Bedil tombak


Bedil tombak or bedil tumbak is a type of early firearm from the Indonesian archipelago. The weapon consists of a gun or small cannon mounted on a wooden pole, forming a type of weapon known as "pole gun".

Etymology

The word bedil is a term in the Malay and Javanese language meaning gun. The word tombak or tumbak means spear, pike, or lance.

History

The introduction of gunpowder-based weapons in the Nusantara archipelago can be traced back to the Mongol invasion of Java, where the Chinese-Mongol troops used cannon against the forces of Kediri in Daha. Between the 14th–15th century, there are local sources mentioned about bedil, but since this is a broad term caution must be taken to identify what type of weapon used in a passage. A small hand-gun dated from the year 1340 thought to be Chinese was found in Java, but the dating may have been wrong.
Ma Huan visited Majapahit in 1413 and took notes about the local customs. His book, Yingya Shenlan, explained about Javanese marriage ceremony: when the husband was escorting his new wife to the marital home, various instruments were sounded, including gongs, drums, and huochong. It is probable that the Javanese hand cannon is modeled after Chinese ones. A Chinese pole cannon from 1421 A.D. has been found in the island of Java bearing the name of Emperor Yongle. The gun's ignition hole is protected from the rain by a cover connected with a hinge.
Haiguo Guangji and Shuyu zhouzi lu recorded that Java is vast and densely populated, and their armored soldiers and hand cannons dominated the Eastern Seas.
Duarte Barbosa recorded the abundance of gunpowder-based weapons in Java ca. 1514. The Javanese were deemed as expert gun casters and good artillerymen. The weapon made there include one-pounder cannons, long muskets, spingarde, schioppi, Greek fire, guns, and other fire-works. In the 1511 siege of Malacca, the Malays were using cannons, matchlock guns, and "firing tubes". The gunpowder weapons of Malacca were not made by the Malay people but were imported from Java.
Local babad of the post-17th century occasionally mention bedil tombak. In Lombok example of such babads were babad Lombok, babad Mengui, and babad Sakra. They are also mentioned in Sundanese and Balinese texts. During the Bali-Lombok war, a part of Karangasem troops were armed with bedil tombak.