Book description
How was it that ordinary men in medieval England and Wales became such
skilled archers that they defeated noble knights in battle after battle?
The archer in medieval England became a forerunner of John Bull as a
symbol of the spirit of the ordinary Englishman. He had his own popular
literature that left us a romantic version of the lives and activities
of outlaws and poachers such as Robin Hood. This remarkable development
began 150 years after the traumatic events of the Norman Conquest
transformed the English way of life, in ways that were almost never to
the benefit of the English. This book is the first account of the way
ordinary men used bows and arrows in their day-to-day lives, and the way
that their skills became recognised by the kings of England as
invaluable in warfare.
Richard Wadge is an organiser of the European Traditional Archery
Society shoot in England. He is the author of the successful Arrowstorm:
the World of the Archer in the Hundred Years War for Spellmount. He
provided Historical Appendices in P Bickerstaffe's , Medieval War Bows:
a Bowyer's Thoughts. He wrote 'Medieval Arrowheads from Oxfordshire' for
the journal Oxoniensia (a peer-reviewed journal) and 'The Longbowmen of
the Vijayanagaran Empire' for the Journal of the Society of Archer
Antiquaries, amongst other articles.