And to heck with Agincort! Its about to go on my list with Rorke's Drift and Marc Antony culture flipping as annoying aberrations...
Agincourt and Rorke's Drift weren't anomalies, though; simply the best examples of (respectively) the power of longbows against infantry/cavalry and the power of rifles in the defense of a fortified position...
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but hopefully no one got that close anyway) But maybe they weren't very high tension, I don't know. Perhaps at the time, the type of wood was the deciding factor for tension and only England had that particular type of wood? I imagine now that synthetics and composite materials are available, this is no longer the case. I think bows would only be used nowadays for silent attack, and long range isn't a priority. Long range weapons would use chemical propellants (replaces muscular power with chemical power). I bet firing a thousand arrows would be way more exhausting than firing a thousand bullets.
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