The accuracy rate is a lot worse than 50%. Then we have to account for cover, element of surprise, bad weather or nightime reducing accuracy further and the limited supply of ammunition.
But yes, you are describing the situation that the introduction of crossbows and longbows in the middle ages created, it became possible to destroy foes at a range as they approached you over an open field. Prior to this you could reliably march heavy infantry across said field while taking only light casualties because the arrows were not powerful enough to penetrate the armour they were wearing and had to rely on luck hits.
We also have to account for troop formation density, and the fact that in your mind longbows are basically railguns so a hit to the armour still counts.
And no, this was not the situation created by crossbows and longbows in the middle ages, infantry still existed and made up the bulk of
most armies, even during battles on open fields.
Infantry were recruited and trained in a wide variety of manners in different regions of Europe all through the Middle Ages, and probably always formed the most numerous part of a medieval field army
I figured I should source my arguments, since if you try to do the same you might realise how wrong you are.
Because knights are on horseback and the armour penetration is not perfect. The knights can reach the archers fairly fast and cut them down in melee. The main issue here is not knights but heavy infantry like greek hoplites, phalangites and roman legionaries, *they* suddenly became completely useless because they would be shot to pieces by archers or crossbowmen.
Good part about sourcing your arguments is that you can find out when you're wrong; the pope did outlaw crossbows (or rather the use of them against christians) because of ease of use
and armour penetration, you were right about that. However if you look up the dates,
that law was made in 1139, and the first proper plate armour since the fall of western Rome
was made in 1420 (presumably this is why DF plate armour seems very hoplite-y). The armour penetration was likely in reference to maille armour, which, when unriveted was totally penetratable by more or less anything stabby, and when riveted was still suceptible to quite a few ranged weapons.
When the mail was not riveted, a thrust from most sharp weapons could penetrate it. However, when mail was riveted, only a strong well-placed thrust from certain spears, or thin or dedicated mail-piercing swords like the estoc could penetrate, and a pollaxe or halberd blow could break through the armour. Strong projectile weapons such as stronger self bows, recurve bows, and crossbows could also penetrate riveted mail.
As for your actual argument in this post, it entirely relies on your railgun long/crossbows being real, since I completely agree that horses charging at you will reach you fast.
I'll just leave this here.The longbows have to be good enough to offset the disadvantages they have.
Longbows are slow in relation to smaller bows because it takes longer to draw back the bowstring and the archers tire faster. That means that your longbows have to be good enough at rate of fire, ease of use and armour penetration to justify the drawbacks to using them.
If your longbows do not have enough power to get through the armour your opponent is wearing and you need to rely on lucky shots; your aim is to loose so many shots that one of them is bound to hit an unarmoured point. The same principle applies even more with crossbows.
If you're strong enough to use a longbow properly they take the same amount of time as any other bow, the motion is the same, the distance you pull the string back is the same, it just takes more power. They did tire out faster than people using lower poundage bows, obviously, and would have paced themselves so they didn't exhaust themselves before they exhausted their arrow supply, but it was a negligable difference, especially when compared to the massive range advantage they had compared to the lower poundage bows.
With a firing rate of three – five volleys per minute they were however no match for the English and Welsh longbow men who could fire ten – twelve arrows in the same amount of time
That was English & Welsh longbowmen vs Genoese crossbowmen at the Battle of Crécy. 5-6 seconds to pluck an arrow out of the ground, load it, draw, and loose as a volley with all the other archers, is not slow by any means. I can't find a figure for other bows, but they'd have to be pretty damn fast to have their speed be a big advantage over the longbow
As for the armour piercing comment, I refer back to the link in the previous section.
Wikipedia is wrong here. They had longbows in the paleolithic and then forgot how to make them, there is no since in the equation.
If they had longbows in the bronze age, nobody would ever used any other weapon back then at all (I'll get to why that is later). They did not have longbows in the iron age either and the Roman Empire would not have existed had they had them.
