Ratty; The quote tells me that the book is addressed to gentlemen and yeomen. Gentlemen were the nobles, not gentle by the modern definition. They owed their position to their immediate readiness to fight for their king with the weapons and armour appropriate to their position. Yeomen, the higher class of peasants who owned their own land, were renowned as the finest warbow archers in existence. But you knew that, cidn't you ? If very few ot the population could have used warbows, maybe you can tell me how the crown found ten archers for every man-at-arms at the end of the Hundred Years War ?
Triton; Since you don't consider the book worth anything because it is ignored, you might as well ignore it. Great reasoning ! Good luck making up history while ignoring it. That is a challenge. Perhaps you will come up with something so much better than your historical heritage.
Cheers,
Erik