where
The Location of weapon used and origins.
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All the Medieval weapon was from the torture tools to the holy church models, but The medieval England's greatest weapon was Crossbow and longbow. It is great when they had alot of hiding and range, they could just shoot enemies on the field with no harms from the soldiers ("MIDIEVAL WEAPONS AND COMBAT - The Longbow (MIDDLE AGES BATTLE HISTORY DOCUMENTARY)"). The Longbow was the best in all, with the power and the range so the England won from French mostly ("MIDIEVAL WEAPONS AND COMBAT - The Longbow (MIDDLE AGES BATTLE HISTORY DOCUMENTARY)"). The shields, like buckler was used in for close combat. It blocks most of the damage from swords and daggers. The buckler is small, it is swifty shield to block against weapons from the enemies. The spear shield can defend them selves from heavy weapons, also can stab enemies from the tip and, also has a hook to bring down enemies and spear them ("MIDIEVAL WEAPONS AND COMBAT - The Shield (MIDDLE AGES BATTLE HISTORY DOCUMENTARY)"). There was alot of French weapons, but most of them were England weapon clones so French always failed on fighting with England. And French always voyage to England, because it is a island and England had alot of advantages.
Warwolf The Biggest Trebuchet.
![Picture](/uploads/8/8/7/4/88743960/editor/warwolf.jpg?1487422008)
The Warwolf is a siege engine used by England armies during Scottish wars of independence ("Warwolf"). It was build in 1304 by king Edward and placed far from Stiriling Castle in Scotland ("Warwolf"). It was Larger than normal trebuchet being 300 to 400 feet and could throw stones 200 yards away with speed of 120 miles per hour and throws stones weight up to 300 pounds ("Warwolf")! Before they build Warwolf the Scots didn't surrender, but after months of building this behemoth the Scots tried to surrender, but king Edward tested on the Stirling Castle ("Warwolf"). When they tested the Warwolf on Stirling Castle's wall, it effictively demoished part of the wall where they wanted to hit ("Warwolf").