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Sympozjum Egejskie. Proceedings of The 2nd Students’ Conference in Aegean Archaeology: Methods – Researches – Perspective, Institute of Archaeology, University of Warsaw, Poland, April 25th, 2014.
Archery had a dominant role in Bronze Age, especially in later period. The technological evolution from the self bows to the composites was a significant factor that affected the Warfare in several ways. Composite’s critical advantage was that they can be made smaller because they retain their strength through the correlation of different materials (wood, sinew, horn). They had more strength, far more range and their small size results in more mobility than the self bows1. The first depiction of a probable composite bow lays in the victory stele of Naram-Sin of Akkad (23rd century BC)2. It was introduced into Egypt by the Hyksos in the 18th Century. The earliest example of a composite bow was found in the tomb of Ahmose Penhant (16th century BC)3 while thirty-two more have been found in the tomb of Tutankhamen4. However we do not have any archaeological examples from the Aegean Bronze Age world. This brief study will try to approach the issue of the use of composite bows in the Minoan and Mycenaean Warfare attempting to include all the possible archaeological iconographical and textual evidence that could support this argument.
‘ The evidence of use of the Composite bows in the Mycenaean World”. =========== Evidence for the use of the bow as a weapon in the Aegean area can be found from the Neolithic period, even though the Minoans and Mycenaeans never equaled the importance that bows generally had in oriental societies like in the Egypt or the Near Eastern military powers. From the Aegean Bronze Age period, two main types of bow are known: the simple wooden bow (self-bow), and the composite bow made of wood, layers of horn and animal sinews. The combination of those materials enhanced the capability for longer distance, powerful shots, and increased the stability of the draws. This evolved the simple self-bows into a more lethal weapon able to confront with great effectiveness heavy armored infantry, while also supporting the use of Chariots as a platform of mobile-archery. The presentation will focus on specific, but rare archaeological examples of the use of those advanced weapons in the Mycenaean Armies from the beginning of the Helladic Period to the Collapse of the Mycenaean Palatial System while trying to answer critical questions: -How composite bows were used against specific enemy units, and what was their effectiveness against various types of armors. -Was it a rare weapon that was accessible only to the elite warriors or was it available to the mass of the common warriors? -What were the various types of the Mycenaean composite bows and how were they connected to relevant types found in Egypt and the Near East. -Is there any connection between a possible mass usage of Composite bows and other light infantry weapons, with the Bronze Age collapse? -The presentation will be supported with a series of recent unpublished experimental reconstructions of Mycenaean armors, weapons and bows that will enhance the arguments.
2016
SUMMARY This thesis shall identify the date origin of the composite bow within Mesopotamia and Elam. and both identify and quantify the design factors which lead to increased performance possible with composite construction. To accomplish this, the thesis begins by summarizing the problems and flaws that currently exist in the field of history as it applies specifically to archery and bow use. With problems identified, the thesis will then introduce the reader to the basics of bow mechanics, thereby laying the basis for physical testing. This in turn will empirically demonstrate flaws in the current iconographical method of bow identification. The thesis will then devise a new method for iconographic identification of composite construction that has greater proven accuracy, based upon proportional length, which will link extant artifacts with both physical test results and iconographic evidence. The reader shall then be led through a complete reevaluation of iconographical evidence for Mesopotamia and Elam starting at the beginning of the second millennium BCE and working backwards using this new method of iconographic evaluation to determine the point at which composite bow technology first appears in the ancient Near East. The thesis will finish with an overview of the above accomplishments and their potential impact on the study of ancient and military history. KEY TERMS Ancient History, Military History, Archery, Bow, Composite, Experimental Archaeology, Egypt, Mesopotamia, Elam, Arrow
Chasing Chariots. Proceedings of the First Chariot Conference (Cairo 2012), A. J. Veldemeijer and S. Ikram (eds), 2013
EXARC Journal Issue 2021/2, 2021
This article presents data from an international experimental study on the reconstruction of the “compound” bow of Sintashta culture of bronze age South Ural, Russia. The project is carried out by a collective of researchers from Greece and Russia as part of the grant program of the world association of experimental archaeology EXARC - “Twinning program”. The article reviews the global context of the design features of bows of the Neolithic-Bronze Age. The features and parts of the Sintashta “compound” bow were considered, and the role of long-range weapons in the life of Sintashta society was discussed. Using authentic technologies and materials, the authors of the article managed to make four versions of the bow reconstruction prior to obtaining the correct version. --- The content is published under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial 4.0 License. Archaeological Experiment on Reconstruction of the "Compound" Bow of the Sintashta Bronze Age Culture from the Stepnoe Cemetery exarc.net/issue-2021-2/ea/reconstruction-compound-bow-sintashta ---- Persistent Identifier: https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10579
Bows Used as Symbols of Military Victory in the Neo-Assyrian Period, 2022
Bows have been used by humankind since prehistoric times. Initially used by hunters to meet their food needs, simple bows with a wooden body and a beam made of plant fiber or animal skin evolved over time into the indispensable deadly compound bow of the battlefields made with sinew, horn, and adhesive. However, since the bows were made of organic materials such as wood, leather, plant fiber, sinew, and horn, most of them decayed over time and were lost in nature. Thus, very few bows survived intact. Hence, visual works and cuneiform texts depicted on steles, obelisks, reliefs, seals, and door bands constitute our main source of information on bows. Numerous archaeological and epigraphic materials on bows dated to the Neo-Assyrian Period (1000-612 BC) have been unearthed as a result of scientific studies. Studies on these materials give important information on the use of bows in many different areas such as hunting activities, battlefields, religious ceremonies, and curse texts but also show that they were used as a symbol of kings' military victories.
