*

Recent Topics

Author Topic: Longbow v crossbow (and handgun) - historical discussion  (Read 29918 times)

Offline Arlequín

  • Galactic Brain
  • Posts: 6218
  • Culpame de la Bossa Nova...
Re: Longbow v crossbow (and handgun) - historical discussion
« Reply #30 on: 08 January 2016, 12:31:38 PM »
OK, then I will argue that the Wars of the Roses, ie the dynastic in fighting between the so called Houses of York and Lancaster can be traced back to Henry IV's usurption of the throne and deposition of Richard II. so say, the Battle of Shrewsbury in 1403- does that give you a satisfactory overlap?   ;) :D

Darrell.

 lol  ... and they ended with the death of the 'de jure' Duke of Suffolk at Pavia in 1525.  ;)

This thread has been a very interesting discussion, which I've been enjoying, but not contributing to so far. Despite all of the varying viewpoints it's very difficult to point the finger at anyone and say you are right/wrong.

However I will offer the following points for your consideration;

a) At point of impact a bodkin-headed warbow arrow exerted the same force as a crossbow bolt, over the same area, while requiring around a tenth of the draw weight. The longer draw length and weight of the head (typically twice that of a bolt head) being the compensating factor.

b) Typical effective ranges of both weapons tended to be similar... with 300 yards being the 'typical' effective range and less than 100 yards being the optimum distance where both weapons were at their most efficient.

c) Except when the expense was waived, mass-produced arrow and bolt-heads were made from iron and not steel. Some have been recovered which have 'curled'  or 'bent' upon impact with presumably superior quality armour.

d) On good-going a fully-armoured knight could cover 300 yards in just under three minutes, albeit at around 100 lbs of armour, he would have required a massive amount of energy to do so (2x more - much more than that required to carry a 100 lb pack in fact - try moving your legs with 8 kilos attached to them!).

Moving at a slower pace would help, but exposes you to more shooting. Armour sapped energy at alarming rates; you've also been wearing it for hours before you even set off across that field.

Mounted knights obviously move much quicker and if it is barded, their mount 'carries' its own armour, rather than 'wears it'. Even at a sedate 20 mph, a mounted man covers 300 yards in half a minute (how many rules give cavalry 5x the move of infantry?).

e) Improvements in steel making were used to make armour lighter, as much as they were directed towards improving protection. Spiralling expense produced fewer and fewer customers, to the point that by the 1480s, there were gentry in France serving as archers, as they could not afford to buy what was needed to become gendarmes. By the early 16th century, the archers were all gentry.

In England too the former one-size-fits-all class of men at arms (or spears), becomes divided between the remaining fully-armoured 'spears' and part-armoured 'demi-lances'.

Iron 'munition' armour is much cheaper than the latest steel types, but is around twice as heavy (or half the protection if it's the same thickness). If you imagine you have maybe a quarter of your men in the latest gear and the rest in iron, imagine how hard keeping them moving at the same speed must be, especially with the hotter heads itching to get into the fight..

f) The warbow is not 'typically' English and North of the Loire in France, the crossbow was confined to the gentry for hunting and town militias (who were typically middle class). There were some 4,000 archers in the ordonnance companies raised in 1445, roughly the same number that the English had at Agincourt.

g) English archers of the HYW were picked men and tested for their ability before they drew pay. Archers in the WotR were men with bows, raised, marched off to war and God willing, back at home before a month or so had passed. They belonged to a society in which the levy had not been raised in anger since 1403 and musters tended to be more of a lad's day out than preparation for war (the northern shires excepted).

h) Despite the massive numbers of archers that could be potentially raised during the WotR, the era saw the return of English cavalry. Indentures as early as 1492 show 'spears', 'custrels' and 'demi-lances', along with rapidly reducing numbers of mounted archers. This is hardly what you would expect from a society in which the longbow was 'Queen of the Battlefield' and a decisive weapon of war.

Okay that's enough I think. The bulk of the longbow myth comes to us from an artillery officer's faith in his arm of service as being essential to victory, so he portrayed them as the QF 18 pdr gun of his day. It is without doubt an excellent weapon, comparable to the average crossbow, albeit with a higher rate of fire... however you can't hand out a longbow and tell a guy to go out and fight, you have to nurture your archer pool.

It was not a battle winner- the French always made it to the English line (albeit they would be knackered) and it all came down to handstrokes. Stakes, pits, blood and mud all contributed to French defeats as much as the longbow did. We also tend to forget that the French actually did win quite a few battles and ultimately the HYW; the English still had their longbows, but it was leaders they lacked.

Offline Dr DeAth

  • Scatterbrained Genius
  • Posts: 2886
    • My Little Lead Men
Re: Longbow v crossbow (and handgun) - historical discussion
« Reply #31 on: 08 January 2016, 01:03:56 PM »
OK, then I will argue that the Wars of the Roses, ie the dynastic in fighting between the so called Houses of York and Lancaster can be traced back to Henry IV's usurption of the throne and deposition of Richard II. so say, the Battle of Shrewsbury in 1403- does that give you a satisfactory overlap?   ;) :D

Darrell.

