Print Page | Close Window

Bayonet History

Printed From: Enfield-Rifles.com
Category: Enfields
Forum Name: Enfield Bayonets
Forum Description: General discussion about bayonets for the Enfield rifles
URL: http://www.enfield-rifles.com/forum_posts.asp?TID=1032
Printed Date: March 26 2026 at 8:19pm
Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 12.07 - https://www.webwizforums.com


Topic: Bayonet History
Posted By: Cookie Monster
Subject: Bayonet History
Date Posted: May 12 2007 at 10:52am

Bayonet History
  

    A bayonet is a knife- or dagger-shaped weapon designed to fit on or over the muzzle of a rifle or similar weapon. It is a close combat weapon.

    Its evolution can be traced to a certain extent to a fortuitous accident. In the mid-17th century irregular conflicts of rural France, the peasants of the Southern French town of Bayonne, having run out of powder and shot, rammed their long-bladed hunting knives into the muzzles of their primitive muskets to fashion impromptu spears, and by necessity created an ancillary weapon that was to influence Western European infantry tactics until the early 20th century.

    The benefit of such a dual-purpose arm contained in one was soon apparent. The early muskets fired at a slow rate (about a round per minute when loading with loose powder and ball), and were unreliable. Bayonets provided a useful addition to the weapon-system when an enemy charging to contact could cross the musket's killing ground (a range of approx 100 yards/metres at the most optimistic) at the expense of perhaps only one volley from their waiting opponents. A foot long bayonet (extending to a regulation 17 inches (approx 43 centimetres) during the Napoleonic period, on a 6 foot (almost 2 meter) tall musket achieved a reach similar to the infantry spear, and later halberd, of earlier times.

    Early bayonets were of the "plug" type. The bayonet had a round handle that fit directly into the musket barrel. This naturally prevented the gun from being fired.

    Later "socket" bayonets offset the blade from the muzzle. The bayonet attached over the outside of the barrel with a ring-shaped socket, secured on later models by a spring-loaded catch on the muzzle of the musket barrel.

    Many socket bayonets were triangular in order to provide sideways stability of the blade without much increase in weight. This design of bayonet did not include a handle to use the blade apart from the gun.

    18th and 19th century military tactics included various massed bayonet charges and defences. The British Army was particularly known for its bayonet use, although towards the early 19th century and the flowering of Napoleonic warfare, the primacy of regular and speedy volley-fire saw the British eclipse their opponents in line to line infantry combat.

    There are rumours among old (pre-World War I) soldiers of exotic bayonet techniques, almost as complex and involved as sword-fighting. Supposedly, rather than just the modern simplified blocks and thrusts, there were also cuts, counters and disarms, in which a sliding block would lead to an attack or disarmament. Supposedly, these techniques also taught use of edge and point, and special vulnerabilities such as wrists, ankles, neck, brachial and femoral arteries. Further, all types of moves are said to have been practised in every orientation, and relative position of the two fighters' weapons, in training methods similar to advanced sword-fighting. These techniques were possible because of the long periods of continued training of the professional armies before this period. Some old French training manuals from the 1850s survive to the present day and scans of them posted online do appear to support this contention.


    A late 19th century Prussian bayonetIn the Geneva Accords on Humane Warfare, triangular and cross-sectional bayonets were outlawed because the wounds they produce do not close easily, and were said to be inhumane, though such designs are, despite this, not uncommon even today.

    Most modern bayonets have a fuller (visible on the top half of the blade shown above), which is a concave depression in the blade designed to reduce the weight and increase the stiffness of the blade; it also allows air into the wound it produces, breaking the vacuum and making the bayonet easier to withdraw after a stabbing attack with it and less prone to getting stuck in the wound.

    Even in modern warfare, bayonets are still used as weapons because, although most combat occurs at a diswhitece, troops are always required to close with an enemy to "mop-up". A bayonet also remains useful as a utility knife, and as an aid to combat morale. Despite the limitations of the bayonet, it is still issued in most armies and most armies still train with them. The modern sawback U.S. M9 Bayonet, officially adopted in 1984, is issued with a special sheath designed to double as a wire cutter. Some production runs of the M9 have a fuller and some do not, depending upon which contractor manufactured that batch and what the military specs were at the time. The M9 Bayonet replaces the M7 Bayonet of the 1960s, though in US Marine Corps use, the Ka-bar fighting knife of WWII is still issued. As of summer 2004, the US Marine Corps is also issuing small quantities of new bayonets of a different design from the M9, with an 8" Bowie knife-style blade and no fuller, manufactured by Ontario Knife Company of Ontario, New York.

