KOPIS
An illustration showing a kopis with a hook-like hilt. Contemporary representations often show the kopis being wound back over the shoulder in preparation for a powerful downward swing.
The 'kopis' is an ancient single-edged sword with a heavy forward-curving blade, designed for delivering strong cleaving blows. Some scholars feel this was developed from the Canaan/Egyptian khopesh. In turn, it is often compared to the shorter Nepalese kukri and the Iberian falcata and may be their predecessor. The word itself is the Greek feminine singular noun derived from the verb ''κόπτω'' (''koptô''), meaning "to cut." The difference in meaning between kopis and makhaira (another Greek word of similar meaning) is not entirely clear in ancient texts, but modern specialists tend to use both terms referred to a class of curved weapons, the only real difference being the direction of the blade curvature.
Though kopis is a Greek word, the ancient Greeks did not often use curved blades in warfare, preferring rather the straight, more martially versatile xiphos. Xenophon however recommended using the curved makhaira for cavalry in ''On Horsemanship'' 12:11.
Greek art shows Persian soldiers wielding the kopis or an axe rather than the straight-bladed Persian akinakes.
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Notes
#: For a good summary of the evidence, see F. Quesada Sanz: "''Máchaira'', ''kopís'', falcata" in ''Homenaje a Francisco Torrent'', Madrid, 1994, pp. 75-94.
#: e.g. Tarassuk & Blair, s.v. "kopis," ''The Complete Encyclopedia of Arms and Weapons'', 1979.
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