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  3. Hussite Wars (1419–1434): How Bohemian Peasants Rewrote the Rules of Gunpowder Warfare

Hussite Wars (1419–1434): How Bohemian Peasants Rewrote the Rules of Gunpowder Warfare

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    Long one here — the Hussite Wars get overlooked in firearms history, which is a shame because the thread from Bohemian peasant gunners to your modern carry piece is more direct than most people realize.

    Two words in the modern English shooter's vocabulary — pistol and howitzer — trace directly back to these wars.

    "Pistol" from píšťala, "howitzer" from houfnice — that's not trivia, that's etymology sitting right there in your holster. Next time someone at the LGS counter asks why we call it a pistol, now you have an actual answer that doesn't start with "I think it was Italian."

    Those weapons didn't require extensive training, nor did their effectiveness rely on the operator's physical strength.

    This is exactly why firearms changed warfare — and it's the same argument that still comes up in self-defense discussions today. A 120-pound farmer behind a píšťala was a threat to a knight who'd spent twenty years in armor. The physics don't care about your pedigree.

    Žižka would select elevated ground when possible, maximizing the defensive advantage and reducing the effectiveness of flat-trajectory enemy fire. His cavalry would sortie out to provoke an enemy attack, then withdraw into the wagon circle.

    He was running bait-and-ambush with what amounted to a mobile shooting platform — and he did it with crossbows, hand cannons, and repurposed farm equipment. That's not luck, that's a guy who understood fields of fire, chokepoints, and forcing the attacker to come to him. The fundamentals haven't changed much.

    Each wagon was manned by a crew of approximately twenty soldiers: two armed drivers, two handgunners, six crossbowmen, eight infantry armed with flails or polearms, and two shield bearers.

    The crew breakdown tells you what Žižka actually valued — he's got more crossbowmen than handgunners, probably because reload time on a hand cannon in 1420 was brutal. He wasn't married to any one weapon system. He used what worked for the mission, which is a more honest approach to combined arms than a lot of professional armies were running at the time.

    What's the oldest piece of firearms history you've come across that actually changed how you think about shooting — whether it's a technique, a design decision, or just something that put modern gear in context?


    Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team

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