    Modern bayonets are often knife-shaped with handles and a socket, or permanently attached to the rifle as with the SKS. Depending on where and when a specific SKS was manufactured, it may have a permanently attached bayonet with a knife-shaped blade (Russian, Romanian, Yugoslavian, early Chinese), or a cruciform (late Chinese) or triangular (Albanian) spike-style bayonet of the type outlawed by the Geneva Accords, or no bayonet at all.

    The push-twist motion of fastening the modern bayonet has given name to several connectors and contacts including the BNC ("Bayonet Neill-Concelman") connector.




Replies:
Posted By: Cookie Monster
Date Posted: May 12 2007 at 10:54am

The Plug Bayonet

In the early 17th Century the matchlock musket was a cumbersome, slow loading weapon and the musketeers required the protection of soldiers carrying long, wooden-shafted pikes to shield them from enemy cavalry and footsoldiers during the lengthy reloading process.  As the century progressed, more emphasis began to be placed on the use of the musket as a primary weapon of the common soldier and as a result, the pike was gradually phased out.

In former times, the usual practice when engaging at close quarters was to fire the musket and then follow the pikemen as they closed on the enemy wielding the musket as if it were a club.  A sword or long knife was also carried as a secondary weapon.  The use of the gun in this way was far from effective and the idea was hit upon to jam the tapered handle of a belt knife in to the muzzle, temporarily converting the musket to a short pike.  This "plug bayonet" produced a far more effective weapon than the clubbed musket and in time removed the need for large numbers of pikemen. 
The term "bayonet" is thought to have derived from the French town of Bayonne, famous for its cutlers and may have originally referred to a type of long knife or dagger which was carried by soldiers of the time.

http://thearmouryonline.co.uk/Plug02.jpg">Plug%20Bayonet
The obvious disadvantage of the plug bayonet is that once fixed, the gun cannot be fired until the bayonet is removed. 
In the late 17th Century experiments were carried out to address this problem and the short- lived "ring bayonet" was born.  This was affixed to the barrel by two rings, but seems not to have found favour and was replaced shortly after by 
the socket bayonet - a pattern which would last until after WWII.
The Socket Bayonet

The socket bayonet  first appears in the ranks of the French army  in the 1670’s and afterwards came into general use throughout Europe.  The standard form of the socket bayonet comprised a short steel tube 3-4 inches long fitting over the barrel of the musket on to which was welded a steel blade.  The socket is then  locked on to the muzzle by means of a "zig-zag" slot which engages with the foresight stud. This innovation would now allow the musket to be fired and reloaded without removing the bayonet.
 

French%20Socket%20Bayonet%20-%20attached
Initially, many fanciful knife and sword type blades were attached to the socket, until around 1715 when the familiar triangular section blades were introduced as the new standard pattern.
At the start 18th Century there still seemed to be very little uniformity in the weapons carried by the common soldier and the external diameter of musket barrels could vary greatly.  In the days of the plug-bayonet this was not a problem as the tapering handle meant that "one size fits all". However, in order to fit, the socket bayonet had to be matched more accurately to the barrel diameter. 

 
Skennerton%20-%20British%20and%20Commonwealth%20Bayonets      An early remedy to this was the split-socket bayonet where a
     longitudinal split was made down the socket allowing the
     diameter to be adjusted to fit any barrel. This must have reduced
     the structural strength of the weapon considerably and they
     appear to have had a relatively short life, possibly due in Britain
     to the introduction of the more uniform "Brown Bess" musket as
     the standard issue weapon of the British soldier from c.1725.
With this design established, the form of the socket bayonet was to remain almost unchanged for the next 150 years - the minor variations which did occur worldwide were mainly to the method of securing the socket to the barrel. Some early sockets were fitted with a leaf spring to help lock the bayonet to the foresight stud, whilst several different springs and catches on the guns themselves came and went during the 19th Century.  One of the most effective methods of retaining the bayonet appears to have been the twisting locking-ring which is found on sockets of many different countries throughout the 19th Century. 
Wilkinson-Latham%20-%20Antique%20Weapons%20and%20Armour
As previously mentioned, the socket bayonet was still in use well in to the first half of the 20th Century - during WWII the Russian troops were armed with a socket bayonet for the Mosin-Nagent rifle and even the British had the No.4 Spike bayonet (although contemporary accounts seem to suggest that this was chiefly used to open tins of milk rather than as a weapon of war....)

