Why a folding knife

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Do you know for a fact that they had restrictions on what a citizen could carry?
My point was that the argument of hiding it would not make sense at that time due to the lack of restrictions.
The folder must serve a purpose that a fixed blade does not for people who could walk around carrying swords and axes.
My money is on messy tasks or jobs like being at sea. They wanted to protect themselves from the edge and keep their sheaths clean.
 
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While a fixed blade is obviously better in general the stowability and size advantage of a folding knife sometimes make it more convenient. For example yesterday I needed to cut back some thorns and tie up a gate with some string. I held back the thorn branches with one gloved hand and pulled a SAK soldiers knife out of my pocket, one-handed opened it and cut the thorn bushes back using the other hand. A folding knife was easier to carry and use in that situation than a fixed knife or some loppers would have been.
 
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What carry restrictions do you refer to, what century?
I know of some restrictions of citizens to carry swords in cities in medieval times.
That´s why so many carried daggers or alehouse daggers (in britain) for self defence.
If they had a ban on knives in Republican Rome, just think Julius Caesar would still be alive today.
 
Same old , same old , same old. I have nothing to add to what's already been said......but here's a thought.....how else can one manage to cut the fingers of the hand that holds the knife?

Regards and laughs to all
Ceeg
 
how else can one manage to cut the fingers of the hand that holds the knife?
Has anyone here actually done that?
How common is it compared with someone cutting or stabbing themselves with any sort of knife?
I doubt that the concept would have caught on if it happened much in the days before spring mechanisms; when a folder was just that.

It must take some doing.

Fixed and folding: two different tools with overlapping uses.
 
I have to compare this to situation in the Finnish countryside and Lapland in the 60's most men carried puukkos and that was considered normal. Having an axe on your belt might have caused some one wondering that have you lost your puukko.

So how threatening a smallish knife is seen is very time and culture dependent. If a knife is needed often in every day life the less it is seen as a weapon and threatening.
I live in England. Any visible knife would be seen as threatening. Times have moved on... but that idea had to have started somewhere down the line. A visible blade, while carried with only practical use in mind, can easily lead to a call to the police and an arrest... Just the world as it is here.

Using a Stanley knife for work purposes for example... Using it at work all day, its in a pocket... you decide to have a couple of pints after work... forget its there...something happens, or someone sees it... that knife is now illegal, because having a locking blade in a pub becomes 'having no good reason', despite the fact it was legal to have in your pocket, before you went to the pub.
 
Has anyone here actually done that?
How common is it compared with someone cutting or stabbing themselves with any sort of knife?
I doubt that the concept would have caught on if it happened much in the days before spring mechanisms; when a folder was just that.

It must take some doing.

Fixed and folding: two different tools with overlapping uses.
Cutting oneself on a folder is more common than you think. Back of the fingers mainly, due to the spring. And springs have been around for what... at least 300 years? Coil springs i mean... the bow itself is a type of spring which has been around for thousands.
 
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I live in England. Any visible knife would be seen as threatening. Times have moved on... but that idea had to have started somewhere down the line. A visible blade, while carried with only practical use in mind, can easily lead to a call to the police and an arrest... Just the world as it is here.
The question was why folders originate in the first place 2500 years ago. Your answer in comparison to my post just shows how much peoples reactions vary in different communities, countries and apparently even in fairly short time scale. Present day reactions here are not quite as paranoid as in the UK but basically one is not allowed to carry a knife in public, in practice it varies a lot, in many places in Lapland no one reacts to a puukko or even three carried by a reindeer herder in a cafe.
 
The question was why folders originate in the first place 2500 years ago. Your answer in comparison to my post just shows how much peoples reactions vary in different communities, countries and apparently even in fairly short time scale. Present day reactions here are not quite as paranoid as in the UK but basically one is not allowed to carry a knife in public, in practice it varies a lot, in many places in Lapland no one reacts to a puukko or even three carried by a reindeer herder in a cafe.
I did mention in my post before the one you quoted that social situations played a part... Probably the largest part of it. Which i agree, varies greatly from area to area and country to country. Go to London.... get seen with a folder... Panic stations. Go to North Yorkshire, get seen with the same knife, in a similar social situation, most likely, no one will care, and everyone has one. I wouldnt be surprised if similar was the case throughout history. Where and when... depending on the laws and social norms of the time.
 
Sorry, I can’t think that the initial adoption of folding knives had a social or legal basis.
I am certain that the reason was one of practicality and convenience.
These are still the reasons that I use them today.

IMG_8865.jpeg

These three knives are:

WW2 jack knife. Military issue.
WW1. Military issue.
Victorian sailors knife Naval issue.

They were issued for heavy duty use to people who were not restricted to civil law and who weren’t involved in particularly social environments.

In the case of the two military examples it is quite possible that their owners also carried bayonets.

Folding knives were chosen for a reason. I don’t know what that reason was but I’m certain that it was practical.

Edited to ask:
Presumably the current version of the Jack knife was issued to some members of this forum. Can they tell us what it was used for? Why in preference to a fixed blade?
 
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Sorry, I can’t think that the initial adoption of folding knives had a social or legal basis.
I am certain that the reason was one of practicality and convenience.
These are still the reasons that I use them today.

View attachment 100902

These three knives are:

WW2 jack knife. Military issue.
WW1. Military issue.
Victorian sailors knife Naval issue.

They were issued for heavy duty use to people who were not restricted to civil law and who weren’t involved in particularly social environments.

In the case of the two military examples it is quite possible that their owners also carried bayonets.

Folding knives were chosen for a reason. I don’t know what that reason was but I’m certain that it was practical.

Edited to ask:
Presumably the current version of the Jack knife was issued to some members of this forum. Can they tell it’s what it was used for? Why in preference to a fixed blade?
The Jack knife started as a sailors knife really, at least your examples did.. Well before ww1 maybe a hundred years before at least... Think battle of Trafalgar, British Navy type before.. Marlin spike for splicing ropes, (originally known as a Pussers Dirk, Google it) Blunt tipped blade so the roll of the sea didnt cause you to stab yourself or others, Tin opener (when they added them) for when they started canning provisions. They went on from there. Seeing more use on land, but modified... less for sea, more for land use. And now we have the SAK.
 
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I wouldnt be surprised if similar was the case throughout history. Where and when... depending on the laws and social norms of the time.
No it was not. Knives have been seen as normal everyday wear as your clothes until the last few decades.
 
Apologies for being slightly off-topic..

Years ago, having discussed this "tin-opener thing" with the very folk having archival knowledge of such things, It appeared that the jack-knives with tin-openers, were not ,in fact, primarily issued to Naval staff, their provisions were already aboard. Ratings were definitely not doled out tins of food directly, but catering staff did have access to large, table mounted openers.

Regards All
Ceeg
 
No it was not. Knives have been seen as normal everyday wear as your clothes until the last few decades.
Last few decades? I think it is longer than that, peasants and nobles both would wear a dagger on their belt in the middle ages, but that was before pockets, I don't think knives have been worn as a fashion accessory since then except for National Costume. Well with the exception of teenage boys perhaps.
 

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