## Wedge
### Old English and Germanic Foundations
The Modern English word **wedge** descends directly from Old English **wecg**, meaning a wedge or lump of metal. The word is attested in early Anglo-Saxon texts with robust practical currency — this was not a learned term but a craftsman's word, worn smooth by daily use in the timber yard and the quarry.
Old English *wecg* traces to Proto-Germanic **\*wagjaz**, a form reconstructed with confidence from the convergence of cognates across the Germanic branch. The inheritance is clean and consistent: Old High German **weggi**, Middle High German **wecke**, modern German **Weck** and dialectal **Wegge** — all preserving the same essential form across fifteen centuries. Old Saxon **weggi**, Old Frisian **wegge**, and Dutch **wig** complete the West Germanic column. In North Germanic, Old Norse contributes **veggr**, which has shifted in meaning toward *wall* — a shift that invites speculation: a wall, in the timber-frame and dry-stone traditions of the Norse world, was something driven or wedged into place, its courses
### The PIE Root
Beyond Germanic, the trail leads to Proto-Indo-European **\*wogʷʰ-** or **\*wegʷʰ-**, a root associated with driving, carrying, and moving under force. This connects *wedge* distantly to Latin **vehere** (to carry, to convey) and its derivatives — **vehicle**, **vector**, **invective** — as well as to Sanskrit **vahati** (he carries, he conveys). The semantic thread running through all of these is directed force applied to mass: the wedge does not merely sit between surfaces but *drives* through them, converting downward pressure into lateral separation. The PIE root captures
### The Wedge as Anglo-Saxon Tool
In Anglo-Saxon England, the wedge was foundational technology. Timber-framed construction — halls, longhouses, the great timbered churches before stone displaced them — depended on splitting oak along the grain. A felled trunk was not sawn but *riven*: iron or hardwood wedges were driven in sequence along the grain line, and the timber opened cleanly, following the natural structure of the wood. The result was stronger than a sawn plank, because the grain ran unbroken along the full length. The Anglo-Saxon carpenter's wedge was not a
In stonework, wedges performed the equivalent service. Iron wedges were hammered into lines of drilled holes along a natural seam, advancing in turns until the stone yielded and the block separated on a true face. This technique, continuous from Roman practice into the medieval period, was the wedge at its most architecturally consequential.
### Runecraft and the Wedge
The runic tradition offers a further dimension. Runes were not painted but cut, typically into wood, bone, or stone with a blade and a pointed tool. The fundamental stroke of runic inscription is the **wedge-cut**: the tool is pressed in at an angle and drawn or levered to produce a V-section groove. The characteristic angular forms of the Elder Futhark — the sharp angles, the absence of curves
### The Battle Wedge
In warfare, the wedge gave its name to one of the defining tactical formations of the Germanic and Viking military tradition. Old Norse sources call it **svínfylking** — the swine-array or boar-snout formation — but the principle is the wedge: a dense column narrowed to a point at the front, designed to penetrate an enemy shield-wall by concentrating force at a single point. The same physics that splits oak along the grain was understood, at some intuitive tactical level, to split a line of men.
### German Weck — The Bread Roll
The most surprising survival of *\*wagjaz* in the modern world is culinary. In Swabian German and across much of southern Germany and Switzerland, a small bread roll is called a **Weck** (or **Wegge** in some dialects). The name is not metaphorical or poetic — it is direct and literal. The traditional form of this roll is wedge-shaped or elongated with tapering ends, and the bakers of the early modern period reached for the most natural word for that shape. **Ein Weck** in Stuttgart is the same word that a ninth-century carpenter used for the iron tool he drove into a log. The bread
### Survival Through the Norman Conquest
The Norman Conquest of 1066 displaced enormous swathes of the Old English lexicon, particularly in administration, law, and high culture. Craft and tool vocabulary proved more durable. **Wecg** survived as *wedge* because carpenters, quarrymen, and smiths continued to use their tools under any overlordship, and the Normans had no competing word to impose. The word surfaces in Middle English with its form and meaning intact, carrying its Proto-Germanic