For more details on the evolution of Commonwealth socket bayonets I would recommend the reader to consult Skennerton & Richardson’s excellent and detailed work "British & Commonwealth Bayonets". 
http://thearmouryonline.co.uk/Bibliography.htm - (See Bibliography)

 

Beyond Sockets

In 1800 the British army established the Corps of Riflemen (later to become the 95th Rifle Regiment) drawn from existing Line Regiments. This new Corps were to be  issued with a new weapon, the Baker rifled musket.  This rifle, based on those carried by German Jaeger troops was issued with a bayonet which, although it did not replace the socket, was to start a new trend in bayonets that would last for the next 100 years. 

Baker%20Rifle%20and%20Bayonet%20-%20Wilkinson-Latham%20-%20Antique%20Guns%20in%20Colour
    Baker Rifle & Bayonet  c.1800
The Pattern 1800 Baker Sword bayonet had a flat, unfullered 24 inch blade, ribbed brass grips, a brass knuckle-guard and was carried in a leather and brass scabbard.  The means of attachment of this bayonet was a bar brazed to the barrel which engaged with a mortise slot on the hilt of the bayonet and was held in place by a sprung locking bolt operated by a press-stud. This method (with some modifications) was later to be adopted almost universally for the attachment of bayonets.
Contemporary accounts show that it was very popular with Riflemen and aside from its status value was particularly useful for wood and brush-cutting, a task for which many later sword bayonets were destined
The Baker bayonet was, to all intents and purposes, a sword with all the romantic associations of that weapon. With the rise of the many patriotically inspired volunteer regiments in the early 19th Century, it is not surprising that such sword bayonets, often worn while off duty were more appealing to such soldiers than the workaday, but possibly more efficient socket bayonets. Over the course of the century, sword bayonets were often used as symbols of status and rank, being especially popular with those ranks not normally permitted to wear a sword.  Many, particularly the early volunteer weapons, were elaborate pieces that although decorative must have been quite impractical in there primary function
as bayonets.
Wilkinson-Latham%20-%20Antique%20Weapons%20and%20Armour
   Napoleonic Volunteer Baker 
   Rifle Bayone
As the British committee set up to modernise the British cavalry sword eventually discovered in 1906,  the most serious wounds can be inflicted with a thrusting stroke using a slim, rigid blade - a form which is embodied by the triangular and cruciform bladed socket bayonets. This being the case, sword bayonets which vary from this pattern having thicker, single edged blades are a compromise. Their efficiency as a thrusting weapon is reduced whilst at the same time are impractically short and unwieldy to be used as swords.
However, there interest to collectors is unquestionable. They show, not only a higher degree of craftsmanship than their socket cousins, but may I suggest that they are also more interesting to the beginner.  If you do not have long experience of identifying the tiny variations in the socket bayonet you are often hard pressed to tell which century a piece is from, let alone the country of origin!
Before leaving the sword bayonet, mention must be made of the so called "Yataghan" bayonets such as that for the famous 1866 "Chassepot" rifle. These will be the most common 19th century pattern encountered by collectors.  The first of this type, based on the Turkish recurved  yataghan was introduced by France in 1840 to NCOs and this shape quickly spread throughout the rest of Europe and the Americas.  The first British yataghan bayonet, the brass gripped  P1853 Artillery was an almost identical copy of the French 1842 model.

   

A Selection of Yataghan Bayonets

Top:       American yataghan c.1865
Middle:  British P1856 Artillery bayonet
Bottom:  French M1842 bayonet

Wilkinson-Latham%20-%20Antique%20Weapons%20and%20Armour
The Knife Bayonet

Towards the end of the 19th Century military fashions once again began to change and the long elaborate sword type bayonets began to give way to a shorter, easier to handle knife-type. This type with wooden grips and usually a metal scabbard quickly became the standard which has lasted to the current day.
There are a couple of contenders for the earliest actual knife bayonet (as opposed to shortened sword bayonets) The most commonly quoted is the German 1871/84 pattern issued in 1886, however an earlier example could be the United States M1861 "Dahlgren". This was a short brass and wood gripped bowie-bladed bayonet for the 1876 Navy rifle, reputed to have been designed by Admiral John Dahlgren.

Stephens%20-%20The%20Collectors%20Pictorial%20Book%20of%20Bayonets JL%20Janzen%20-%20Bayonets%20From%20Janzens%20Notebook
The change to the short knife was by no means immediate or universal, many long sword and sockets continued in use, particularly on the shorter carbine weapons which have tended to have longer bayonets to make up the length. An example of this is the P1879 for the Martini Henry Artillery Carbine which is a magnificent sword bayonet over 31 inches long.
Unusual Bayonets

The evolution of the bayonet has by no means been a linear progression over time as the brief history above might suggest.  The different types of bayonet existed side by side and many variations on the theme have been tried over the years - some which were practical but were never widely produced and some which were quite bizarre. 

