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axe| Weapon or tool with a stone or metal head. In archaeology, it denotes the stone and bronze axeheads used by the prehistoric peoples of Europe. More generally, the term ‘axe’ or battle-axe is used for a one- or two-handed weapon, later made of iron or steel. The poleaxe or halberd is an axe with a long handle. |
| Stone axeheads, made of flint or other types of rock, are usually 18 cm/7 in long, but vary in the range 2.5–50 cm/1–20 in. Some jadeite examples were almost certainly prestige objects of symbolic value, and are often found in elite graves. Bronze axeheads are commonly 12–15 cm/5–6 in long, but may be up to 25 cm/10 in long. Later bronze axeheads often had a socket for the handle, which would have been lashed to the head with cord made of leather or other organic material. |
| Axes served also as chisels, adzes, and other tools. The term celt is sometimes applied to stone axes (from Latin celtes ‘stone chisel’). |
| The remains of early axeheads were once superstitiously regarded as ‘thunderbolts’, or as objects endowed with strange curative powers. |
Axe| River in Somerset, England; length 40 km/25 mi. It rises in the Mendip Hills at Wookey Hole, and enters the Bristol Channel at Uphill. |
Axe| River in Dorset and Devon, England; length 33 km/21 mi. It flows through Axminster into the English Channel at Lyme Bay, but is not navigable. |
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