I wasn't dissatisfied in the first place  :D, just pointing out that there was a gap in the overlap  lol.   

If we do accept your theory that they started in 1403 and Arelquin's comment that they ended in 1525, that would mean the WotR lasted longer than the 100 years war.

Photos of my recent efforts are at www.littleleadmen.com and https://beaverlickfalls.blogspot.com

Offline Captain Blood

  • Global Moderator
  • Elder God
  • Posts: 19742
Re: Longbow v crossbow (and handgun) - historical discussion
« Reply #32 on: 08 January 2016, 01:29:35 PM »
What an erudite and fascinating conflab. Well done chaps :)

History is a continuum, for sure - which is why some historians now suggest that actually the history of the C20th is the story of one long interconnected war, starting in 1914 and ending with the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. (Basically WW1, WW2 and the Cold War all being different phases in one conflict lasting 70+ years).

So I guess the idea that the Wars of the Roses could be traced back to 1403 and didn't end until 1525 would be supportable if you take that view of history.

I think most people would agree though, that the main active phase of what historians have traditionally regarded as 'the wars' proper was 1455 - 1487.

That's the Perrys' definition at any rate, and that's good enough for me ;)

Offline Arlequín

  • Galactic Brain
  • Posts: 6218
  • Culpame de la Bossa Nova...
Re: Longbow v crossbow (and handgun) - historical discussion
« Reply #33 on: 08 January 2016, 01:32:12 PM »
I wasn't dissatisfied in the first place  :D, just pointing out that there was a gap in the overlap  lol.  

If we do accept your theory that they started in 1403 and Arelquin's comment that they ended in 1525, that would mean the WotR lasted longer than the 100 years war.

Personally I would say they started in 1459 and ended in 1471... the Post-Edward IV escapades were more 'white on white' than they were 'white on red', Henry Tudor was merely a fortunate figure head and  the lucky winner. There were probably night-soil removers in Lambeth with higher places in the line of succession.

Before 1459 it was more 'who should manage the king', than 'who should be king'... hence the embarassing silence and scuffing of feet when the Duke of York announced his claim to the throne.

 ;)

Anyhoo... bows, crossbows and handguns folks...  :)
« Last Edit: 08 January 2016, 01:36:39 PM by Arlequín »

Offline Atheling

  • Elder God
  • Posts: 12414
    • Just Add Water Wargaming Blog
Re: Longbow v crossbow (and handgun) - historical discussion
« Reply #34 on: 08 January 2016, 03:09:47 PM »
Personally I would say they started in 1459 and ended in 1471... the Post-Edward IV escapades were more 'white on white' than they were 'white on red', Henry Tudor was merely a fortunate figure head and  the lucky winner. There were probably night-soil removers in Lambeth with higher places in the line of succession.

Before 1459 it was more 'who should manage the king', than 'who should be king'... hence the embarassing silence and scuffing of feet when the Duke of York announced his claim to the throne.

 ;)

Anyhoo... bows, crossbows and handguns folks...  :)

I see your point but.....

The First Battle of St Albans, fought on 22 May 1455 and that undeniably was a struggle to see who would gain control of the king but a struggle between, if they weren't already, very soon two explicit partisan parties.

Darrell.

Offline Cubs

  • Galactic Brain
  • Posts: 5084
  • "I simply cannot survive without beauty ..."
Re: Longbow v crossbow (and handgun) - historical discussion
« Reply #35 on: 08 January 2016, 03:12:45 PM »
I'd like to go to a partizan party because I like Battenburg cake.
'Sir John ejaculated explosively, sitting up in his chair.' ... 'The Black Gang'.

Paul Cubbin Miniature Painter

Offline tomcat51

  • Scientist
  • Posts: 248
Re: Longbow v crossbow (and handgun) - historical discussion
« Reply #36 on: 08 January 2016, 03:28:18 PM »
One overlooked advantage of the crossbow is that you can walk around with it loaded and ready to fire. A bow you have to place the arrow, draw and loose. You could point a crossbow at someone and take them prisoner for example, and they would know that all you had to do was release the catch to shoot them. You could also keep a crossbow sighted on a position and wait for someone to pop up, then snipe them.
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!"

Offline Cubs

  • Galactic Brain
  • Posts: 5084
  • "I simply cannot survive without beauty ..."
Re: Longbow v crossbow (and handgun) - historical discussion
« Reply #37 on: 08 January 2016, 03:56:35 PM »
One overlooked advantage of the crossbow is that you can walk around with it loaded and ready to fire. A bow you have to place the arrow, draw and loose. You could point a crossbow at someone and take them prisoner for example, and they would know that all you had to do was release the catch to shoot them. You could also keep a crossbow sighted on a position and wait for someone to pop up, then snipe them.

