Great taste in weapons, those early Britons.
Of course, before the Hi Power, the Welsh long bow was the greatest missile weapon of all. Able to be fired several times a minute, capable of penetrating both sides of a suit of armour at 200 metres (to say nothing of the man in it) the Welsh long bow was a superior weapon to anything invented up until the Minie ball and repeating rifles of the 1860s.
The problem with such weapons was that they could only be effectively wielded by professionals.......it took so much time and practice to become and remain proficient with them. I was interested to read recently that archeologists on old battlegrounds can tell the skeletons of long bow archers from other remains by the over developed arm bones, and even a twist in the spine towards the draw arm..........that is how much practise it took. Only the elite, or professional men-at-arms hired by the elites had the time to spare from scraping out a living to excel at such weapons. The same is true of edged weapons, although to a lesser extent.
So, a Lord with a few men-at-arms were very capable of putting down any rebellion consisting of much larger numbers of men using farm implements as weapons.........
The long bow fell to the firearm simply because you can teach a man to shoot in an afternoon..........not well, but as well as the capabilities of the firearms of the day would permit. Bring him back a year later, and he can still do it.........and when the industrial revolution put such arms within the reach of a large number of common men.........democracy wasn't long in coming
.:read2:
Hi Colpy
Kidding. In all honesty, the high power is a great weapon.
BTW, I have had a bow for over thirty years. It is a sixty two pound pull, Bushmaster, compound bow.. I once entertained the idea of bow hunting. Never did hunt with it, but I can still put ten consecutive arrows, mostly in the middle of the paper from twenty five yards