Originally Posted by AussieGiant
Chaps,
We need to be clear on something and it`s a shame there is no "historical" post thread where everyone can read "the story so far", as we have gone over this before.
As a weapon, the longbow was superior in every way to a musket and even a rifle up until the early 1800`s.
Crazy as it may seem if a longbow army was to be deployed in the Napoleonic era it would have probably won the war.
Just so I`m not going gaga...
can you all imagine marching in one big French column, in your nice faded Blue coats (some 4 to 5 thousand of you) knowing that at 300 yards there are 1000 longbow men able to fire 10 shots a minute at you, and you know going to take you 2 minutes to close the distance??
This didn`t happen for a number a major reasons.
Longbows were a product of a particular set of characteristics in Feudal Great Britain. Stolen from the Welsh who they conquered, it was something they had that was only really seen in other Eastern empires in the form of compound bows. The rest of Europe never really got to grips with it therefore it has probably been overstated in its effectiveness due to the pounding the English generally gave the French for many centuries.
But, it did allow a normal fellow from England to be drafted into an army, be equipped far cheaper and paid far less and be able to, in effect, take out (kill, maim, what ever you prefer) Knight`s and Men at Arms who were some 10 time more costly to train and maintain than a Longbow man. The reason it was available to English Kings was because there are a social mechanism in place to train these fellows in large enough numbers to make them very effective.
It was law to train with the Longbow in England for many, many decades. The Yeomanry of England became essentially professional fighters who were physically large enough and strong enough to wield 100 to 160lb bows and fire arguably up to 15 shots a minute. No one else had the social mechanism in place to match this.
I`m not going to get into a lethality competition but it`s suppression fire capabilities are impressive. And suppression is all you need to have when 5000 long bowman are firing at 5000 knights or 5000 MA to win a battle. It gives you the edge and that is all a good general needs. It will kill plenty, maim many and render not a small number of the oppositions BEST and MOST expensive fighters useless for that particular battle.
Ironically it is the same type of social and economic process that made the longbow a weapon of advantage that lead to the musket (even though an inferior statistical weapon) to dominate leading up to the 1700 and 1800 hundreds. You certainly have a transitional time around the 1600`s in which the English Civil war was played to see the different technologies at work.
Heavy Half Plate, open faced helmets, dueling pistols, pike and shot to summarize the period.
But once the industrial revolution got into full swing by the early to mid 1700`s the process of making a musket could be reproduced at a staggering rate and far faster than longbow`s and all other forms of weapons, both ranged and melee.
On top of this, it took ONLY a few months to grab a bunch of thieves or conscripts and have a number of veteran Sargent's bully them into firing 2 or 3 shots a minute while standing in a great big line. The musket didn`t fire as far, or as fast and was only really more lethal at point blank range than the longbow, BUT it allowed a nation to field not 10 000 longbowmen, but 80 000 musket men (for arguements sake). Put a bayonet on the end of it, and there you have the end of the sword as a weapon of choice except the aristocracy and officers who could still afford them. A bayonet was more than enough, and when "the point beats the edge" in this era of hand to hand combat you have yourself a winner.
If your leading a nation at the time, which weapon are you going to choose gentlemen?