Europe Prehistory A longbow was found in 1991 in the
Ötztal Alps with a
natural mummy known as
Ötzi. His bow was made from
yew and was long; the body has been dated to around 3300 BC. A slightly shorter bow comes from the Scottish parish of Tweedsmuir in a
peat bog known as Rotten Bottom. The bow, made from
yew, has been given a calibrated radiocarbon date of 4040 BC to 3640 BC. Another bow made from yew, found within some peat in Somerset, England has been dated to 2700–2600 BC. Forty longbows, which date from the 4th century AD, have been discovered in a
peat bog at
Nydam in
Denmark.
Middle Ages In the
Middle Ages the English and Welsh were famous for their
very powerful longbows, used
en masse to great effect against the French in the
Hundred Years' War, with notable success at the battles of
Crécy (1346),
Poitiers (1356), and
Agincourt (1415). During the reign of
Edward III of England, laws were passed allowing
fletchers and
bowyers to be
impressed into the army and enjoining them to practice archery. The dominance of the longbow on the battlefield continued until the French began to use
cannon to break the formations of English archers at the
Battle of Formigny (1450) and the
Battle of Castillon (1453). Their use continued in the
Wars of the Roses. They survived as a weapon of war in England well beyond the introduction of effective firearms. The
Battle of Flodden (1513) was "a landmark in the history of archery, as the last battle on English soil to be fought with the longbow as the principal weapon..."
Sixteenth and seventeenth centuries In 1588, the
militia was called out in anticipation of an invasion by the
Spanish Armada and it included many archers in its ranks; the
Kent militia for instance, had 1,662 archers out of 12,654 men mustered. The
Battle of Tippermuir (1644), in Scotland, may have been the last battle in the
British Isles to involve the longbow in significant numbers.
Early literature The earliest known book on European longbow archery is the anonymous ''L'Art D'Archerie
, produced in France in the late 15th or early 16th century. The first book in English about longbow archery was Toxophilus'' by
Roger Ascham, first published in London in 1545 and dedicated to
King Henry VIII.
Modern recreational and hunting use Although
firearms supplanted bows in warfare, wooden or
fibreglass laminated longbows continue to be used by traditional archers and some tribal societies for recreation and hunting. A longbow has practical advantages compared with a modern
recurve or
compound bow; it is usually lighter, quicker to prepare for shooting, and shoots more quietly. With the longbow it is possible to use
instinctive shooting, a fast shooting method widely used in hunting or in
3D Archery competitions. However, other things being equal, the modern bow will shoot a faster arrow more accurately than the longbow. Organisations that run
archery competitions have set out formal definitions for various classes of bow; many definitions of the longbow would exclude some medieval examples, materials, and techniques of use. Some archery clubs in the United States classify longbows simply as bows with strings that do not come in contact with their limbs. According to the British Longbow Society, the
English longbow is made so that its thickness is at least (62.5%) of its width, as in
Victorian longbows, and is widest at the grip. A similar, more inclusive, definition was created by the International Longbow Archers Association (ILAA) which defined the bow as fitting within a rectangular template of the proportions 1:0.625. ==Design and construction==