A 19th-century French naval cutlass

A cutlass is a short, broad sabre or slashing sword, with a straight or slightly curved blade sharpened on the cutting edge, and a hilt often featuring a solid cupped or basket shaped guard. It was a common naval weapon.

Contents

Etymology [link]

The word cutlass developed from a 17th-century English variation of coutelas, a 16th-century French word for a machete-like blade (modern French for "knife", in general, is "couteau" The word is often spelt "cuttoe" in 17th and 18th century English). The French word is itself a corruption of the Italian coltellaccio, or "large knife," derived ultimately from Latin cultellus meaning "small knife."[1]

History and Use [link]

Cutlasses aboard the frigate Grand Turk

Although also used on land, the cutlass is best known as the sailor's weapon of choice. A naval side arm, its popularity was likely due to the fact that it was not only robust enough to hack through heavy ropes, canvas, and wood, but short enough to use in relatively close quarters, such as during boarding actions, in the rigging, or below decks. Another advantage to the cutlass was its simplicity of use. Employing it effectively required less training than that required to master a rapier or small sword, and it was more effective as a close-combat weapon than a full-sized sword would be on a cramped ship.

In times of peace, the Ottoman Empire supplied no arms, and the Janissary on service in the capital of Constantinople were armed only with clubs; they were forbidden to carry any arms save a cutlass, known as yatagan, the only exception being at the frontier posts.

Owing to its versatility, the cutlass was as often an agricultural implement and tool as it was as a weapon (cf. machete, to which the same comment applies), being used commonly in rain forest and sugarcane areas, such as the Caribbean and Central America. Woodsmen and soldiers in the 17th and 18th centuries used a similar short and broad backsword called a hanger, or in German a messer, meaning "knife". Often occurring with the full tang more typical of knives than swords in Europe, which is commonly believed to reflect a legal claim to nonweapon status, these blades may ultimately derive through the falchion (facon, falcon) from the seax. In their most simplified form they are held to have become the machete of the Caribbean.

Cutlasses are famous for being used by pirates, although there is no reason to believe that Caribbean buccaneers invented them, as has sometimes been claimed.[2] However, the subsequent use of cutlasses by pirates is well documented in contemporary sources, notably by the pirate crews of William Fly, William Kidd, and Stede Bonnet. French historian Alexandre Exquemelin reports the buccaneer Francois l'Ollonais using a cutlass as early as 1667. Pirates used these weapons for intimidation as much as for combat, often needing no more than to grip their hilts to induce a crew to surrender, or beating captives with the flat of the blade to force their compliance or responsiveness to interrogation.[3][4][5][6]

In 1936 the Royal Navy announced that from then on cutlasses would be carried only for ceremonial duties and not used in landing parties.[7]

The cutlass remained an official weapon in United States Navy stores until 1949, though seldom used in training after the early 1930s. The last new model of cutlass adopted by the U.S. Navy was the Model 1917; although cutlasses made during World War II were called the Model 1941, they were only a slightly modified variant of the Model 1917.[8] A United States Marine Corps engineer NCO is reported to have killed an enemy with a Model 1941 cutlass at Incheon during the Korean War.[9]

A cutlass is still carried by the recruit designated as the Recruit Chief Petty Officer for each division at US Navy Recruit Training Command. In a message released March 31, 2010, the US Navy approved optional wear of a ceremonial cutlass as part of the Chief Petty Officer dress uniform, pending final design approval.[10] That approval came in January 2011, and the cutlass was made available for ceremonial wear by Chief Petty Officers in August of that year.[11]

See also [link]

Sources and references [link]

References [link]

  1. ^ https://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=cutlass
  2. ^ "Pirate Weapons". Brethren of the Coast. Archived from the original on 2007-12-23. https://web.archive.org/web/20071223184117/https://www.geocities.com/captcutlass/Weap.html. Retrieved 2009-03-30. "According to legend, buccaneers invented the cutlass, but this may not be factual. It is said to have evolved from the long knives used by the early buccaneers to butcher their meat." 
  3. ^ Lawson, John Davis (1915). American State Trials. St. Louis: F.H. Thomas Law Book Co. p. 668. "But as soon as they came up the shrouds, they clapped all hands to their cutlasses. Then I saw we were taken..." 
  4. ^ John Richard Stephens, ed. (2006). Captured by Pirates. New York City: Barnes & Noble. p. 6. ISBN 0-7607-8537-6. "They immediately drew their weapons and, after beating us up severely with their cutlasses, drove us below." 
  5. ^ John Richard Stephens, ed. (2006). Captured by Pirates. New York City: Barnes & Noble. p. 9. ISBN 0-7607-8537-6. "[N]ine or ten men of a most ferocious aspect armed with muskets, knives, and cutlasses . . .ordered Captain Cowper, Mr. Lumsden, the ship's carpenter, and myself to go on board the pirate, hastening our departure by repeated blows with the flat part of their cutlasses over our backs." 
  6. ^ John Richard Stephens, ed. (2006). Captured by Pirates. New York City: Barnes & Noble. p. 40. ISBN 0-7607-8537-6. "[T]he man who gave the order commenced beating me severely with the broad side of his cutlass." 
  7. ^ "Royal Navy" (Official Appointments and Notices). The Times (London). Saturday, 1936-10-24. Issue 47514, col D, p. 17.
  8. ^ Wagner, Rick. "Focus on the M1917/M1941 Cutlass". The Swordcollector. https://www.angelfire.com/wa/swordcollector/cutlass.html. Retrieved 2008-09-19. 
  9. ^ Gilkerson, Bill (1991). Boarders Away. Volume 1: With Steel. Lincoln, Rhode Island: Andrew Mowbray Inc. ISBN 978-0-917218-50-7. 
  10. ^ Press release (2010-03-31). Uniform Changes Include CPO Cutlass, Ball Caps. United States Navy. Retrieved 2011-01-11.
  11. ^ Press release (2011-01-25). NAVADMIN 025/11 - Uniform Board Update. United States Navy. Retrieved 2012-03-18.




https://wn.com/Cutlass

Cutlass (film)

Cutlass is a short drama film which was filmed in 2007, written and directed by Kate Hudson.

