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WLA brooklynmuseum Boat Building Scene 2
Adzes, Marshall and Yap Islands - Pacific collection - Peabody Museum, Harvard University - DSC05732
Japanese adze.

An adze (/ˈædz/; alternative spelling: adz) is an ancient type of edge tool[1] dating back to the stone age. Adzes are used for smoothing or carving wood in hand woodworking, similar to an axe but with the head mounted perpendicular to the handle. Two basic forms of an adze are the hand adze, a short handled tool swung with one hand, and a foot adz, a long handled tool capable of powerful swings using both hands - the cutting edge usually striking at foot or shin level. The blade of an adze is set at right angles to the tool's shaft (like a hoe or plane), unlike the blade of an axe which is set in line with the shaft. A very similar (but blunt) tool used for digging in hard ground is called a mattock.

Contents

History[edit]

Europe[edit]

In central Europe, adzes made by knapping flint are known from the late Mesolithic onwards ("Scheibenbeile"). Polished adzes and axes made of ground stone, such as amphibolite, basalt or Jadeite are typical for the Neolithic period. Shoe-last adzes or celts, named for their typical shape, are found in the Linear Pottery and Rössen cultures of the early Neolithic. Adzes were also made and used by prehistoric southeast Asian cultures, especially in the Mekong River basin.[citation needed]

Africa[edit]

The adze is shown in ancient Egypt from the Old Kingdom onward.[2] Originally the adze blades were made of stone, but already in the Predynastic Period copper adzes had all but replaced those made of flint.[3] While stone blades were fastened to the wooden handle by tying, metal blades had sockets into which the handle was fitted. Examples of Egyptian adzes can be found in museums and on the Petrie Museum website.

A depiction of an adze was also used as a hieroglyph, representing the consonants stp, "chosen", and used as: ...Pharaoh XX, chosen of God/Goddess YY...

The ahnetjer (Manuel de Codage transliteration: aH-nTr) depicted as an adze-like instrument,[4] was used in the Opening of the Mouth ceremony, intended to convey power over their senses to statues and mummies. It was apparently the foreleg of a freshly sacrificed bull or cow with which the mouth was touched.[5][6]

As iron-age technology moved south into Africa with migrating ancient Egyptians, they carried their technology with them, including adzes. To this day, iron adzes are used all over rural Africa for various purposes - from digging pit latrines, and chopping firewood, to tilling crop fields - whether they are of maize (corn), coffee, tea, pyrethrum, beans, millett, yams or a plethora of other cash and subsistence crops.

New Zealand[edit]

Prehistoric Māori adzes from New Zealand, used for wood carving, were made from nephrite, also known as jade. At the same time on Henderson Island, a small coral island in eastern Polynesia lacking any rock other than limestone, natives may have fashioned giant clamshells into adzes.[citation needed]

Northwest Coast America[edit]

Native Alaskan boat builder using an adze

American Northwest coast native peoples traditionally used adzes for both functional construction (from bowls to canoes) and art (from masks to totem poles). Northwest coast adzes take two forms: hafted and D-handle. The hafted form is similar in form to a European adze with the haft constructed from a natural crooked branch which approximately forms a 60% angle. The thin end is used as the handle and the thick end is flattened and notched such that an adze iron can be lashed to it. Modern hafts are sometimes constructed from a sawed blank with a dowel added for strength at the crook. The second form is the D-handle adze which is basically an adze iron with a directly-attached handle. The D-handle therefore provides no mechanical leverage. Northwest coast adzes are often classified by size and iron shape vs. role. As with European adzes, iron shapes include straight, gutter and lipped. Where larger Northwest adzes are similar in size to their European counterparts, the smaller sizes are typically much lighter such that they can be used for the detailed smoothing, shaping and surface texturing required for figure carving. Final surfacing is sometimes performed with a crooked knife.[citation needed]

New Guinea and Melanesia[edit]

Contemporary stone adzes from New Guinea

Ground stone adzes are still in use by a variety of people in Irian Jaya (Indonesia), Papua New Guinea and some of the smaller Islands of Melanesia and Micronesia. The hardstone is ground on a riverine rock with the help of water until it has got the desired shape. It is then fixed to a natural grown angled wood with resin and plant fibers. The shape and manufacture of these adzes is similar to those found from the Neolithic stone age in Europe. A variety of minerals are used. Their everyday use is on a steady decline, as it is much more convenient to cut fire wood using imported steel axes or machetes. However, certain ceremonial crafts such as making canoes, ceremonial shields, masks, drums, containers or communal houses etc. may require the use of traditional-made stone adzes.