I provided a source. If you think my source is wrong, provide me with a more reliable and up-to-date one, rather than simply making the baseless claim that my source is wrong.
No because the prototype crossbows were not good enough to penetrate armour yet. The Greeks never adopted them en-masse because they did not have the rate of fire to replace bows nor the armour penetration to make their slower rate of fire worthwhile.
Or maybe it's because Greek armies had lots of training, enough for the crossbow's advantage of being easy to use to be irrelevant, because plate armour actually works.
Here's a video of faulty replica plate armour still working against functioning replicas of crossbows from the century after the armour was used. Makes some dents and small holes, but never actually hits the "body" underneath until the plate is removed. Also note that the crossbows have those metallic limbs that you claimed wouldn't work.
Yes war *is* very much rock-paper-scissors. The reason they lost is that the muddy terrain prevented them from moving at their full speed, so in effect they were rendered in a similar position to heavy infantry, especially once their horses are slain. So Agincourt really demonstrates the uselessness of heavy infantry once longbows are in use, heavy cavalry remains useful at that point because their speed counteracts the effectiveness of the archers somewhat. It is only when gunpowder is invented that heavy cavalry also becomes useless since guns armour penetration is even greater than longbows/crossbows.
In rock-paper-scissors, there is no situation in which scissors turn into rock, so already you've gone against your own analogy, but there's also some other questions it raises, like what happens when your cavalry has bows? If infantry is rock and cavalry is scissors, why were cavalry charges into infantry formations so common? Where does siege equipment fit in? Since numbers afford an advantage in warfare, how many pairs of scissors does it take to cut a rock?
If the Romans enemies had longbows, their preference for fighting large battles in the plains would have been their end. The whole reason the Romans prevailed with the tactics they did was because none of their enemies had longbows or crossbows.
As I said, mountains and molehills but you clearly did not get what I was saying, ships are fortified enough to count as fortifications but a line of stakes in the ground is not. The testudo was used whenever the Romans came under missile fire in open ground, which tended to be fortresses because that was the only open ground context in which archers were generally effective against heavy infantry. The effectiveness of this formation is entirely based upon the lack of armour penetration of the contemporary missile weapons causing them to be completely dependant upon lucky shots, which the testudo formation denies them.
noun
- the act of fortifying or strengthening.
- something that fortifies or protects.
- the art or science of constructing defensive military works.
- Often fortifications. military works constructed for the purpose of strengthening a position; a fort
Stakes driven into the ground to protect against cavalry charges, under these definitions, are indeed fortifications as they are constructed for the purpose of strengthening a position. Small fortifications when compared to most others, but fortifications none the less. Boats on the other hand are not built for defence. Some boats do have fortifications on them, but
Rome used polyremes, rather than defensive fortifications, they had offensive rams that were used to puncture the other ship's hull and sink it.
the trireme was essentially a ship built for ramming
Also why are you bringing up the testudo again? I agreed with you, it's used for sieges, because shields are quite good at stopping arrows, but the troop is left very open to flanking due to poor visibility, and has little to no oppourtunity for retaliation to melee attack without breaking formation.
That X lies therefore what I say is true is the Conspiracy Theorist's Fallacy. You have just doubled down on it there; that we know the Romans lies and cover stuff up, does not mean that what they are covering up is the evidence you are correct.
I wasn't the one making claims though. You said that there was a thing that definitely never happened, I asked how you knew that, explaining that absence from Roman records isn't a reliable way to draw that conclusion, then you called me a conspiracy theorist. The burden of evidence lies firmly upon you.
The Romans did use archers and yes they were auxilia. Crete was also where the best archers came from, but ask yourself the question? Why is it the Roman Empire and not the Cretan Empire?
Because war is not rock-paper-scissors, good archers don't always beat heavy infantry.
