thick wooden handle
and also usually has a wrist thong attached to the end the handle, which enables it
to be more easily retained during combat. Used in conjunction with a round
ironbound shield of wood and hardened leather.

Battle-axe
(Kurii)
A huge axe wielded by the members of the Kurii race who have become native to
Gor. It has a four inch thick round handle of green wood, approximately eight feet
in length, and is equipped with a fixed double-bladed iron axe head, the blade of
which is over two feet wide, and razor sharp. It is typically used in conjunction
with a wide round iron shield some four feet in diameter.

Battle-axe
(Kurii)
This weapon is similar in most respects to the Battle Axe, except it is much larger,
with a handle up to four feet in length. The axe blade is also much larger, and this
weapon is used two-handed, without the benefit of a shield of any sort.
Occasionally such axes will be double-headed, though that adds considerably to
the weight of the weapon.

Tomahawk
This weapon consists of a shaped wooden handle up to two feet in length, capped
with a narrow hatchet-type blade either of sharpened metal, shaped stone or
obsidian glass. Often carved with ceremonial inscriptions, it is a common war-arm
in use by the Red Savages of the vast Grasslands located to the Northwest of the
civilised city-states of Gor. Can be used as a hand weapon, or thrown as a missile
weapon.