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2007-01-24 11:53:25 · 6 answers · asked by cartoonryan789 1 in Arts & Humanities History

6 answers

During the Middle Ages, archery in warfare was not as prevalent and dominant in Western Europe as popular myth dictates. Archers were quite often the lowest-paid soldiers in an army or were conscripted from the peasantry. This was due to the cheap nature of the bow and arrow, as compared to the expense needed to equip a professional man-at-arms with good armour and a sword. Professional archers required a lifetime of training and expensive bows to be effective, and were thus rare in Europe (see English longbow).

Archery was highly developed in Asia and in the Islamic world. The horse archers were the main military force of most of the Equestrian Nomads. In modern times, horse archery continues to be practised in some Asian countries but is not used in international competition. Central Asian tribesmen were extremely adept at archery on horseback. Archery is the national sport of the Kingdom of Bhutan.
Genghis Khan (c. 1160–1227) was originally named Temujin. He united his own clan with others, forming a military juggernaut which swept across the Asian continent to the fringes of Europe and the Holy Roman Empire.
Though few in number (approximately two million people at the height of their empire), Mongols were important in Eurasian history. Under the leadership of Genghis Khan , the Mongols created the second largest empire in world history, ruling thirty-five million square kilometres (13.8 million square miles) and more than 100 million people, nearly equal to the British Empire in land area. At its height, the Mongol Empire extended from Manchuria in the east to Hungary in the west, and from Russia in the north to Java island in Indonesia in the south, and it included most of the lands in between, such as Afghanistan, Turkey, Uzbekistan, Georgia, Armenia, Russia, Persia, Pakistan, China, and much of the Middle East.

2007-01-24 12:24:01 · answer #1 · answered by E Blizzle 2 · 0 1

Archery and arrows were definately in use during the Stone Age/Neolithic times, both for hunting as well as attacks. However, their usage was generally limited to isolated incidents.

To answer your question, as stated by another poster, it is difficult to exactly pinpoint the first army who utilized them. My best educated guess would be the ancient Egyptians. Archers were definately used in the Battle of Kadesh (1274 BCE), between the Egyptians and the Hittites. This is proven by various engravings dating back to this very era. However, these archers were mounted on mobile chariots. Stationary archers would be added in later centuries.

2007-01-24 12:14:07 · answer #2 · answered by havish 1 · 0 0

The origin of the bow as instrument of war is lost in obscurity. With all the ancient peoples, both civilized and barbaric, the bow was a favourite weapon, and skill the use of it was regarded by the Scythians as princely accomplishment. The Greeks and Romans employed archers to draw the enemy into action, and the exploits of the ancient Egyptians rivaled those of the archers of the Middle Ages.

2007-01-24 12:44:08 · answer #3 · answered by violeta 2 · 2 0

have you ever tried the neverwinter nights series? you may have alot of relaxing with archers, the neverwinter night series is in my view the terrific DnD sport released, additionally the diablo series if im no longer fallacious has archers besides. additionally in the experience that your searching for an mmog you may have alot of relaxing with archers in WoW as a hunter. WoW has a 14 day trial, in case you're hesitant on WoW dont be its a good sport, and loose trials on no account pass off beam. League of ledgends is likewise a large loose mmog, organic pvp and a few solid archer instructions. for rts video games i could reccomend the two age of empires a million and a couple of or maybe attempt the whole conflict video games, they have a medevil placing. additionally warcraft 3 is dazzling. all counsel mandatory might properly be got here upon utilising google.

2016-11-01 05:08:30 · answer #4 · answered by mosesjr 4 · 0 0

Impossible to say. There are Stone Age cave paintings that seem to suggest that hunters were using very primitive bows. If they used them to hunt - then they would have used them in combat with other groups when quarrels about hunting areas arose. That would have been the first use of the bow in war. Much followed.

2007-01-24 12:05:20 · answer #5 · answered by Tony B 6 · 0 0

The Chinese

2007-01-24 12:03:40 · answer #6 · answered by goodforwho 4 · 0 0

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