• -15%

Hungarian-Magyar bow with black poplar 39 lbs


143.00€
121.6 € + VAT: 121.55€
Save 15%

This is one of the nicest forms of bows from our workshop. It’s been very popular since we started to produce it 2003.  

Upper lamination is 

Black poplar: It is also called black poplar with warts. When it is quite rainy or the area is wet it grows a lot of branches that will be grown around by the tree. The warts are branches in the tree tribe. When they slice the wood it shows a nice pattern. Black poplar doesn’t crack easily, it is a half-hard wood. Popular material in furniture building.

osage orange grip

Product customisation

  • 250 char. max
Power
Lamination color
In basic set:
In prime set:
Quantity
Product available with different options

Description

Composite bows are different from the Western European simple bows (so called longbows) in a way that in all cases several pieces of horn and wood were stuck together in layers, with bone stiffening. The form and structure of these were extremely diverse, but it is typical of all of them that in un-drawn condition they become bent strongly backwards, and this negative bending also remains in drawn condition in a length of 1-2 hand span at both ends of the bow. Turkish-Tartar composite bows, which represent the best of reflex bows, ensured a relatively high initial speed. 

In Basic set we add 12 budget arrows, +1 Dacron string and a standard leather armguard.

In Prime set you’ll receive 12 medieval arrows matching to the bow in spine value, 1 Fastflight string and a bow case. If you want the arrows to be shorter than 32”, please write us!

Product Details

FDMAT SK

Data sheet

String length
53 ¾ (4 ¾ )”
Draw weight (lbs)
39 lbs
Draw length
up to 32"
Bracing height
~7"
Total length
57 1/2"
Average weight
600 g
Video
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Good to know
Regino, the Abbot of Prüm described Magyars in 908 in this way: "They don' kill many with swords, but they do thousands with their arrows, which are shot so skilfully from their bows made of horn, that it is scarcely possible to find protection against them." Magyars, the name by which Hungarians call themselves, arrived to the Carpathian basin in 896 from the southern region of the Ural. They did not pursue a settled way of life for another 100 years, they led looting expeditions to Western Europe and Byzantium. "They find great pleasure mostly in distant fight, lying in ambush, encircling the enemy, imitating back out and then turning back, and dispersing fighting units... They are attracted to machination, they fight from their horses galloping forward or turning back, they often imitate running away as well... Most of the times they stop fighting in the middle of a fierce combat, then a little later they turn back from running, and when you think that you have defeated them already, you find yourself in a mortal danger." (Leo, the Wise) The uniting Holy Roman Empire stopped their marauding lifestyle (933, 955). Taking up Roman Christianity ended the Magyars’ Western campaigns, and from this time on their horse archery tactics were replaced by a Western styles of warfare.
Length strung
55 1/2"
Product status
In stock
Used materials
wood, fibre glass, horn, epoxy, genuine leather, bandage thread
Garancia
1 év
Kiszállítás
Gyors, 1-3 nap

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