How Does a Medieval Blacksmith Work?

A medieval blacksmith is like a super-powered toy maker who turns simple stuff into strong tools and shiny armor.

Blacksmiths use fire, hammer, and anvil to shape metal, just like how you might bend a paperclip with your hands and a table. The fire makes the metal hot, so it becomes softer and easier to work with, like when you warm up chocolate and it becomes gooey.

How It Works

The blacksmith puts the metal in a furnace, a big, hot oven, until it glows red or even white. Then they take it out and hit it with a heavy hammer, using an anvil as a base to pound the metal into different shapes.

Sometimes, they cool the metal quickly in water to make it extra strong, like when you put ice on a hot pan to stop it from burning.

Making Armor and Tools

If they're making armor, they shape pieces of metal and then join them together with rivets, little metal nails that are also hammered into place. For tools like swords or axes, they sharpen the edges so they can cut through things like wood or even other metals!

It's a lot of hard work, but the results are strong, beautiful, and ready to help knights fight battles!

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Examples

  1. A blacksmith uses fire to heat up a piece of iron until it's red-hot, then hits it with a hammer to shape it into a sword.
  2. The blacksmith heats the metal again and again to make it strong enough for battle.
  3. They cool the sword in water to harden it, creating a weapon ready for knights.

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