Modern adzes[edit]

Rye Shipyard- the Construction of Motor Fishing Vessels, Rye, Sussex, England, UK, 1944 D22783

Modern adzes are made from steel with wooden handles, and enjoy limited use: occasionally in semi-industrial areas, but particularly by 'revivalists' such as those at the Colonial Williamsburg cultural center in Virginia, USA. However, the traditional adze has largely been replaced by the sawmill and the powered-plane, at least in industrialised cultures. It remains in use for some specialist crafts, for example by coopers. Adzes are also in current use by artists such as Northwest Coast American and Canadian Indian sculptors doing pole work, masks and bowls.

Foot adze[edit]

19th century knowledge woodworking adze and axe

"Adzes are used for removing heavy waste, leveling, shaping, or trimming the surfaces of timber..."[7] and boards. Generally, the user stands astride a board or log and swings the adze downwards between his feet, chipping off pieces of wood, moving backwards as they go and leaving a relatively smooth surface behind.

Foot adzes are most commonly known as shipbuilder's or carpenter's adzes. They ranges in sizes from 00 to 5 being 3 1/4 to 4 3/4 pounds with the cutting edge 3 inches to 4 1/2 inches wide.[8] On the modern, steel adze the cutting edge may be flat for smoothing work to very rounded for hollowing work such as bowls, gutters and canoes. The shoulders or sides of an adze may be curved called a lipped adze, used for notching. The end away from the cutting edge is called the pole and be of different shapes, generally flat or a pin pole.

  • Carpenter's adze - A heavy adze, often with very steep curves, and a very heavy, blunt pole. The weight of this adze makes it unsuitable for sustained overhead adzing.
    • Railroad adze - A carpenter's adze which had its bit extended in an effort to limit the breaking of handles when shaping railroad ties (railway sleepers). Early examples in New England began showing up approximately in the 1940s - 1950s. The initial prototypes clearly showed a weld where the extension was attached.
  • Shipwright's adze - A lighter, and more versatile adze than the carpenter's adze. This was designed to be used in a variety of positions, including overhead, as well as in front on waist and chest level.
    • Lipped shipwright's adze - A variation of the shipwright's adze. It features a wider than normal bit, whose outside edges are sharply turned up, so that when gazing directly down the adze, from bit to eye, the cutting edge resembles an extremely wide and often very flat U. This adze was mainly used for shaping cross grain, such as for joining planks.
  • Another group of adzes can be differentiated by the handles; the D-handled adzes have a handle where the hand can be wrapped around the D, close to the bit. These adzes closely follow traditional forms in that the bit or tooth is not wrapped around the handle as a head.
  • The head of an ice axe typically possesses an adze for chopping rough steps in ice.
  • A firefighter tool called the Halligan bar has a dull adze on one end of the bar. This bar is a multipurpose tool for forcible entry of a structure and demolition with a forked pry-bar on one end and an adze and spike on the other, called the adze-end.
  • Demolition adze - A demolition adze has a dull edge and is used for separating materials in the demolition or salvage of old buildings.

Hand adze[edit]

Cooper's adze
  • There are also a number of specialist, short-handled adzes used by coopers, wainwrights, chair makers, and bowl and trough making. Many of these have shorter handles for control and more curve in the head to allow better clearance for shorter cuts.

See also[edit]

  • Mauna Kea Adz Quarry, used by prehistoric Hawaiians to obtain basalt stone for adzes and other tools

Footnotes and references[edit]

  1. ^ Any tool with a sharp cutting edge. Oxford English Dictionary: Edge-tool, edged-tool.
  2. ^ Rice M (1999). Who's who in ancient Egypt. New York: Routledge. p. 25. ISBN 0-415-15448-0. "A statue of the third dynasty boat builder Ankhwah is showing him holding an adze" 
  3. ^ Shubert SB, Bard, KA (1999). Encyclopedia of the archaeology of ancient Egypt. New York: Routledge. p. 458. ISBN 0-415-18589-0. 
  4. ^ Erman A, Grapow H (1926). Wörterbuch der ägyptischen Sprache [Dictionary of the Egyptian language] 1. Leipzig: JC Hinrichs. p. 214.24. 
  5. ^ Schwabe CW, Gordon A (2004). The quick and the dead: biomedical theory in ancient Egypt. Leiden: Brill. p. 76. ISBN 90-04-12391-1. 
  6. ^ Eyre C (2002). The cannibal hymn: a cultural and literary study. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. p. 54. ISBN 0-85323-706-9. 
  7. ^ Salaman, R. A.. Dictionary of tools used in the woodworking and allied trades, c. 1700-1970. USA edition, New York: Scribner, 1975. 23. Print.
  8. ^ Salaman, 23

Original courtesy of Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adze — Please support Wikipedia.
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9917 videos foundNext > 

Making a beam, hewing, using froe, axe and adze

Details at http://www.idostuff.co.uk. Making a replica beam for an old cottage using traditional tools (apart from tree felling with a chainsaw). A satifying...

