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Archery.—XIV. Century

Archery.—XIV. Century.jpg Cross-Bow Shooting at the Butts.—XVI. CenturyThumbnailsTwo Saxon Archers—VIII. CenturyCross-Bow Shooting at the Butts.—XVI. CenturyThumbnailsTwo Saxon Archers—VIII. CenturyCross-Bow Shooting at the Butts.—XVI. CenturyThumbnailsTwo Saxon Archers—VIII. CenturyCross-Bow Shooting at the Butts.—XVI. CenturyThumbnailsTwo Saxon Archers—VIII. CenturyCross-Bow Shooting at the Butts.—XVI. CenturyThumbnailsTwo Saxon Archers—VIII. Century
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The Cornish men are spoken of as good archers, and shot their arrows to a great length; they are also, says Carew, "well skilled in near shooting, and in well aimed shooting;—the butts made them perfect in the one, and the roaving in the other, for the prickes, the first corrupters of archery, through too much preciseness, were formerly scarcely known, and little practised."

Other marks are occasionally mentioned, as the standard, the target, hazel wands, rose garlands, and the popinjay, which, we are told, was an artificial parrot.
I have not met with such a mark in any manuscript delineation; but, in the following engraving, the reader will find a cock substituted for the parrot, and the archer has discharged his arrow very skilfully.

Author
The Sports and Pastimes of the People of England from the Earliest Period to the Present Time
By Joseph Strutt
Published 1845
Available from gutenberg.org
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900*389
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