Panabas
The panabas is a chopping bladed weapon or tool from the Philippines, variously described as both a sword and a battle axe. It has a distinctive long straight haft and a curving blade of various designs. It can range in size from and can be held with one or both hands, delivering a deep, meat cleaver-like cut.
It is found throughout the islands of the Philippines as an agricultural tool for cutting branches and thickets. Variants of the panabas used as combat weapons or ceremonial executioner's axes are more commonly associated with the ethnic groups of the southern Philippines, particularly with the Maranao and Maguindanao people.
The panabas is one of many bladed weapons portrayed in the "Weapons of Moroland" plaque that has become a common souvenir item and pop culture icon in the Philippines.
Names
The word wikt:panabas means "tool for cutting down", from the prefix wikt:pang- and the root word wikt:tabas. It is also known alternatively as pangtabas or simply tabas. In specific regions, it is also known as lantip in the Western Visayas, palataw in Luzon, and nawi among the Maguindanao people."Panabas", as a broader term, can also refer to the indigenous large forward-curving sickle-scythes of the Philippines, known more specifically as the karit, Bolo knife#types, lagaraw, lampas, or sanggot. But they are completely different tools. A weaponized version of the agricultural sickle would be the Indonesian kerambit.
Panabas can also be referred to with generic names for large bolos like talibong or badang.
Appearance
Image:Mindanao lumad panabas 1a.JPG|thumb|A Lumad panabas. Overall length of this example is.Easily one of the most recognizable among Filipino blade weapons, the panabas is distinguished by its broad and uniquely shaped blade, and its long hilt. At in length, it is among the largest of Filipino swords, with only some Kampilan specimens being longer.
Blade
The most common forms of panabas have a laminated steel blade that is single-edged, narrowest near the haft, and gets dramatically broader towards the tip as the blade curves backwards away from the edged side, though there are some rare varieties that do have forward curved blades.Because the panabas is primarily used in a chopping rather than thrusting motion, the shape of the actual tip varies greatly, with some specimens coming to a blunt tip, some pointed in the manner of other Filipino swords such as the Dahong Palay, and some taking on a square or diamond shape, with the furthest tip of the diamond, on the tip of the edge. There are rare panabas specimens that have an S-shaped blade sharpened partially along the backside, such that the specimen is double edged at the tip.
While design work on the panabas's blade is relatively rare, among the most common examples of decorative design elements take the form of decorative piercings/serrations along a small section on the furthest end of the spine, and/or a talismanic 'X' along the spine.
Observed cross-sectionally, the blade is also thicker at its base, with a typical example being about thick - so designed in order to withstand the massive forces that the panabas both deals out and absorbs with every blow.