Postby David Mastro » Fri Dec 10, 2004 7:29 pm
Katherine,
There's at least one period account of Agincourt, which mentions plate being penetrated.
In addition, Sir John Smythe, in his Certain Discourses Military of 1590, noted that the maille panels of an arming doublet could be pierced (he mentions a specific plate-armored French knight who was killed because of this).
Generally speaking, the very best plate armor of the 1400s and 1500s was proof against archery of any kind (witness the longbow's comparative ineffectiveness against the Scottish nobility at Flodden), but not everyone had the very best plate. In addition, soldiers remained vulnerable in the face (even as late as 1571, Agostino Barbarigo, who commanded the Christian left wing at Lepanto, was killed by a Turkish arrow, when he raised his visor to shout orders). Horses were also vulnerable, which explained why knights on the Continent sometimes adopted the tactic of fighting "in the English manner" (i.e., on foot). Add to that the slow ROF (rate-of-fire) of early matchlock firearms, and the fact that not everyone had the very best plate armor to begin with, and its easy to see why archery remained viable right through the 16th century.
The biggest single factor that contributed to the abandonment of archery (in cultures where archery was a dominant form of warfare, as with the English and Turks) was the fact that it was not nearly as cost-effective as gunnery. As Professor John F. Guilmartin noted, it took a lifetime to make a competent archer, and the loss of a corps of archers could take literally years to replace, if it could be replaced at all (and this is exactly what happened to the Turks at Lepanto--their corps of naval archers was eradicated). In addition, as mentioned above, arrows could not pierce the best plate armor, but guns most certainly could. No armor was proof against the heavy Hispano-Italian musket, which fired a 2-ounce lead ball at about 1,000 feet per second.
Peace,
David
"The Turks go to war as if to a wedding"--Venetian proverb