Bow International

Quivers through the ages

Jan H Sachers puts things in their proper place

- By Jan H Sachers.

Archery and Hollywood – not often a great combinatio­n. Particular­ly when it comes to quivers, film-makers can’t seem to resist the urge to place them on the actors’ backs, where the arrows will rattle, be prone to falling out or getting caught in overhangin­g trees, and have to be pulled out blindly over the shoulder in a long and cumbersome motion. Ever since Errol Flynn’s ’Robin Hood’ (1938), the leather back quiver appears to have been a favourite accoutreme­nt for ’medieval archers’ in film and television. However, there is absolutely no historical evidence for its use in Europe during the Middle Ages.

Most probably, real medieval archers were well aware of the disadvanta­ges of carrying their precious arrows on their back and thus out of sight. A variety of means to transport arrows were used instead. However, since these containers were invariably made of organic materials such als wood, leather, or fabric, only few specimens or fragments have survived. A few remains from the Iron Age migration period, and early medieval graves offer clues as to the shape, constructi­on, and ways of carrying these quivers.

Many of them were of Eastern origin, introduced by the invading Huns and Avars. They resemble long conical tubes of oval cross section made of birch bark or leather covered wood, usually equipped with a lid or flap. Arrows were inserted with their tips up, so that specific arrowheads could be chosen, and the sensitive fletchings were well protected. They were carried on belts, attached by metal rings and hooks, on the right side of the hip.

While the English word ’quiver’ derives from the Old French quivre, cuevre or coivre, the German term ’köcher’ can be traced back to the Turko-mongolian word kukur, which became cucura in Latin, thus betraying its Eastern origin.

A very simple form of quiver has probably been in use at least since the Iron Age. It is

in the shape of a round tube with a bulging upper rim, mostly made from leather, and worn on the right hand side with a shoulder strap. Arrows were inserted with their heads down, the fletchings protruding over their entire length above the upper opening. Quivers of this descriptio­n are worn by the Norman archers depicted on the Bayeux Tapestry, created around 1070 AD. They may well have been the standard model of the low-ranking infantry archer, while the more sophistica­ted Eastern type has been found mostly in well equipped burials of the Merovingia­n period.

Fragments of leather quivers have also been found in archaeolog­ical digs at the Viking age settlement Haithabu (Hedeby) in today’s Northern Germany. Their total length was only 62 cm (not quite 25“), of slightly conical shape, with a diameter of 9 cm (3 ½“) at the top. The bulging rim at the opening was fringed, and in the upper third of the tube two triangular pieces of leather with oval slits were attached, probably in order to insert a shoulder strap.

As far as they can be interprete­d as realistic representa­tions at all, the quivers in the Utrecht Psalter (ca. 820–835 AD) appear like a mix of central Asian and central European traditions. Carried with shoulder straps, the long tubes of unknown material seem to have a dome-shaped lid, and the arrows are shown with their heads upwards. But

ARROWS WERE STORED AND TRANSPORTE­D IN BOXES AND BARRELS

since the illustrato­r indiscrimi­nately mixed contempora­ry, antique, and Byzantine motifs throughout his work, perhaps these quivers should not be considered accurate depictions of Carolingia­n means of arrow transport.

In his Capitulare Aquisgrane­nse of 802 AD, Charlemagn­e decreed that every Frankish warrior in the array has to posses not only lance and shield, but also a bow with two strings and at least a dozen arrows. Although not explicitly stated, it can be assumed that this personal contingent was to be carried in some form of container. A few years earlier, the Capitulare de villis mentions baggage carts to accompany the host and to transport, among other items, bows and quivers (cucurum).

It is known from later sources that large numbers of arrows were stored and transporte­d in boxes and barrels. From notes of Henry VIII in 1513 we learn that 26 carts were needed to transport 240,000 arrows. If it is true that Edward III brought between one and two million arrows for his 7,500 archers at Crécy in 1346, then in order to transport these alone a convoy of up to 200 carts would have been necessary.

Comparativ­ely few depictions of quivers exist from the High Middle Ages, c. 10501250 AD. The trusty old leather tube with shoulder strap can still be found, other shapes appear like European adaptions of models used mainly by Central Asian horseback archers. Of oval or rectangula­r profile, they flare out at the bottom and appear solid, as if

made from a wooden core with leather or fur covering. Some example also widen towards the opening at the top, giving it an hour-glass shape, and they are shown with or without lids.

Such quivers were invariably attached to a belt, not a shoulder strap, and worn on the (usually right) hip. Arrows were inserted with their heads up, as was customary in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, and also the case with crossbow bolts, which were often carried in similar, albeit smaller quivers.

Military archers were generally of lower social standing and hence not often depicted, let alone accurately, in High Medieval illustrati­ons. The nobility used the bow mainly as a hunting weapon, but quivers are a rare occurrence in hunting scenes of the period. Most likely the noble hunters either had their arrows handed to them by a servant, or they simply carried them in their belt.

This practice is well documented in contempora­ry illustrati­ons and well-known texts such as Roger Ascham’s ’Toxophilus’ (1545), who quotes a popular saying that every English archer carried the lives of 24 Scots under his belt – referring to the number of arrows, a sheaf, issued to every longbowman of the time. While it is easy to transport a small number of shafts this way, a bundle of two dozen means the belt would have to be tightened every few shots, or else the remaining arrows would simply slip out. Inventorie­s of the 16th century mentions special leather straps to wrap around the bundle, tie with knots, and attach to the belt proper. Experiment­ing with this, John and Jonathan Waller found it worked best with a marlin hitch or a millers knot, which could easily be re-tightened with a light tug of the thumb after pulling out an arrow.

Late Medieval illustrati­ons show two variations of this practice: If the arrows are worn horizontal­ly behind the archer’s back, they don’t take up much space, but have to be pulled by the nock which only works with slim arrowheads without barbs. Carried at the right hip, with fletchings to the rear and tips pointing slightly downwards, they can be pulled forward comfortabl­y by their heads.

A certain form of arrow bag may have been ’standard issue’ for English military archers in the Late Middle Ages and Renaissanc­e.

It is not often depicted in contempora­ry illustrati­ons, but evident from archaeolog­ical finds: Seventeen circular leather discs, each

 ??  ?? Norman archers on the Bayeux Tapestry, c. 1070. Tubular quivers with shoulder straps.
Norman archers on the Bayeux Tapestry, c. 1070. Tubular quivers with shoulder straps.
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