What is a shovel and what are its applications?
Does the question "what is a shovel?" even require any elaborate answer? After all, there are few things more trivial than this tool, one might think. In the first Polish encyclopedia, written in the middle of the 18th century by Benedykt Chmielowski, under the entry Horse falls the famous phrase "what he is, everyone can see". And while everyone can see, not everyone knows that this humorous interjection is followed by an exhaustive description of the animal, because any object, even the most common, can hide more than can be seen at first glance.
What does it mean to shovel?
More specifically, we will first address what a shovel means in purely utilitarian terms. Nowadays, the term in question is so spread that shovel means virtually any type of digging tool smaller than a classic shovel or spade.
It can come in a folding, telescopic, detachable version, as well as with a fixed handle. The handle, the length of which usually oscillates between 30 and 55 cm, can be made of wood, steel or other metal, as well as modern high-strength plastics.
The size of the steel head is about 20 x 15 cm. Often shovels allow them to be used as a machete or saw, thanks to the appropriately sharpened or serrated edges. The option to lock the folding blade in a half-open position is used to use it as a pickaxe or hoe. Survival models even offer integrated compasses, ring wrenches, bottle openers or rope cutters. Shovels often come with a carrying case for additional ease of transport in a car, backpack or when clipped to a belt.
What does shovel mean - where did its name come from?
It remains to find out one more thing, namely, what the shovel means in a linguistic context, where the association of this instrument, which is used by almost all uniformed formations and civilians, with sappers comes from.
The reference to sappers comes from the broad meaning of the word. Contrary to what may come first to mind when we currently speak of a sapper, i.e. a soldier who disarms explosive charges in a special outfit, for hundreds of years "sappers" have been referred to the general engineering troops. Such formations, whose tasks included the creation, but also the destruction of fortifications and fortifications, were particularly fond of using shovels. They also did so many years before shovels became standard equipment for infantrymen as infantry shovels, under which name this tool officially appears in the Polish Army.
The term saper found its way into the Polish language from French, but in searching for its root word we go all the way back to the Latin sappa, which means.... a tool that is a variant of a hoe or pickaxe. In fact, one might be tempted to say that history comes full circle here. Although the name sapper comes from sapper, but the term "sapper" derives from the ancestor of the modern shovel, which made it possible to perform similar, both civilian and military tasks.