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Sickle

Part of the collection: Agriculture

Popularization note

“In July, the ear already abases, yielding the gift of God, and Margaret first puts the sickle in the grain,” traditional Polish saying. The harvest was a special time in the life of the rural population. The harvest's success determined whether they would endure the winter in abundance or suffer from hunger. Various types of equipment were used for field work, including small and handy sickles. These consisted of a short wooden handle and a characteristically curved blade. Based on archaeological research, sickles were known as early as the Neolithic. Although they differed depending on the place and time of occurrence, they were built with a wooden handle and a semicircular or elliptical curved blade. In Pomerania and western Poland, sickle blades were rounded, while in eastern areas, they were slightly larger, straighter, and narrower. Traditionally, women used sickles, held in one hand, to reap by cutting a clump of plants held in the other hand. The men tied the harvested grain into sheaves. Nowadays, in the modern era of mechanised farming, sickles have fallen out of common use. However, this does not mean that they have fallen into disuse. They are still used, for example, for small jobs such as cutting weeds or tufts of grass in home gardens. The featured sickle comes from Western Pomerania and has a blade shape characteristic to the region. It is one of a dozen or so objects of this type in the ethnographic collection of the National Museum in Szczecin. Agnieszka Słowińska.

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

unknown

Object type

sickle, agricultural equipment

Technique

forging, hewn

Material

wood, iron

Origin / acquisition method

donation

Creation time / dating

1901 — 1945

Creation / finding place

powstanie: Stara Rudnica

Owner

Muzeum Narodowe w Szczecinie

Identification number

MNS/E/4999

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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