## Adze
The adze is one of the oldest tools in the woodworker's kit — a blade mounted perpendicular to its handle, used for hollowing, smoothing, and shaping timber. Where the axe cleaves along the grain, the adze works across it, scooping and paring. In the hands of a skilled craftsman, it could reduce a rough-hewn log to a smooth plank, hollow out a dugout canoe, or true the keel of a ship. For most of the history of European timber-working, the adze was more important than the saw.
## The Old English Word
The word comes down to us from Old English *adesa* (also spelled *adese*, *adse*), attested in glossaries and in the names of craftsmen. The form is exclusively Germanic — there are no clear cognates in Latin, Greek, Sanskrit, or any of the other branches of Indo-European. This puts *adesa* in the company of words like *oat* and *hops*, terms for things that belonged distinctively to the material world of the Germanic peoples, with no linguistic debt to the Mediterranean or the Indo-Iranian east.
The Proto-Germanic reconstruction is *\*adisō*, from which Old English *adesa* descends by regular sound changes. The word passed into Middle English as *adse* or *adze*, with the final vowel reduced and then lost. The modern spelling *adze* preserves the medial consonant cluster that gives the word its slightly awkward look on the page but its unmistakable sound in the mouth.
The Germanic isolation of *\*adisō* is worth dwelling on. Most Old English tool-names connect to a broader Indo-European web: *hammer* traces back to a root meaning stone or crag, shared with Sanskrit; *knife* connects to roots for cutting found across the family; *nail* has cognates in Latin and Greek. But the adze stands apart. We cannot point to a Latin *adisia* or a Greek ancestor. The tool and its name belong, so far
This does not mean the adze was invented by Germanic speakers. Adze-shaped tools appear in Neolithic Europe and across the ancient Near East. But the particular word *\*adisō* — the name that speakers of Proto-Germanic gave to their adze — has left traces only within the Germanic branch. It is a small monument to the separateness of Germanic material culture
## The Tool in Anglo-Saxon Life
In Anglo-Saxon England, the adze was a fundamental instrument of construction. The characteristic building method of the Germanic peoples was timber-frame construction: upright posts, horizontal beams, thatched or shingled roofs. The great hall — that defining institution of Germanic social life — was a timber structure. Heorot in *Beowulf*, the hall that Hrothgar raises as a monument to his power and that Grendel invades in the dark, is explicitly described as built by craftsmen who shaped
Timber-framing requires precision. The joints that hold a frame together — the mortise and tenon, the half-lap, the scarf joint — must fit without significant gaps. A saw can crosscut a beam, but for paring a joint surface flat, removing a hump from a log, or hollowing the inner face of a plank, the adze is the correct instrument. Anglo-Saxon carpenters and shipwrights would have used it constantly.
Shipbuilding in particular depended on the adze. The clinker-built ships of the Anglo-Saxons and Vikings — whose strakes overlapped like the scales of a fish — required planks that curved in complex ways. The adze allowed a shipwright to work along the inside of a plank, hollowing and thinning it, without the blade binding as a saw would. The Sutton Hoo ship, though the wood itself had rotted away by the time of its excavation in 1939, left rivet patterns showing
## The Craftsman's Grave
Anglo-Saxon grave archaeology gives the adze an unusual dignity. Tools appear as grave goods in the burials of craftsmen — not as mere utility items, but as markers of identity and status. An adze buried with a man declared who he was in life: not a warrior, not a priest, but a maker. The craftsman who shaped the hall, fitted the ship's keel, and smoothed the planks of a coffin was a figure of standing
### The Adze and the Axe
The distinction between the adze and the axe is one of geometry and grain. An axe blade is parallel to the handle; it swings in an arc that drives the edge into the grain of the wood, splitting it. An adze blade is perpendicular to the handle; when the tool is swung, the blade arrives nearly flat against the wood's surface, cutting across the grain and removing a chip or shaving. The axe fells, the adze refines. Both were essential in the Anglo-Saxon woodworker's kit, but they were not interchangeable.
## Survival
The adze survived because the problems it solves did not go away. Industrial sawmills changed timber construction after the seventeenth century, but shipwrights continued to use adzes into the twentieth. Timber-framers who work in the traditional manner still reach for an adze when they need to true a beam or hollow a surface. Bowl carvers use a small adze called a spoon adze or crook knife
That continuity is characteristic of words for hand tools. So long as the thing is made and used, its name persists. The adze is as useful as it ever was in the right hands, and the Old English word — worn down from *adesa* to *adze*, its syllables compressed by a thousand years of use — is still the right word for it.