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The valaška (Polish: ciupaga, Hungarian: fokos, Ukrainian: бартка, топірець) is a long thin light axe used in past centuries by shepherds and other Gorals in the Carpathian Mountains, especially in Poland, Slovakia, Ukraine and Hungary. The main feature of a valaška is a combination of a tool with a walking stick, which could also be used as a light weapon. It has symbolic historical and cultural connotations and is still used as a prop in many traditional dances, for example the odzemok.
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Appearance
A valaška is a light axe with a long and straight wooden shaft, often with a metal butt. The length of the shaft is usually slightly more than 1 metre. The shafts were usually engraved as their owners had plenty of time for crafting.
A small metal head-piece is sharp on one side while the other side is flat and can be used as a hammer. The head-piece is formed to fit comfortably into the hand so the valaška could be used as a walking stick.
Today's valaškas are mostly decorative, some having golden or silver head-pieces. Many are considered works of art.
History and usage
In the ninth century, Hungarian warriors used light axes on long shafts, called fokos, before them, the Bulgars and also the Alans used a very similar type of that.
In the fourteenth through seventeenth centuries, valaškas were brought into Central Europe from Wallachia, (today's Romania), along the Carpathian Mountains by Romanian shepherd migrants called Vlachs as part of their culture. Valaškas were mostly used by shepherds as versatile tools, providing a small axe, a supplemental hammer and a walking stick. Although a valaška could not be used to effectively cut down heavy trees, it was still able to cut smaller branches.
In Slovakia and Poland, valaškas were inseparable tools of Slovak and Polish shepherds, together with heavy decorative belts. In Slovak culture, the valaška was popularized by Slovak historical legend Juraj Jánošík.
In Hungary, modified valaškas were also used as martial weapons by Hungarian warriors in the medieval age, used for example in the 18th century in Rákóczi's War for Independence against Austrian soldiers. In the 17th and 18th century, Hungarian Kuruc leader Imre Thököly and his soldiers used valaškas as weapons. Hungarian shepherds in the northern regions used valaška as tools as well.
Present-day usage
At present, valaškas are still made and sold as souvenirs and for decorative purposes. They are also still used in many traditional dances. Occasionally they may be seen in the rural parts of the country where older men still use them as walking sticks. They are rarely used as tools or weapons.
Gallery
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Juraj Jánošík holding his valaška |
Imre Thököly holding a modified fokos |
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