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Forging Roman Square-Shanked Iron Nails — Essential Roman Fastener
Forge

Oluşturan

Forge

23. March 2026

Forging Roman Square-Shanked Iron Nails — Essential Roman Fastener

Roman iron nails were hand-forged with a distinctive square cross-section shank and flat circular or square head. They were produced in enormous quantities — the Inchtuthil Roman fortress in Scotland alone yielded a buried hoard of approximately 875,000 nails weighing 7 tonnes, deliberately buried when the legion withdrew. Roman nails ranged from small tacks to massive timber spikes over 30 cm long. This blueprint covers forging standard construction nails.

Beginner
60-120 minutes

Talimatlar

1

Taper the Nail Point

Heat the end of a square iron rod to bright orange (approximately 1000 °C) in the forge. Place the heated end on the anvil face and hammer a four-sided taper over the last 4 to 6 cm, rotating the rod 90 degrees between each set of blows to maintain the square cross-section. The taper should end in a blunt point — Roman nails were not needle-sharp but had a robust pyramidal tip that spread wood fibres apart rather than cutting them, which reduced the tendency to split the timber. Work quickly while the iron is hot, returning it to the forge if it drops below dull red. The finished taper should transition smoothly from the full-thickness shank to the point without any abrupt shoulders or cold shuts.

Step 1 - Image 1
2

Cut the Nail to Length

Determine the desired nail length — common Roman construction nails were approximately 7 to 12 cm long. Measure from the tip of the taper and mark the cut point by nicking the rod with the hardy (a chisel set in the anvil's hardy hole). Heat the cut area to bright orange and place the nick over the hardy edge. Strike the rod above the nick with the hammer to cut approximately three-quarters through, then bend the nail free from the parent rod with a twist. The remaining nub of metal at the cut end will be incorporated into the nail head in the next step. Leave this end slightly proud — approximately 5 to 8 mm of extra length beyond the intended shank — to provide material for forming the head.

3

Upset and Form the Head

Heat the cut end of the nail to bright orange. Insert the nail point-first through the tapered hole in a nail header plate (a thick steel plate with a hole that matches the nail shank size, placed over the pritchel hole or held in a vice). The shank should pass through until only 5 to 8 mm protrudes above the header plate. Strike the protruding end with the hammer face to upset (spread) the metal outward, forming a flat circular head. Rotate the nail slightly between blows to keep the head symmetrical. Three to five firm blows are usually sufficient to form a head approximately twice the shank width in diameter. Lift the nail out of the header by tapping it from below with a punch through the pritchel hole.

Step 3 - Image 1
4

Straighten and Inspect

While the nail is still warm, lay it on the anvil face and check for straightness by rolling it — a straight nail will roll smoothly without wobbling. Correct any bends by placing the concave side down on the anvil and tapping the high point with light hammer blows. Inspect the head for cracks — if the metal was too cold when headed, it may have cracked around the edge. A cracked head means the nail must be reforged. Check that the taper is centred and the point is aligned with the shank axis. A well-made nail should stand upright on its head without tipping. An experienced Roman-era smith could produce several hundred nails per day using this method.

5

Quench and Finish a Batch

Quench the finished nail in water to cool it for handling. Mild steel and wrought iron nails do not require heat treatment — they are not hardened like tool steel. Wire-brush or lightly file any heavy scale from the surface if desired, though Roman nails were typically used as-forged with their black oxide scale intact, which actually provides some corrosion resistance. Repeat the process to forge a batch of nails. For efficiency, many smiths would taper several rods in sequence, then cut and head them in a second pass, maintaining a rhythm with the forge. The Inchtuthil hoard demonstrates the astonishing scale of Roman nail production — the nails were buried to deny them to the enemy, as iron was a strategic material in the Roman military supply chain.

Malzemeler

  • Mild steel or wrought iron rod, 8-10 mm square - 30 cm per nail piece

Gerekli Aletler

  • Coal or coke forge
  • Anvil with a pritchel hole or nail header plateYer Tutucu
    Görüntüle
  • Cross-peen hammer (0.5-1 kg)Yer Tutucu
    Görüntüle
  • Flat-jaw tongsYer Tutucu
    Görüntüle
  • Nail header (hardy-hole or hand-held plate with tapered hole)
  • Hardy (hot-cut chisel in anvil hardy hole)Yer Tutucu
    Görüntüle

CC0 Kamu Malı

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