In: S. Blum ‒ T. Efe ‒ T. L. Kienlin ‒ E. Pernicka (Hrsg.), From Past to Present. Studies in Memory of Manfred O. Korfmann (Bonn 2020) 33–43., 2020
Berkeley Undergraduate Journal, 2017
This research looks to investigate the designs of ancient bows depicted on ancient Greek pottery. The goal is to show that the bows most commonly shown are not native to the Greek mainland but rather are from both Scythia and Egypt. This has been done by examining a number of vases, pyramid friezes, and modern bow reconstructions. The common use of the Scythian design for archer characters in scenes of myth implies a familiarity with archery primarily through the Scythian mercenaries. The Egyptian acacia deflex bow design, while rare in vase depictions, directly corresponds to images on pyramids. The Egyptian angular composite bow appears in a rare case on a Greek vase, but its depiction is consistent with modern historical reconstructions. Through showing these non-native bow origins, this paper hopes to further demonstrate the worldly influences to archaic Greece.
Acta Militaria Mediaevalia IX (Kraków-Rzeszów-Sanok), 2013
The aim of the paper is to enhance our understanding of bow finds unearthed in burials in Eurasia in the first millennium A.D. General terminological, methodological and source critical problems are concerned in order to define the information value of the two main sources, i.e. rigid bow applications and well-preserved bows. Hence, an attempt is made to find a suitable, unambiguous term for the bows surveyed, through an epistemological analysis of the terminology of bows in general. As the structure of the arms (complex or simple) and the reflex or deflex of the bow cannot be unequivocally ascertained on the base of archaeological data alone – considering our first and abundant group of rigid bow applications, the initiation of the ‘rigid’ term seems appropriate, as it properly describes the main characteristic of the archaeological record. Concerning the terminology of rigid bow applications, Russian, English, German and Hungarian terms of different meanings are unified into a coherent system, emphasizing certain related theoretical problems of function (strengthening versus decoration or structure) and material (bone versus antler). Thus an objective terminology is proposed, which besides the main formal characteristic of the application (plate or rod) also indicates its location (grip or tip) and position (frontal, dorsal or lateral). Dealing with issues of source criticism and research methods, the usage of artistic sources is also challenged here. In order to demonstrate the general unrealism, abstraction and thus inapplicability of the artistic depictions, the finds from Kurgantepe (Uzbekistan) are analyzed, where both pictorial and archaeological evidence were unearthed in the same grave. The types, quality and general ‘worth’ of information (fabrication, structure, function, use-wear traces, etc.) derived from the archeological record (i.e. rigid bow applications) are discussed in greater length. Furthermore, it is noted that rigid bow applications once were part of a complicated & complex mechanical machine, thus the epistemological question arose, whether the applications can be understood and discussed separately or only as parts of the whole entity, i.e. the bow. For it makes real difference, if one classifies and evaluates the applications or only the bow itself. The aim of the prolonged theoretical discussion is to provide a firm methodological basis for further analysis of the archaeological material unearthed throughout Eurasia. At last, to demonstrate the enormous importance of well-preserved bow finds, i.e. the ultimate source of the research, a list of all pre-Mongol period rigid bow finds in Eurasia is compiled and evaluated. Thus the chronological and chorological aspects of well-preserved bows are given, while overall source critical problems (archaeological context, available information, state of preservation, etc.) are also concerned.
Colours, Commodities and the Birth of Globalization: A History of the Natural Dyes of the Americas, 1500-2000, edited by Carlos Marichal and David Pretel, 99-122. London: Bloomsbury Press, 2024., 2024
Acoustics, 2024
Anadolu Araştırmaları - Anatolian Research, 2024
Training Manual for Pharmaceutical Faculty Students, 2015
Union Seminary Quarterly Review, 1999
Philosophical Psychology, 2005
Philosophy, Phenomenology, Sciences
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مجلة بحوث جامعة حلب, 2024
Bonfring International Journal of Power Systems and Integrated Circuits, 2012
Bringing Communities Together, 2012
Acta agriculturae Serbica, 2019
Ciência e cultura (Barretos), 2016
Promoting Understanding of Statistics about Society IASE Roundtable Conference
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