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Re: Crossbows vs. Longbows
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The Junior Dictionary is designed for very young children, as an introduction to dictionaries. They are expected to already know the majority of the words in the book, adding to their sense of security and familiarity when using it. Clearly the dictionary also has a limit on the number of words it contains. So when the vocabulary of young children changes, as it does constantly, the dictionary must change to reflect this. It isn't like 'monarch', 'bishop', 'acorn, 'psalm' etc were left out as an oversight due to stupidity, or were removed as political correctness gone mad, or because the researchers at OUP Reference division wanted to exert thought control over the next generation. It's an accurate (according to a team of professional linguistic researchers, as opposed to say, you) portrayal of the vocabulary and language needs of very young children in england. If you look at a list of all the hundreds of words removed and added and you choose a handful selectively based on your political or 'logical' agenda, you can 'prove' just about whatever you want. I would think this was obvious. For the last time - dictionaries do not DRIVE language, they merely represent and define it. The definition could be inaccurate due to an error somewhere in the process, but since they are representing modern language usage a definition cannot be 'wrong' if it accurately portrays the current use. Which 'fire' for loosing arrows certainly does. Regarding the Junior dictionary, if very young children aren't using pulpit, acorn, psalm etc that's hardly the fault of OUP. We just record it. If your argument is that you know more about the state of language and how to construct a dictionary than the researchers at OUP, then wow. Enjoy your fantasy land. It's pretty clear now you're a troll, which I will blame you for, because it is your fault. Even so you could at least try to get things halfway correct. That way you wouldn't get 'pwn3d' like a 'n00b' every time you open your mouth. 'LOL :D' |
Re: Crossbows vs. Longbows
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Re: Crossbows vs. Longbows
I thought everyone wanted Joe to post a lot. :happy:
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Re: Crossbows vs. Longbows
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At least to me, your original mention of arcing seemed to ignore the fact that the archers have more options than "straight" and "arc of X degrees". Changing the angle the arrows are fired at will also affect the place where they come down, obviously. While it can't be used always, it would allow for some flexibility. The constant force is also a limit for crossbows, also used in similar manner. Quote:
Longbows are cheaper than crossbows, and a trained man can load a longbow faster than he can a crossbow. If your goal is to fire as many arrows/bolts into the enemy army fast, longbows do it better than crossbows, both because their rate of fire is better and because they are cheaper, ergo you can afford more longbowmen. As far as I know, there was no other cheap ranged weapon that could fire at a comparable distance, in the time period we are talking about. If longbow is the only such weapon, then the English couldn't have used the tactic of massed archers with anything but the longbow. I can't see anything wrong with this logic. Unless you know something I don't, that means longbows really were the superior choice, for this single instance. Quote:
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I don't know how longbowmen were stationed in the battlefield, but of course they couldn't be stationed so close to each other that they wouldn't have space to fire or aim. However, since the weapon has rather long range, it isn't necessary. It would make defending an army or longbowmen more difficult than an army of crossbowmen, since the longbowmen would cover a larger area. However, as I said above, crossbows couldn't be massed (by English) in such numbers any way. Quote:
It is an interesting question, for two reasons: 1) If longbows are so useful, why didn't anyone else do it? 2) If they aren't superior weapons, why did the English do it? I think the second question has been answered in this thread: for the English, it was cheaper and/or more efficient to mass longbows than other similar weapons, like crossbows. Now the question becomes, why did they need so many archers? I found someone who thought it was because archers were good against CAVALRY, not infantry. Arrows would kill and/or wound unarmored horses, and the presence of longbowmen would force the French to dismount. It was just one person and he didn't cite any sources, so make of that what you will. |
Re: Crossbows vs. Longbows
Cavalry kills infantry.
Infantry kills bowmen. Bowmen kill cavalry. Warsong, for Sega Genesis, rock-paper-scissors system. |
Re: Crossbows vs. Longbows
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It was common military practice in the medieval ages to a). Mark out spacings around castles as markers so bowmen and artillery knew how hard to pull for the effective range. b). It was often done to fire same at *less* than full strength to deceive your opponent as to the maxiumum range of your pieces. According to your argument that each bow had a specific "sweet spot". Nonsense. If you are saying that a bow had to be pulled with 40 lbs of strength - Imagine how hard it would be to match each bowman to each bow. It is much rather true that each bow had a *Wide* range of acceptable pull strengths. And generally, the harder you pulled it the farther the arror flies. Competitions in the middle ages were held at various distances, with some at more than 1000 feet. Other points: While crossbows did have the ability for a moderate amount of ascenscion- they had essentially no ability for declension. Talented bowman could put 5 arrows in the air in two seconds - and putting three arrows in a bird before it hit the ground. You can't even begin to compare the rate of fire of a crossbow. Saying things is rocks scissors paper is a little misleading - yes, after a time systems and tactics develop to compensate for a new weapon. However the longbow was an amazing and groundbreaking development. |
Re: Crossbows vs. Longbows
@Sombre
When young children are referring to "magical pebbles that grow trees" I'll hold you to what you said. How am I troll? I prefaced that factoid with an inference that I was intentionally being silly which is why I'm not badgering people about it when they use it elsewhere. And it is still true that "fire" is not the appropriate term. It is still incorrect. :D Quote:
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Given the poor leadership of their enemies at the time I do not feel a massed archer strategy was necessary and in the long run it was a hindrance. Quote:
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And can you clarify what you said about crossbow "declension" I do not get your meaning. The longbow was NOT an "amazing and groundbreaking development" because it is neither amazing nor groundbreaking since in that time period the weapon was already old as dirt. |
Re: Crossbows vs. Longbows
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I might write answer to the rest of your post later. Quote:
I also agree with MGJT in regards to the fact that longbow itself isn't an English invention, and not new by that time. He's commented on it already, but longbows have existed for thousands of years. They had varying draw strengths, of course. I found a few mentions of something called "African elephant bow", but couldn't find a time for it. I did find an image of a girl who had killed an elephant with a single arrow, but her bow was a modern, adjustable hunting bow. I liked the other parts of your post, but without sources, your points will just be ignored by MGJT. |
Re: Crossbows vs. Longbows
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It also now appears you've never even played dominions. You couldn't possibly be a troll :rolleyes: |
Re: Crossbows vs. Longbows
Just watched a history channel special on xbows and longbows, an also a show on the battle of Crecy.
The longbow archers fired a rate of roughly 12 arrows a minute. So every 5 seconds. The range of the longbow outpaced the range of the xbow until you get into the composite xbows which were certainly not cheap and were very labour intensive and because of cranking the rof on those was terrible. Sheer numbers of arrows and the fact that England was using the longbow during a period of mounted nobility meant the longbow was incredibly effective at halting charges. The lack of penetration at long ranges is one reason English longbowmen were trained to aim for the horses. Longbow groups were also more mobile than xbow groups who used pavises from behind which they fired. (although they were left on the baggage train at crecy). What it boiled down to in the programs was that whoever has to charge the enemy is going to hurting, thhose charging longbows through sheer volume and barrages at multiple points in the charge. Those charging at pavise protected xbows would be killed at a much closer range. But the biggest purpose of the xbows and thier pavises was to provide a line of defence and retreat from which the knights could charge. Of course at Crecy the French knights ended up killing the Genoese xbows when they routed, I guess the 'cowardice'(they were being slaughtered) sent them into a rage. Just one of many errors that helped the English succeed against such odds. |
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