Archery Throughout the Centuries By Michael Russell

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Archery Throughout the Centuries
By Michael Russell


In the notorious armies of the early civilizations, good archers were great assets and were usually used as the first offense. Their arrows caused mass destruction on the battlefields and could topple large numbers. Civilizations that held archers in high regard in their armies were the Greeks, the Persians, the Parthian, the Chinese and the Indian armies. The famous phrase 'a parting shot' actually originates from the a shooting style wherein the rider turns in the saddle to shoot as he and his horse rode away from the enemy. This shot is called the 'Parthian shot.' Archers often rode on horseback and combined speed with close range like the mythological characters of Apollo and Odysseus that are depicted using bows and arrows riding horses and chariots. Other archers are positioned in strategic places of height increasing accuracy and effectiveness of the shot.

In Medieval Europe, however, the archer's use in battle was not as significant and predominant as myth has it. In reality, bowmen were one of the lowest paid soldiers in the army and were often just trained peasants. The bow and arrow were labeled as lower class weapons because they were cheap to make compared to the very expensive armor and swords that clad men-at-arms. This low value made the bow a mere toy of the nobility and peasants as well. The Vikings, however, saw the prowess of archery and made it one of their foremost weapons in their expeditions throughout Western Europe in the 9th and 10th centuries.

Following this example, the English had learned to appreciate and hold in high regard the power of the bow and arrow. In the Hundred Years' War, the English deployed huge numbers of archers using English Longbows. This strategy gave them tactical dominance. Seeing this much success, archers were soon recruited and farming peasants started training since childhood. Each boy was given and trained with a bow of his height. They held tournaments to encourage and test them for accuracy and precision. Soon after, they would train shooting arrows while riding horses. And at a certain age, they would proceed to join the army.

On the battlefield, archers are faced with enemies from all sides. A technique where an archer shoots two arrows at one time would bring down the enemy's defenses. One arrow is shot on a high trajectory and the other at a lower trajectory thus hitting the target on two different angles. In addition, the development of the bodkin point gave their arrows the ability to penetrate deeper into the enemy's armor.

Longbows require a lot of skill and training before being able to shoot an arrow and hit a target. This training took a lot of years. With the crossbow however, anyone can shoot an arrow, although a little training is needed to hit a target. This and the fact that the crossbow had the same penetrating power and range of the longbow, made it useful in the early civilizations up to today. Unfortunately, it takes a significant amount of time to reload an arrow compared to the longbow.

In centuries after, the use of bows in the army became obsolete with the development of firearms. Even when bows had a longer range and could reload faster than the first rifles, the penetrating power of a bullet and the minimal training needed reigned supreme. In due time, guns and bullets would defeat the bow and arrow in range, accuracy, proficiency and in reload time. Because of archery's decline in popularity, the 16th century English monarch mandated that every man of fighting age practice archery and Henry VIII banned all sport except archery during Sundays. Their efforts to preserve this fighting style helped archery survive until the present day. In this day and age, archery is no longer a weapon of war but a sport that is a true test of precision and accuracy.

Michael Russell
Your Independent guide to Archery

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Michael_Russell
http://EzineArticles.com/?Archery-Throughout-the-Centuries&id=218090
 

Tez3

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I don't know if any of you are familiar with the actor Robert Hardy, he played Siegfried Farnon in the series All Creatures Great and Small, as well as playing Churchill in several films and being in Harry Potter etc. He is also a very well known expert in the English long bow and archery in general.

http://www.amazon.com/Longbow-Military-History-Robert-Hardy/dp/0964574136
 

Blindside

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Hmm, an article about the history of archery and somehow manages to fail to mention the mongols. Makes me a bit worried.
Following this example, the English had learned to appreciate and hold in high regard the power of the bow and arrow. In the Hundred Years' War, the English deployed huge numbers of archers using English Longbows. This strategy gave them tactical dominance. Seeing this much success, archers were soon recruited and farming peasants started training since childhood. Each boy was given and trained with a bow of his height. They held tournaments to encourage and test them for accuracy and precision. Soon after, they would train shooting arrows while riding horses. And at a certain age, they would proceed to join the army.

This is overstated, the English victories at Crecy and Poiters were highly unusual victories, and tend to give untoward weight toward the power of the longbow. The extreme bodycount of Agincourt was due to the slaughter of prisoners, not the use of the longbow. The English laws regarding archery were already in place before the Hundred Years War, in that every able bodied male should have a bow and arrows. I'm very curious about his sources for horseback archery using a longbow.

On the battlefield, archers are faced with enemies from all sides. A technique where an archer shoots two arrows at one time would bring down the enemy's defenses. One arrow is shot on a high trajectory and the other at a lower trajectory thus hitting the target on two different angles. In addition, the development of the bodkin point gave their arrows the ability to penetrate deeper into the enemy's armor.

If archers get to the point where they are "faced with enemeis from all sides" something has gone drastically, badly wrong. Crecy, Poiters, and Agincourt are great examples of archers having to deal an enemy from just one side. This business about two trajectory firing seems silly.... from a single archer. If you have massed bowman and the front rank can fire flat and the second/third ranks fired arced it seems possible. But a single archer doing two shots seems silly. Warfare archery is about massed volleys not about individual targets.

By the end of the Hundred Years War armor technology had gotten to the point where even the bodkin points were nearly useless against the plate armors, though useful on horses.

Because of archery's decline in popularity, the 16th century English monarch mandated that every man of fighting age practice archery and Henry VIII banned all sport except archery during Sundays.

That would be Edward III in 1363.

The article as a whole seems sort of iffy.
 

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All I know is... I love archery! It is so much fun! :D

I would have thought the Mongols would have been mentioned. Great article though. Thanks :)
 

Tez3

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Quote:
Because of archery's decline in popularity, the 16th century English monarch mandated that every man of fighting age practice archery and Henry VIII banned all sport except archery during Sundays.
That would be Edward III in 1363.


This law has never been repealed and still stands on the statute books.
 

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Quote:
Because of archery's decline in popularity, the 16th century English monarch mandated that every man of fighting age practice archery and Henry VIII banned all sport except archery during Sundays.
That would be Edward III in 1363.


This law has never been repealed and still stands on the statute books.

The question is, are you a proper law-abiding yeoman-archer and practice every day, just in case the French invade.
 
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