Author Topic: sudbury bow discussion  (Read 4674 times)

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riverrat

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sudbury bow discussion
« on: October 19, 2015, 02:10:45 pm »
hi, i like making replicas of Native American style bows. on this sight i have seen several sudbury type bows over the years that people had made. some of the things that get my attention is it has a handle. most Native style bows were D bows.looking at a drawing in a book called N.A. BOWS ARROWS AND QUIVERS VOL. 1 on page 34 is a Wampanoag bow, the famous Sudbury bow. looking at it and taking in its style, looks rather modern for those times in N.America, or more so European to some extent.for those times.which got me to thinking. did any other tribes have such a handled bow? that kind of style? then looking at the map of tribes in the northeast theres the Onandaga on page 64. further inland from the coast with a very similar handled bow.these bows have handles thick enough in relation of limb thickness to say they didnt bend through the handle.gets me wondering could Europeans with bows influenced this design? could they have sailed to the coast of N.America and maybe came into contact with tribes such as those mentioned? when i read about viking bows {these are those Europeans i was thinking might of sailed here}, i came across 3 different types the used. something like a recurve. a simpler style of a English long bow than the English made, and the Holmegaard  bow .being made of Ash, Yew, or Elm.the later two resembles the Sudbury bow to some degree and those two styles {long bow and Holmegaard } could be made of the many hardwoods found in what is now the eastern U.S. of that time period.anyone want to chime in thoughts, insight, or guesses of what might of lead up to this style of bow? Tony

Offline willie

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Re: sudbury bow discussion
« Reply #1 on: October 19, 2015, 03:35:54 pm »
I have often thought the same Tony.  Having grown up only a few miles from where that bow was "obtained", I can say that there are more than a few sites where many believe that the vikings may have settled or maintained contact (within a hundred miles) Of course the "experts" and archaeologists have debated this contact endlessly in the past. I haven't followed the discussion in many years, but did read an interesting book called Cod , by Mark Kurlansky, which suggests that northern european fishermen crossed much earlier than the government sponsored "discoverers".  It's suggested that the Spanish government may have actually been forced to find the secret Basque fishing spot, as the fishery had grown to such an extent by 1492, that the balance of trade in Europe was tilting because of the import of salt cod as a commodity.

Offline PatM

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Re: sudbury bow discussion
« Reply #2 on: October 19, 2015, 04:04:16 pm »
Give the Natives some credit for being innovative. ;) I believe most of those bows pre-date the use of handle risers in Europe.
 Any designs that seem borrowed are more likely to be influenced by later generations coming over the land bridge from Asia. Retro tips and sinew backing likely came from there.
 Remember even after the land bridge closed  the same people lived on either side of the straight and communication, trade and ideas was still an active thing even though you couldn't just walk back and forth.

Offline willie

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Re: sudbury bow discussion
« Reply #3 on: October 19, 2015, 04:54:47 pm »
Quote
I believe most of those bows pre-date the use of handle risers in Europe

I believe the discussion is about the sudbury bow, Pat. Are you aware of NA handled designs predating the viking era?  Is there much stock given to the idea that the northern type (eskimo) bows may have come from the east (greenland and possibly viking), and southern handled types deriving from northern influence?

willie

Offline wizardgoat

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Re: sudbury bow discussion
« Reply #4 on: October 19, 2015, 05:52:46 pm »
Some northwest coast bows have narrowed and deeper handle sections as well, and look to bend very little if at all through the handle.
I think Pat was jus suggesting that the maker of the Sudbury bow could have designed it without the knowledge of European bows.
I believe the Eskimo bows were directly influenced from the asiatic composites. Just my opinion

Offline AndrewS

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Re: sudbury bow discussion
« Reply #5 on: October 19, 2015, 06:26:37 pm »
I think the vikings were in "vinland" - best example l'anse aux meadows, where parts of a chilldren's bow is found.