An example of the latter has to be the privately produced 1916 Pritchard pistol bayonet. Manufactured by WW Greener, this was a short brass-hilted affair utilising a cut-down French Gras bayonet blade and was meant to attach to the Webley mark IV revolver. The idea of a bayonet on a pistol was not new but was probably as ineffective in WWI as it was in the 18th Century.  Only around 200 of these were ever produced as private purchases. Pritchard%20Bayonet%20:%20Skennerton%20-%20British%20and%20Commonwealth%20Bayonets
American Model 1873 trowel bayonet 

As its name suggests, the shape is that of a mason's trowel and was envisaged as doubling as an entrenching tool.  The idea never caught on and issue of the piece was limited. 

Stephens%20-%20Collectors%20Pictorial%20Book%20of%20Bayonets
Cutlass Bayonets  -  The British Naval Pattern 1859 was the first of the "cutlass" bayonets and were intended to do away with the necessity of a separate boarding cutlass.  Initially these were long, heavy, slightly curved unfullered blades with sheet steel bowl guards, although later patterns were lightened and straightened.  In 1871 they were converted for use with the Martini Henry rifle and were to be the basis of the aforementioned P1879 Artillery Carbine sword bayonet. Wilkinson-Latham%20-%20Antique%20Weapons%20and%20Armour
Ramrod Bayonets  -  Several patterns of these misleading named bayonet (the rifles were breech loading) were produced in the United States between 1882 to 1903 for the Springfield rifle.  When not in use the bayonet slides into the stock of the rifle and is held in place with a spring-clip. The pattern however is older, having been used on the M 1833 Musketoon. Stephens%20-%20Collectors%20Pictorial%20Book%20of%20Bayonets
Practice Bayonets Occasionally you may come across a bayonet which has a dull blade and a ball, disk or rough blob of metal in place of the sharp tip.  This will almost certainly be a practice bayonet used to train soldiers in the art of bayonet fencing whilst reducing injuries.  In some cases, rather than a dedicated practice bayonet, old stocks of bayonets were blunted and had the tips rounded off for use in bayonet drill or fencing practice.
The Future

The bayonet in all its forms must represent one the most primitive of weapons - a sharp object mounted on a shaft to gain extra reach than could be had by holding a blade in the hand. 
Even in the 21st century when the flint blades of our aboriginal ancestors have been replaced by vanadium steel and battles are conducted at ranges measured in miles rather than yards, the bayonet still has a place as the last-ditch weapon of almost all armies of the world.  Almost all assault rifles produced today still have provision for a bayonet.



Posted By: Cookie Monster
Date Posted: May 12 2007 at 10:58am
 
Brown Bess Socket Bayonet


Posted By: Cookie Monster
Date Posted: May 12 2007 at 10:59am
Pattern 1876


Posted By: Cookie Monster
Date Posted: May 12 2007 at 11:00am


Posted By: Cookie Monster
Date Posted: May 12 2007 at 11:01am
Pattern 1887


Posted By: Cookie Monster
Date Posted: May 12 2007 at 11:01am
Pattern 1888


Posted By: Cookie Monster
Date Posted: May 12 2007 at 11:02am
Pattern 1903


Posted By: Cookie Monster
Date Posted: May 12 2007 at 11:03am
Pattern 1907


Posted By: Cookie Monster
Date Posted: May 12 2007 at 11:04am

Type 30 bayonet



Posted By: Cookie Monster
Date Posted: May 12 2007 at 11:04am
No5 Jungle Carbine bayonet


Posted By: Cookie Monster
Date Posted: May 12 2007 at 11:05am
No 7 MKI Bayonet


Posted By: Cookie Monster
Date Posted: May 12 2007 at 11:06am
No 9


Posted By: Cookie Monster
Date Posted: May 12 2007 at 11:07am
FN-L1A3 Bayonet


Posted By: Cookie Monster
Date Posted: May 13 2007 at 3:03am

History of Bayonets

  "All nations boast of their prowess with the bayonet, but few men really enjoy a hand-to-hand fight with the bayonet. English and French both talk much of the bayonet but in Egypt in 1801 they threw stones at each other when their ammunition was exhausted and one English sergeant was killed by a stone.
  At Inkerman again the British threw stones at the Russians, not without effect; and I am told upon good authority that the Russians and Japanese, both of whom proffes to love the bayonet, threw stones at each other rather than close, even in this twentieth-century."

J.W.Fortescue, Military History




Antique Spanish hunt Plug Bayonet from 1700

  The bayonet stems directly from the various forms of polearm, it was obviously inappropriate to have a firearm-bearing soldier encumbered by a pike, yet there was need for a polearm to stand off cavalry and for hand-to-hand encounters when ammunition was gone or when there was no time to reload.

