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Harold R.
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Posted: Fri 26 Dec, 2008 7:58 am Post subject: Where do you guys learn all this stuff? |
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Lately I've been thinking about beginning to peice together a kit.
I haven't decided exactly where I want to start but I'm thinking about an English archer circa 1350 or so.
Where do I even begin learning about this stuff?
I'd like to make some of it myself (gambeson or jack, maille if / where appropriate) but I'll definitely need to buy things like a helmet. I figure if I'm going to go to the trouble of making / buying stuff, I should make an effort to make it as authentic as possible.
Any suggestions on some good books I should check out?
Thanks
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Doug Lester
Location: Decatur, IL Joined: 12 Dec 2007
Posts: 167
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Posted: Fri 26 Dec, 2008 8:26 am Post subject: |
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You could click on "Books" on the brown bar above. Topics under "Features" might also be useful. Please don't feel that I'm trying to talk down to you; it took me for ever to learn to navigate this site.
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James Aldrich
Location: Green Bay WI Joined: 21 Aug 2003
Posts: 112
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Posted: Fri 26 Dec, 2008 9:53 am Post subject: |
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A reasonable starting point is the Osprey Warrior Series #11 English Longbowman 1330-1515. People will always find something to criticize about the Osprey books but that should only spur your further research.
Keep your bowstrings dry.
JSA
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Andres M. Chesini Remic
Location: Buenos Aires, Argentina Joined: 17 Dec 2008
Posts: 33
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Posted: Fri 26 Dec, 2008 11:03 am Post subject: |
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Osprey books are an easy solution for starting.- With time you'll start finding some innacuracies on them, and eventually you'll find yourself purchasing archeology books (Many of them listed on this very forum, as doug said before).-
I'd say: Pic something you like from osprey books, then go to the bibliography section, and see where they took that from. (Sometimes, they put together stuff from different ages and locations. ) Then go to a library and ask for those books, and search the internet for images of the original archeological findings and locations.
"El que no viene por donde debiera, no viene a lo que dice - P. B. Palacios ~ Almafuerte"
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Harold R.
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Posted: Fri 26 Dec, 2008 12:43 pm Post subject: |
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Doug Lester wrote: | You could click on "Books" on the brown bar above. Topics under "Features" might also be useful. Please don't feel that I'm trying to talk down to you; it took me for ever to learn to navigate this site. |
Thanks. I've been looking at the reviews and features for awhile now but it hasn't occured to me to look at the books.
On the Osprey books, I have a couple of those - good idea to check out the bibliography and work back from there.
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M. Eversberg II
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Posted: Sat 27 Dec, 2008 2:28 am Post subject: |
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I'll ditto books. Also take a look at period art (IN CONTEXT), other peoples kits, and ask lots of questions. Lots, and lots of questions.
M.
This space for rent or lease.
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Sean Flynt
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Harold R.
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Posted: Thu 01 Jan, 2009 2:47 am Post subject: |
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Sean Flynt wrote: | Get a copy of The Great Warbow. It's full of great information as well as contemporary illustrations of longbowmen. |
Thank you.
I found it on amazon.
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Gordon Clark
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Posted: Thu 01 Jan, 2009 9:33 am Post subject: |
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A very nice 14th century resource is 1381: The Peel Affinity. La Belle Compagnie is a 14th century reenactment group here in No VA and MD, and they put a huge amount of work into this. I was at one of the photo shoots, so my family and I are in a couple of the pictures. It was fun...
Gordon
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Gereg Jones Muller
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Posted: Mon 05 Jan, 2009 4:20 pm Post subject: |
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I highly recommend _Longbow: A Social and Military History_ by Robert Hardy. Like the author of the Osprey book that was mentioned here, he is (or was) an ardent longbowman himself, and he offers a loving survey of the weapon's rise and fall. (Hardy can be seen loosing a bow rather nicely with Glenda Jackson in "Elizabeth R", where he plays Leicester.)
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Harold R.
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Posted: Mon 05 Jan, 2009 4:57 pm Post subject: |
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Thanks. I ordered a couple books from amazon yesterday, one of which was The Great Warbow. I even got it in hardcover.
I considered the one you mentioned but I only had forty bucks to spend so I had to pass on it.
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Gereg Jones Muller
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Posted: Mon 05 Jan, 2009 5:56 pm Post subject: |
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That title's a new one on me, as of this thread. I'm looking forward to getting a look at it.
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