
thumb|upright=1.2|A variety of polearms consisting of Morning star (weapon)|morning stars, [[halberds, partisans, spontoons, war scythes, and a ranseur in the center]] thumb|upright=1.2|Evolution of various European polearms from the 13th to 18th centuries
thumb|upright=1.2|A variety of polearms consisting of Morning star (weapon)|morning stars, [[halberds, partisans, spontoons, war scythes, and a ranseur in the center]] thumb|upright=1.2|Evolution of various European polearms from the 13th to 18th centuries
A polearm or pole weapon is a close combat weapon in which the main fighting part of the weapon is fitted to the end of a long shaft, typically of wood, extending the user's effective range and striking power. Polearms are predominantly melee weapons, with a subclass of spear-like designs fit for thrusting and/or throwing. Because many polearms were adapted from agricultural implements or other fairly abundant tools, and contained relatively little metal, they were cheap to make and readily available. When belligerents in warfare had a poorer class who could not pay for dedicated military weapons, they would often appropriate tools as cheap weapons. The cost of training was comparatively low, since these conscripted farmers had spent most of their lives using these "weapons" in the fields. This made polearms the favoured weapon of peasant levies and peasant rebellions the world over.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).