  The original "bayonnette" - the name came from the town of its supposed origin, Bayonne in France - was introduced into the French Army in 1647.

  It was a plug bayonet, a spear-like blade to which was attached a long conical steel plug inserted directly into the muzzle of the soldier`s musket, a collar lodging against the barrel to prevent it sliding too far in. This had certain defects; the musket could not be fired once the bayonet was fitted, and during the act of fitting the soldier was virtually unarmed. Misfortune overtook an English army at Killiecrankie in 1689, when a sudden rush of Scottish Highlanders overwhelmed them as they were fixing bayonets.

  As a result of these defects, the socket bayonet was developed; this had the blade cranked and attached to a hollow sleeve which slipped over the muzzle of the musket. The blade lay below the axis of the barrel and left sufficient clearance to permit the weapon to be loaded and fired while the bayonet was fixed.

  Although generally considered as the infantryman`s assault weapon, the bayonet was originally a defensive instrument. Steady infantry standing two or three deep and adopting a "square" formation could defend their position against a sudden rush of cavalry; the combined lenght of the musket and bayonet was sufficient to permit a standing soldier to reach a man mounted upon a horse.


Square
The 28th of Foot form a square at Waterloo to resist a French cavalry


  The idea of using a short sword as a bayonet was tried from time to time but the first regular users of the sword-type blade appear to have been the British rifle regiments in the early 1800s. However, the advent of breech-loading, and then magazine arms provided infantry with a firepower capable of beating off cavalry, at which time the bayonet turned from being primarily defensive to being a personal offensive weapon.
  For this a knife-like blade was of more use than a spike blade, and so from the midle of the 19th century the knife or sword blade became common, though a few armies still retained spike blades.

  The difficulties of fixing bayonets in the heat of the battle led some armies to adopt permanently-attached bayonets which folded above or below the barrel of the weapon and could be released and locked into place very quickly when required.
  A singularity of the Imperial Russian Army, which carried over into the Soviet Army, was the permanently fixed bayonet; no scabbards were issued, and the bayonet remained on the rifle muzzle at all times.

  With the adoption of modern short assault rifles the utility of the bayonet as a weapon was placed in doubt; the combination is not well suited to bayonet fighting.



Posted By: A square 10
Date Posted: June 15 2007 at 2:41am
great read , nice photos of your bayos as well , i gotta agree that my M9 mounted on my AR15-A3 seems a suitable 'last resort' only
and far less practical than the p07 on the end of a SMLE


Posted By: hoadie
Date Posted: July 03 2007 at 11:50am
I just recieved an original bayo tonight.Its socket type.Its not big enough for a .577.I'm thinking maybe Martini Henry, or Snider Enfield(just guesses)It has alot of stamps on it.Does anyone have info on the stamp marks?
Hoadie

-------------
Loose wimmen tightened here


Posted By: Cookie Monster
Date Posted: July 03 2007 at 1:36pm
Hoadie what are they? I have a lot of info on those???
 
CM


Posted By: Shamu
Date Posted: July 03 2007 at 7:52pm
Excellent information! I never knew the origins of the word till now. Thanks.
OT: There was a movie (old 1950's B&W) about the scientific research department during WW2. I think it was called "The Backroom Boys" or something similar.
One of the plot lines was this guy developing an improved bayonet. Every time he appeared the thing got fancier. Finally the frustrated chief scientist  says "Have you any idea what the average squaddie uses his bayonet for? OPENING CANS OF CORNED BEEF!"
For some odd reason that line has gotten stuck in my mind for ever.


-------------
Don't shoot till you see the whites of their thighs. (Unofficial motto of the Royal Air Force)


Posted By: hoadie
Date Posted: July 03 2007 at 10:54pm
well Cookie, its a tri-corner (sharpest point I've ever seen on a tri corner bayo).It has a 2 just below the blood gutter on flat side.Below that is a E. Below that-& slightly left are the small letters:REL(maybe a V as well).below that: 10/73.Under that is what appears to be an attempt @ a U with 55 stamped beside it.Below that-& slightly right is a U, under that slightly left is either a "V" or a "Y".
On the socket portion of the bayo, are the stamps:"U" or maybe a poor "O", with an 8 beside it.
I cant find any other marks, except the small triangular red paint behind the screw.
Any ideas?
Hoadie

-------------
Loose wimmen tightened here



Print Page | Close Window

Forum Software by Web Wiz Forums® version 12.07 - https://www.webwizforums.com
Copyright ©2001-2024 Web Wiz Ltd. - https://www.webwiz.net