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The Eastern Composite Bow; Grandfather of the Compound.

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Bushman452:
Arrow Affliction is a cool show but it's all about a punk redneck with a compound bow but he isn't the all round master I believe Lajos Kassai is the greastest archer of our time and he can totally take that compound junkie to school. Remember if it wasn't for the Huns there wouldn't be a compound.

zeNBowyer:
I don't see the connection between asian bows and the compound (?)

Traxx:
Lajos Kassai,the greatest archer of our time?While i dont purpose to take away from the mans skill as an archer,i would think that is a very bold statement,considering the quality of archers we have in our time.And what exactly is,"Our time"?
Another little tidbit of Historical fact,that is widely unknown.While most attribute the Modern compound as we know it to Mr Allen,it was actually INVENTED by another.While Allen,did in fact have the first Patent on the Modern compound,it was Dick Hamilton who was credited as drawing up the first set of known plans for the "Compound"as we know it today.Dick never shot one though as he is a die hard traditionalist who never strayed from his,trusty hill style bows,even when the rage was the recurve.Dick is more known for his Hunting skills and association with Jay Massey,who together developed the Moosejohn outfitter buisness,that cateres to Traditional bowhunters.

Tsalagi:
Actualy, the Huns didn't shoot anything close to a compound. They shot a siyah-type composite recurve with an assymetrical, shorter lower limb. The Huns didn't invent the composite bow. The composite bow most likely did develop on the steppes of Asia. But long before the Huns and Mongols, it was brought to the Middle East by Indo-Aryan and Semitic tribes. It's what gave the Hyksos---probably proto-Hebrews---the ability to conquer Egypt. That, and the chariot. The chariot preceded horse riders as the platform for the composite bow. Being that the Semites and Indo-Aryans who came out of Asia were pastoralists, the composite bow was probably a logical step on the steppes where bow wood was almost non-existant and if you couldn't defend your flocks, you didn't survive. After the Hyksos, then the composite bow spread across the Middle East. The Hyksos came into Egypt around 1620 BC; a long, long time before the Huns showed up. The only resource on the steppes is grass and much of it only suitable for pastoralism. Hence, the composite bow is at least as old as pastoralism as practiced on the steppes.

medicinewheel:
Well, some say the Penobscot bow might be 'something like a forefather' to the compound, but I can't really see the connection to the Huns' bow either. And the Hornbow is also not the Huns' invention; at the times of the Hunnic empire middle of the first Millennium, the hornbow was an ancient weapon already!

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