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#1 | |
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#2 | |
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AFAIK, the Mongol adoption of the Manchu bow was driven by the Manchu conquest of Mongolia. After the Mongolian Mongols adopted it, then it spread to Moghulistan, and next to Mawarannahr/Transoxiana (under Uzbek rule by then), and then to the Crimean Khanate. By the time the Manchu bow reaches Crimea, it's shrunk a bit (but is still a big bow) - smaller ears, smaller string bridge, and also less reflexed. The Crimean Khanate being an Ottoman protectorate, the Ottomans are exposed to this bow. At which point, bows appear in the Ottoman Empire which are intermediate in size between the traditional Ottoman bow and the Crimean/Manchu bow. The new bows are about 50"/125cm long, as compared with the traditional 40"/100cm bows, and the 60"/160cm Crimean/Manchu bow (and the 66"-72"/170-180cm Manchu/Qing bow). |
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#3 |
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Thank you for your reply, Timo. The Ottoman bows I have seen does not have the siyah-ears big and so rigid (so it seems) like the Manchu. But I have only seen some Ottoman and Manchu bows in pictures, never seen one personally, and they look different. The Manchu bow seem more "Hunnish", but symmetrical. I have only elemental knowledge of the historic composite bow from the Orient, that's why I asked for the specific influences, like beign more robust, bigger than the originals, siyah bigger or more rigid, different profiles-curvatures-proportions, etc.
I also wonder if those Timurid warriors should carry their swords edge up. Regards Last edited by Gonzalo G; 8th July 2017 at 09:31 AM. |
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#4 |
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Composite bows at ed-Dur (Umm al-Qaiwain, U.A.E.)
http://faculty.ksu.edu.sa/archaeolog...t%20ed-Dur.pdf Bows in Arabia and at ed-Dur According to pre-Islamic Arabic poetry, the bow was a frequently used weapon in Arabia (29). Originally, the Arabs used the simple, asymmetrical bow (upper and lower limbs being of different length). Later, the ‘Arab composite bow’ was intro- duced: a large, segment-shaped bow with long ears bent forwards, a descendant of the above-mentioned ‘composite segment bow’ with bone coverings. When ed-Dur was occupied (late first century BC- first half of the second century AD), this type was widely used by the Arabs (30). Surprisingly, how- ever, ed-Dur is the only site in the Arabian Peninsula where bone nock-plates have been excavated. More- over, no illustrations of the Arab composite bow have been found, perhaps because of the ‘iconoclas- tic tendencies common to Islam and to the pre- Moslem religions of the country’ (31). |
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#5 | |
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The research paper is quite excellent however, I dont know what context you mean iconoclatic tic... "a contradiction in established beliefs"... I can say however, that I have found a lot of arrow heads around here in the desert...which proves to me someone must have been loosing some arrows off>>> a long time ago. ![]() |
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#6 | |
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An archer engaged in combat using a thumb draw on what appears to be a type of Indo-Persian bow. It dates back to the 8th-9th Century AD and was taken from the ancient city of Panjikent located partially in Tajikistan's northwest but mainly in Uzbekistan's southeast according to the locals. For years it was kept in the Hermitage of St. Petersburg, Russia but now resides back in Tajik lands where it rightfully belongs. |
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#7 | |
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I think I have a few left ... will check the store ...and take a picture. |
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#8 | |
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#9 | |
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First, some Manchu bows: http://mandarinmansion.com/antique-manchu-composite-bow http://www.hermann-historica.de/en/k..._jhdt/l/138178 https://anthromuseum.missouri.edu/gr...-0162bow.shtml These are big bows (170cm to 180cm long), very reflexed, long ears, prominent string bridges. The Mongolian version is similar: often a bit smaller, but still a big bows, often with shorter (but still long) ears, usually less reflexed. A couple of examples: http://www.hermann-historica.de/en/k..._jhdt/l/138189 http://www.hermann-historica.de/en/k..._jhdt/l/138192 http://mandarinmansion.com/tigers-ta...-composite-bow The typical Ottoman bow is very different. Much, much smaller (about 1m long), short ears, no string bridges: https://anthromuseum.missouri.edu/gr...7turkbow.shtml https://anthromuseum.missouri.edu/gr...7turkbow.shtml Now the in-between bow, the "Crimean" bow. AFAIK, these are Turkish Ottoman, rather than Crimean as such - the actual Crimean bow was close to the Mongolian/Manchu bow (more prominent string bridges). 150cm long, so very large: https://anthromuseum.missouri.edu/gr...artarbow.shtml 125cm long, so about halfway between the above example and a typical Ottoman bow: https://anthromuseum.missouri.edu/gr...artarbow.shtml Quote:
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#11 |
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Another online publication of interest:
Bernard A. Boit, "The Fruits of Adversity: Technical Refinements of the Turkish Composite Bow During the Crusading Era", MA thesis, The Ohio State University, 1991. http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a243362.pdf |
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#12 | |
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#13 | |
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Take that 3mm rawhide lamellar, and wear it on top of a mail shirt (as was common), and it isn't light armour at all. |
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#14 | ||
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Thank you for the link, I´m downloading. Regards |
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Smaller is easier on horseback, but note that the bow survived for so long in the Qing army as a cavalry weapon. After pike and musket became the dominant infantry weapons, the bow remained in use by the cavalry for another 200 years. If they'd adopted the pistol as a standard cavalry weapon, the bow might have been abandoned. The Japanese managed with an even longer bow! (Modern yumi usually vary from 2.2m to 2.5m.) Quote:
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#16 |
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Thank you, Timo.
At what moment and where began those sabers be carried edge-up? In the Golden Horde they were carried edge-up, as I understand. The Russians adopted this sytsem, as also the oriental style of sabers. The Japanese carried the nihonto edge-up in the sash, but edge-down with armour. Regards |
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