I think also the vikings hadn't flatbows like the holmegaard (the origin is dated 6500 b.c.).
The haithabu bows (dated around 1000 a.c) are all long, small and d-shaped. Other bows from this time that were found in europe are also d-shaped and small and measured from 5 feet to 6 feet 7". Some of them are probably bending through the grip (the shorter ones)

The sudbury bow looks more like the neolithic bows of europe (holmegaard, bodman (3500 b.c.))

Offline PatM

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Re: sudbury bow discussion
« Reply #6 on: October 19, 2015, 06:57:08 pm »
Quote
I believe most of those bows pre-date the use of handle risers in Europe

I believe the discussion is about the sudbury bow, Pat. Are you aware of NA handled designs predating the viking era?  Is there much stock given to the idea that the northern type (eskimo) bows may have come from the east (greenland and possibly viking), and southern handled types deriving from northern influence?

willie
I was referring to that bow. It's from the 1600s while the use of a handle riser and fades was a much later development in Europe, at least from people likely to have brought any bow influences over.
 I think the use of a  riser and fades is more likely to be a result of access to European tools rather than bow ideas.

Offline AndrewS

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Re: sudbury bow discussion
« Reply #7 on: October 19, 2015, 07:09:32 pm »
@PatM
have a look to the neolithic bows of europe: holmegaard, tybrind vig, bodman, Ashcott Heath, Meare Heath, Mollegabet...
the use of handle risers and fades is a few thousand years older than 1600 a.c.  - as I wrote above the sudbury looks like the neolithic bows....

Offline bradsmith2010

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Re: sudbury bow discussion
« Reply #8 on: October 19, 2015, 07:23:03 pm »
I think either is possible,, or that the similar design could have developed without any contact,,, :)

Offline AndrewS

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Re: sudbury bow discussion
« Reply #9 on: October 19, 2015, 07:25:31 pm »
or may be the contact was from outer space 8)

Offline bradsmith2010

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Re: sudbury bow discussion
« Reply #10 on: October 19, 2015, 07:45:17 pm »
I think the outer space connection is a definite possibility, :)

Offline willie

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Re: sudbury bow discussion
« Reply #11 on: October 19, 2015, 08:02:15 pm »

I was just reading about the  l'anse aux meadows site the other day. Seems like the site was fairly easy to study as it was relativity untouched location. I was surprised to see in that article some theories advanced about the translation of the word "vineland? The take away I got was that if vineland did not refer to the wild grapes found in southern New England, then the vikings did not visit the more southerly locations. Implying that the vikings did not go someplace, seems like more of the obfuscation that has always surrounded any investigation about viking settlements in the new world, although I must admit that they were not promoting the "columbus was first" bs anymore.

At any rate, the more southerly locations were more heavily settled , and the better real estate remodeled on many occasions since, more than might have been previously thought by N Americans and for sure by the later Europeans, making viking finds that might establish there presence in Massachusetts, hard to make sense of.

Brad- the alien influence is further south in the DC area.

Offline bradsmith2010

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Re: sudbury bow discussion
« Reply #12 on: October 19, 2015, 08:13:22 pm »
that seems to make since about the DC area  :)
as far as the handle development ,, I think it could happen quite naturally,, if I had a nice wide piece of wood I was working,, and didnt want to loose weight by making it narrow,, what would I do to be able to shoot it,, well I would narrow the handle,,,   :)

Offline PatM

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Re: sudbury bow discussion
« Reply #13 on: October 19, 2015, 08:32:16 pm »
@PatM
have a look to the neolithic bows of europe: holmegaard, tybrind vig, bodman, Ashcott Heath, Meare Heath, Mollegabet...
the use of handle risers and fades is a few thousand years older than 1600 a.c.  - as I wrote above the sudbury looks like the neolithic bows....
  If you are suggesting those guys nipped over to North America and left bow designs and no DNA you may want to explore what typically happens when dudes get on boats and seek out far lands.  ;)

Offline bowandarrow473

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Re: sudbury bow discussion
« Reply #14 on: October 19, 2015, 08:34:43 pm »
People can generally come to similar conclusions even when separated, a logical mind that can think through a problem is what leads to such conclusions I think.
Whatever you are, be a good one.