Jump to content

Related changes

Enter a page name to see changes on pages linked to or from that page. (To see members of a category, enter Category:Name of category). Changes to pages on your Watchlist are in bold.

Recent changes options Show last 50 | 100 | 250 | 500 changes in last 1 | 3 | 7 | 14 | 30 days
Hide registered users | Hide anonymous users | Hide my edits | Show bots | Hide minor edits
Show new changes starting from 03:24, 4 July 2025
 
Page name:
List of abbreviations:
N
This edit created a new page (also see list of new pages)
m
This is a minor edit
b
This edit was performed by a bot
(±123)
The page size changed by this number of bytes

3 July 2025

N    08:06  Club (weapon) diffhist +17,441 WikiKnight talk contribs (Created page with "{{Redirect|Cudgel|the racehorse|Cudgel (horse)}} {{short description|Blunt weapon}} {{More citations needed|date=December 2010}} thumb|An assortment of club weapons from the ''[[Wujing Zongyao'' from left to right: flail, metal bat, double flail, truncheon, mace, barbed mace]] A '''club''' (also known as a '''cudgel''', '''baton''', '''bludgeon''', '''truncheon''', '''cosh''', '''nightstick''', or '''impact weapon''') is a short staff or s...")
N    05:09  Lucerne hammer diffhist +9,520 WikiKnight talk contribs (Created page with "{{Short description|Early-modern Swiss combination polearm}} thumb|The head of a Swiss Lucerne hammer with four-pronged face, long rear beak and top spike {{Circa|1520}}, [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]] The '''Lucerne hammer''' ({{IPAc-en|l|u|ˈ|s|ɜːr|n}} {{respell|loo|SURN}}) is a polearm that combines a multi-pronged hammer, a long rear spike (''bec'' or ''beak'') and an even longer top spike. It was carried c...")
N    05:00  Poleaxe diffhist +9,054 WikiKnight talk contribs (Created page with "{{short description|Medieval European polearm}} {{hatnote|Several variant spellings redirect here. See also List of Gladiators UK events#Pole-Axe}} {{more citations needed|date=March 2014}} thumb|15th-century [[Republic of Venice|Venetian poleaxe at the Metropolitan Museum of Art]] The '''poleaxe''' (also '''poleax''', '''pollaxe''' and other similar spellings) is a European polearm that was used by Medieval...")