
Dao
The iconic single-edged Chinese saber
The dao is China's iconic single-edged curved saber, known as the "General of All Weapons" (baibing zhi shuai). Featuring a gently curved 70-85cm blade with a distinctive ring pommel, it was developed during the Han Dynasty (206 BC-220 AD) and served as China's standard military weapon for roughly two thousand years through the Qing Dynasty. Numerous variants evolved over the centuries — the willow-leaf dao, dadao, and ghost-head dao among others. Its simple construction and robust design made mass production easy, serving soldiers from common infantry to generals.
Origin
Developed from ring-pommeled swords of the Han Dynasty (206 BC-220 AD), replacing the earlier double-edged jian as the standard military weapon. Continued evolving through the Tang, Song, Ming, and Qing dynasties.
Features
- Gently curved single-edged blade (70-85cm)
- Ring pommel (huanshou) — iconic feature
- "General of All Weapons" — China's most representative weapon
- Numerous historical variants (willow-leaf, dadao, ghost-head)
- Simple construction ideal for mass production
- Weight approximately 700g-1.2kg
Usage
Standard infantry weapon across Chinese dynasties, essential in both battlefield combat and martial arts (wushu) training. Dao techniques are a fundamental subject in Chinese martial arts.
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