They wore a mixture of linen and metal, they had a metal helmet, a metal breastplate and a linen skirt under the breastplate to protect their legs. Oh and they also wore metal greaves on their legs under their skirt, the linen vs bronze distinction you are using does not exist in Ancient Greek infantry, they always wore a mixture of cloth and metal.
They did not use bronze upper body armour at this time, but that of leather or linen
Bronze!!! This is the Iron Age silly, the bronze age ended centuries before this point so all the armour, shields, weapons and arrows are now made of steel. Here is why that matters, heavy infantry rule the Iron Age but not the Bronze Age because of basic physics; the metals involved have got stronger but the men wielding the metals have not.
the Greeks' wooden shields (sometimes covered with a very thin layer of bronze) and bronze helmets deflected the arrows...
...In 1939, archaeologist Spyridon Marinatos, excavating at Thermopylae, found large numbers of Persian bronze arrowheads on Kolonos Hill
When we take two substances of the same strength and hit one substance (the armour) with a second substance (the weapon) all the damage done to the first substance is the extra force added to the equation by the person or missile thrower. While hitting bronze armour with a bronze weapon does not involve more force than with steel weapons+armour in absolute terms, in relative terms the difference in the extra power on the side of the weapons vs the armour is greater with bronze than with steel so the armour takes more damage.
So what you're saying is; the harder the material, the less it deforms from external pressure. Congrats, you have successfully described hardness.
That is why I said that if Bronze Age people had longbows, nobody would ever have used any other weapon. Bronze arrows against bronze armour is much more effective than steel arrows against steel armour. It is for that reason that heavy infantry becomes dominant in the Iron Age. In the Bronze Age masses of archers are used as front line troops and chariots are used to counter them, chariots are of a dubious effectiveness compared to cavalry in an actual charge but their dominance is because they provide cover against missile fire; even if you kill the horses with arrows the chariot itself provides cover for advancing infantry.
Your argument still relies on the idea that the longbow provides enough force to pierce plate, which I already provided evidence against. Sure it'd probably do more damage to bronze plate, cause steel is harder than bronze, but the steel was literally just scratched by a close range shot. At best, from the same range, I'd wager bronze plate might get slightly dented. Feel free to test it out, or find someone doing so online.
The Persian armies unlike the Greeks were mostly archers, the Spartans at Thermopylae were not fighting heavy infantry like themselves; they were fighting hastily converted archers while is why they did so well. The Persians archers were useless, so they were forced to use them in melee but the Persians did not realise the uselessness of archers because their tradition of warfare did not take into account that the physics of warfare had changed by the transition from bronze to steel. They thought (like you) that archers were still effective at the front line and like you they were wrong.
They had a lot of archers, yes, but that wasn't all they had, and they certainly didn't hastily arm their archers with melee weapons and send them in. Some lessons in Persian army composition:
Xenophon (Cyropaedia 6.4.1; 7.1.2) describes the guard of Cyrus the Great as having bronze breastplates and helmets, while their horses wore bronze chamfrons and poitrels together with shoulder pieces which also protected the rider’s thighs. Herodotus, instead, describes their armament as follows: wicker shields covered in leather, short spears, quivers, swords or large daggers, slings, bow and arrow. Underneath their robes they wore scale armour coats
The sparabara, meaning "shield bearers" in Old Persian, were the front line infantry of the Achaemenid Persian Empire.[1] They were usually the first to engage in hand-to-hand combat with the enemy. Although not much is known about them today, it is believed that they were the backbone of the Persian army who formed a shield wall and used their two-metre-long spears to protect more vulnerable troops such as archers from the enemy
Not as well equipped for melee as the Greeks, sure, but certainly not hastily converted archers.
Also they were both still using bronze, I've already given you a source for that. Their bronze helmets and bronze-plated shields still protected them from the arrows, so bronze isn't as flimsy as you think, nor were people so quick to abandon it when a cool new metal was discovered.