This is very true, which made it very good in sieges. The crossbowman can sit and wait for a target to present itself then make a quick shot before ducking back into cover.

Offline Arlequín

  • Galactic Brain
  • Posts: 6218
  • Culpame de la Bossa Nova...
Re: Longbow v crossbow (and handgun) - historical discussion
« Reply #38 on: 08 January 2016, 06:22:35 PM »
Many condottieri and Italian rulers et al, preferred bodyguards of mounted crossbows, rather than the more usual group of man at arms. A big plume and a sharp stick is of little use as a response against tossed flowerpots, bricks, roof tiles and random cape-clad attackers leaping from roof to roof... oh wait, that last bit isn't actual history, sorry.

 ;)

Offline Atheling

  • Elder God
  • Posts: 12414
    • Just Add Water Wargaming Blog
Re: Longbow v crossbow (and handgun) - historical discussion
« Reply #39 on: 08 January 2016, 07:21:38 PM »
I'd like to go to a partizan party because I like Battenburg cake.

More like X-mas dinner last couple of times (and pricey too) but I digress....  ;) :)

Darrell.

Offline Patrice

  • Mastermind
  • Posts: 1962
  • Breizh / Brittany
    • "Argad!"
Re: Longbow v crossbow (and handgun) - historical discussion
« Reply #40 on: 08 January 2016, 08:00:21 PM »
One overlooked advantage of the crossbow is that you can walk around with it loaded and ready to fire. A bow you have to place the arrow, draw and loose.
Yes...but. A bowman can walk slowly (on easy terrain) with an arrow already in place, and his bow at half draw, and he can aim very quickly. With a crossbow he must stop and aim, and it's not so easy if he was not ready.
Crossbows still have the advantage for sieges (shooting immobile), but not if trying to shoot while they also move in the same game turn.

Offline Arlequín

  • Galactic Brain
  • Posts: 6218
  • Culpame de la Bossa Nova...
Re: Longbow v crossbow (and handgun) - historical discussion
« Reply #41 on: 08 January 2016, 09:03:15 PM »
How long do you imagine an archer can hold at half draw? A crossbow can also be 'snap-fired' from the waist, but a longbow has to be drawn in the same way regardless. My money is on the crossbowmen as far as shooting first goes; although I think 'first aimed shot' might be a more evenly weighted bet.

Of course 'who gets second shot first' is an outright win for the archer.  ;)

Offline tomcat51

  • Scientist
  • Posts: 248
Re: Longbow v crossbow (and handgun) - historical discussion
« Reply #42 on: 10 January 2016, 10:58:06 PM »
What we all forget to take into account when talking about the merits of various weapons is that its the wielder that is deadly, the weapon is just a tool. The english longbow was deadly when used correctly, as was the crossbow. The English bowmen won out againts the Genoese crossbowmen at Crecy because the French leadership wouldn't let them wait until they had their pavises from the baggage train. Pure miss management of a weapon system.

Offline Atheling

  • Elder God
  • Posts: 12414
    • Just Add Water Wargaming Blog
Re: Longbow v crossbow (and handgun) - historical discussion
« Reply #43 on: 11 January 2016, 06:57:09 AM »
Guys, Longbow is a Victorian invention, it was just called the Warbow or Bow.

Let's get the fundamentals correct first  ;) :)

Darrell.

Offline Arlequín

  • Galactic Brain
  • Posts: 6218
  • Culpame de la Bossa Nova...
Re: Longbow v crossbow (and handgun) - historical discussion
« Reply #44 on: 11 January 2016, 10:00:46 AM »
Maybe we could continue the thread in Middle English too?  ::)

Seriously, longbow, warbow, whatever, we know what we are talking about. I'd be interested to see a contemporary use of 'warbow' though, as in all my years I don't recall seeing the word outside of archer fan-boy books.

Almost all contemporary documents tend to say 'bow', often in rederence to crossbows too and the only way you know what sort of bow it is, is by whether 'arrows' or 'bolts' are mentioned with it. Henry VIII's revision of the 'Archery Law' mentions 'longe bows', so the Victorian 'creation' myth holds no water either.

It was a bow... and whether you were in the Low Countries, Northern France, England, Wales, Scotland and even Spain (where the majority of bow staves were imported from in the 15th Century), it was the same weapon; a bow.

 :)

 

Related Topics

  Subject / Started by Replies Last post
0 Replies
1640 Views
Last post 26 October 2014, 07:37:38 PM
by Bergh
7 Replies
1326 Views
Last post 11 April 2025, 04:04:55 PM
by Atelier Robin
5 Replies
1109 Views
Last post 14 May 2025, 01:07:48 PM
by Basementboy
3 Replies
595 Views
Last post 12 June 2025, 10:14:18 PM
by Pattus Magnus
49 Replies
2134 Views
Last post 20 August 2025, 05:44:20 PM
by Dice Roller