Curtis Buchanan - 15. Carving the Seat with the Adze and the Scorp

Episode Fifteen: "Carving the Seat with the Adze and the Scorp" of the series "Make a Comb Back Windsor Chair with Curtis Buchanan"

Applewood and the Adze

Today I decided to dedicate some time to a friend Randy who forged me an Adze out of an old carpenters hammer. Randy lives across the country and we've never...

Using an adze

http://www.woodlands.co.uk/ Kim Williams is using an adze. She is dubbing or adzing some timber planks using an adze, for a reconstruction Anglo Saxon buildi...

Carving a Bowl with Adze, Axe, Gouge, and Drawknife

A simple video showing an Adze, Axe, Gouge, and Drawknife working together to carve a large bowl from a black walnut log. To see more, visit davidffisher.com...

Applewood and the Adze PT II

Working on my applewood bowl. Using the axe to shape the outside, and the adze on the inside. The music was recorded by me. It was never meant to be heard. J...

adze handle

by me.

working with adze on a large burl

Some sequences of me making a bowl from a big birch burl. Not the whole process but some. To show the adze at work. It is from a few years back.

Using an Adze - Neil Taylor working at the CLA July 09

Here is a very short cli[p of Neil at work.

Making an Adze

Add later.

9917 videos foundNext > 

67 news items

waateanews.com

waateanews.com
Sun, 16 Jun 2013 19:29:08 -0700

Pouroto Ngaropo, a Ngāti Awa senior cultural advisor, says obsidian flakes, hangi and crop storage pits and a broken adze were also found, confirming the site was Te Marakai of Taiwhakaea or Taiwhakaea's garden. He says in line with tradition it's ...
 
GhanaWeb
Fri, 14 Jun 2013 19:25:49 -0700

Onky3ree biara na Ghanaman Obenfo Kofi Asare Opoku a, merekasa yi, owo America no kyer33 me adze wo Legon, oy3 Afrostads anaa d3 African Studies wo afe 1975. Ono na okenyan me do wo h3n kusum na atormuadze, na Akan amambra ho suahu na ...
 
Otago Daily Times
Fri, 14 Jun 2013 10:36:47 -0700

Mr Allingham says evidence of occupation found in recent years includes cooking stones, the unfinished adze-like tool mentioned by Mr Loh, and flakes of quartzite used for making tools which probably came from quarries further up the valley. Because of ...
 
The Daily Post
Thu, 13 Jun 2013 18:54:48 -0700

As well as the koiwi, archaeologists from CFG Heritage found fine pieces of obsidian (glass-like volcanic rock), used for cutting, a hangi pit, crop storage pits and a broken adze at the site. Ngati Awa senior cultural advisor Pouroto Ngaropo, said the ...
 
AllAfrica.com
Tue, 11 Jun 2013 02:57:50 -0700

The fleeing persons, mainly of Tiv extraction, arrived in their numbers at the IDPs camps situated in Ortese-Igugun-Adze, Km 28 and Central Primary School, Km 25 along Makurdi-Lafia highway all in Guma Area. One of them, Aondotar James-Tar, told our ...
 
Tallahassee Democrat (blog)
Sat, 08 Jun 2013 21:15:41 -0700

With the bow stem on the ground, notch it with your foot adze. You know, the tool that looks like an axe built sideways. Notching out the wood lightens the piece, making it easier to move the stem out of the woods. If the bend isn't quite to your ...
 
AllAfrica.com
Mon, 10 Jun 2013 04:10:10 -0700

The Chronicle looks forward eagerly to the day when there would be a positive change in government attitude here. After all it is late Professor John Evans Atta Mills who pointed out that adze wo fie oye! Let's practise what we preach, please! Comment ...

Daily Mail

Daily Mail
Mon, 27 May 2013 08:59:50 -0700

... discovered after routine dredging work but it is now only display at Poole Museum. Visitors to Brownsea Island, the largest of eight islands in Poole Harbour, helped shape the flat-fronted boat using an adze, an ancient axe-like tool used for wood ...
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