Plot

Lacy (Dakota Fanning), a young songwriter, discovers a great but expensive guitar in a music shop. She's very excited by the guitar, and asks her mother, Robin (Virginia Madsen), to buy it. However, her mom says "absolutely not", but after that she reminiscences about the time back in 1979 when she got an Olds Cutlass as her first car. Her father used to say: "Whatever makes you happy, makes me happy". Maybe... in the end... she'll change her mind about Lacy's wish.

Cast

  • Virginia Madsen as Robin
  • Dakota Fanning as Lacy
  • Kristen Stewart as Young Robin
  • Kurt Russell as Dad
  • Sarah Roemer as Eve
  • Brian Hooks as Leroy the Mechanic
  • Chevy Chase as Stan
  • Ethan Suplee as Bruce
  • Steve Jones as Jonesy
  • Dax Shepard and Michael Rosenbaum as Background extras
  • External links

  • Cutlass at the Internet Movie Database

  • Cutlass (disambiguation)

    The cutlass is a type of sword.

    Cutlass may also refer to:

    In the military:

  • USS Cutlass (SS-478), a submarine of the U.S. Navy built during World War II and later used by the Republic of China (on Taiwan)
  • Vought F7U Cutlass, an unsuccessful carrier-based jet fighter and fighter-bomber flown by the U.S. Navy
  • a nickname for the U.S. Navy's Enlisted Surface Warfare Specialist pin
  • Other uses:

  • Oldsmobile Cutlass, an automobile line
  • Cessna Cutlass 172RG, a type of light, civilian, single-engined aircraft
  • Cutlass, a term for the machete in the English-speaking Caribbean
  • Cutlass (film), a short 2007 film directed by Kate Hudson
  • Cutlass programming language and application system, developed by the UK's Central Electricity Generating Board in the 1970s and 1980s for the real-time control of power stations
  • See also

  • Cutlassfish, a family of tropical fish
  • Kutless, a band
  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Cutlass

    by: E-40

    Hook
    My paint be drippin wet I'm clean as Clorox
    And you can hear my beat for like 3 or 4 blocks
    And when I hit the corner all the girls gone be jockin my Cutlass Cutlass (x2)
    1st Verse (E-40)
    The reason my roofs bald headed convertible top
    What use use a old school if it aint a drop
    I got a zap of rock and a 5th of Ciroc
    Teflon burner gloves don't get molly wooped
    She likin on me She lovin what she see
    A big nigga with style S.W.A.G.
    Every since a child had G.A.M.E.
    Backwards ass smile bet not fuck with me
    Electric dash electric glass electric everything
    Highly carberated dual exhaust camillion bugger green
    Fresh back from the car wash
    Fresh back from a bathe
    When the sun hits my paint it turns a different shade
    I aint got time to be bullshittin I got money on my agenda
    I've been gettin bread since I came out the placenta
    Sevas in the summer time Rallies in the winter
    Side wood light skin big booty tender
    Hook
    My paint be drippin wet I'm clean as Clorox
    And you can hear my beat for like 3 or 4 blocks
    And when I hit the corner all the girls gone be jockin my Cutlass Cutlass (x2)
    2nd Verse (B-Legit)
    I keep them bands on deck
    My mans on a jet
    Some soft up on the block
    In a duce cutty drop
    I remember when I copped back in '88
    I sat em on some straights
    Filled the trunk with fosgates
    And since I'm movin weight
    You know I counldn't wait
    Brought that motor out the crate
    Then I taught it how to skate
    We turnin figure eights
    Half and whole cakes
    We take em on a chase
    We aint tryin to take the case
    Bitches know I'm fly got that vocal tone
    And when they see me they be askin what I'm smokin on
    I tell em cookies bitch you know I got that provolone
    And you can call me on the under on my Iphone
    You see me insides you know I keeps em stocked
    And when I leave the block everybody stop and watch
    You never know you might catch a sideshow
    I lay that back down And then I drive slow
    Hook
    My paint be drippin wet I'm clean as Clorox
    And you can hear my beat for like 3 or 4 blocks
    And when I hit the corner all the girls gone be jockin my Cutlass Cutlass (x2)
    3rd Verse (Richie Rich)
    Bitch this aint my Bentley
    This my seven duce
    Tv deg w sevens press that big ole zeus
    Matter fact I got a pair of those for dummies that means 2
    My shit is clean as fuck but when I brought it it was through
    I took it off the frame
    Bitch this not a game
    Got motor new suspension brand new everythang
    Candy orange outside guts cocaine
    Rims hella chromey see my face and my chain
    New shoes on it
    22s homie
    And I would leave that bitch at home if I was you homie
    Cause I'ma swing it sideways
    And slap to the trap
    Off Patron and a zone with the zap on my lap
    Change my flow up Fasho but never fuck the dough up
    In the city where prices go down but never go up
    Niggas see the Cutlass and they know it's the Double
    Flossin on that ass know you know you in trouble
    Hook
    My paint be drippin wet I'm clean as Clorox
    And you can hear my beat for like 3 or 4 blocks




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