Crossbow
The mechanized ranged weapon of the medieval era
The crossbow is a ranged weapon that lays a bow horizontally on a stock, the tiller, and holds the drawn string until a trigger releases it. Unlike an ordinary bow, it can deliver great power after relatively short training rather than a lifetime of practice, and so it is often called a democratized weapon. In medieval Europe it was widely used as an infantry weapon and as the mainstay of wall defense. Early prods were composite, of wood, horn, and sinew glued together, but from the 14th century the steel prod was introduced and greatly raised the draw weight and the penetration. The bolt, or quarrel, that answers to the arrow is shorter and heavier than an ordinary arrow and delivered strong penetration at close range.