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Description
The mechanical brilliance, lucrative contracts, and tragic slaughter of Europe's most feared medieval mercenaries. During the 14th century, the most feared and highly compensated military force in Europe did not fight for king, country, or honor. They fought strictly for gold. The Genoese Crossbowmen were an elite, heavily armored mercenary guild whose mechanical weapons revolutionized the battlefield, capable of punching through knightly armor from hundreds of yards away.Their dominance, however, was violently shattered at the Battle of Crécy in 1346. Caught in a sudden rainstorm without their massive protective shields (pavises), their bowstrings became soaked and useless. When they retreated to restring their weapons, the French nobility, who had hired them, viewed it as cowardice and ordered their own cavalry to ride down and slaughter their expensive mercenaries.This historical deep-dive explores the ruthless business model of the medieval military-industrial complex. We dissect the mechanical engineering of the windlass crossbow, the complex union-like contracts of the Genoese guilds, and how the introduction of the English longbow disrupted a century of tactical dominance.Uncover the brutal intersection of economics and warfare. Understand how logistical failures and aristocratic arrogance destroyed the greatest mercenary army of the Middle Ages in a single, muddy afternoon.



