The khopesh was used in early Middle Eastern warfare.
A flaming Khopesh with roses wrapped around it. (See the link below for an image of a Khopesh).
a khopesh
it is pronounced co pesh
He carried a Khopesh sword
That was a Khopesh which is an Egyptian sickle-sword that evolved from battle axes. The khopesh went out of use around 1300 BC. However, in the 196 BC Rosetta Stone it is referenced as the "sword" .
The khopesh sword's history can be traced back to Sumer in the third millennium of BC. It was invented because Sumerians wanted a way to unhook their enemies shields or disarm them. When it was used for attacking the holder would slash.
One would have to see the depiction of Anubis is answer this fully, but Anubis was also a protective god of the dead, thus perhaps the need for a khopesh as the Duat (underworld) through which the dead traveled with Anubis was viewed as dangerous.
scimitars for sure i found it in the text
The Khopesh sword is named after the Egyptian word "ḫpš," which means "leg." The sword's distinctive shape, with a curved blade that sweeps forward and then curves back sharply near the tip, resembles a leg bending at the knee.
The "Khopesh" (also called "Canaanite" and "Sappara"), the sword famously associated with Egyptians by holywood in movies like the Scorpion King, was in fact invented buy Assyrian craftsmen after the bronze age began. It was developed by changed an older copper war axe named the epsilon, invented in Greece. When Assyrian warriors invaded Egypt, the defending Egyptian army discovered the Khopesh, and adopted it as a symbol of nobility and as a personal weapon. No individual has been credited with the invention of the original Khopesh.
The main weapon used in Ancient Egypt was called the khopesh. It was a curved sword, typically made of bronze.