'Llo Fellows,
In a A History of Warfare John Keegan makes an interesting contention: that, all things considered, the longbow remained a far more effective weapon than the musket, and that this held true far later than one would expect. (I.e., well throughout the Napoleonic Wars; practically up until the advent of the Minie (sp? Ball and militarily practical rifled muskets. (Sorry for the lack of a specific citation--where the %$#@ did I put that book? <img src="/forum/images/icons/confused.gif" alt="" /> ) According to Keegan, the longbow approached the musket in penetrating power, while having a far greater effective range and rate of fire. The reason the musket ultimately supplanted the longbow on the battlefield? Simple: an effective longbowmen needed to be trained practically from childhood, a process which (obviously) took several years and cost a not inconsiderable sum, whereas musket-wielding infantry could be relatively quickly (and thus far more cheaply) drilled into competent soldiers, and (given the lessened expenditure in time and money) in much greater numbers. Hence, any of the advantages in accuracy and rate of fire of the longbow were effectively nullified by massed formations (and fire) of musket-armed infantry
While this (er) 'scenario' in no way sounds incredible to me, I somehow do not find it wholly satisfactory. Heavy plate armor remained prevalent on the battlefield long after the emergence of longbows and crossbows (wielded by highly-skilled archers and near the apogee of their technological development, no less). The same is seemingly far from true in re the development of reliable firearms; indeed, here there seems to be an inverse relationship: as firearms became more and more effective, heavy armor became more and more rare.
No I don't quite know what I'm talking about. Hence I would humbly appreciate any feedback here from those of you who do. <img src="/forum/images/icons/wink.gif" alt="" />
Cheers,
Robert
P.S. Re: my two earlier threads (questions), many thanks for all of the detailed and expert answers so generously provided! (Also, I greatly enjoyed/am enjoying the ensuing discussion...)
