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{{Short description|Use of equines in combat}}
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{{Redirect|War horse}} {{Redirect|War horse}}
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] in late medieval style ], demonstrating ] at a ]]]
{{Use British English|date=August 2023}}


]'' depicting the ] of the ] at the ].]]
The first use of '''horses in warfare''' occurred over 5000 years ago. The earliest evidence of horses ] in warfare dates from ] between 4000 and 3000&nbsp;BC. A ]ian illustration of warfare from 2500&nbsp;BC depicts some type of ] pulling wagons. By 1600&nbsp;BC, improved ] and ] designs made chariot warfare common throughout the ], and the earliest written training manual for war horses was a guide for training chariot horses written about 1350&nbsp;BC. As formal ] tactics replaced the chariot, so did new training methods, and by 360&nbsp;BC, the Greek cavalry officer ] had written an extensive treatise on horsemanship. The effectiveness of horses in battle was also revolutionised by improvements in technology, including the invention of the ], the ], and later, the ].
{{war}}


The first evidence of ]s in ] dates from ] between 4000 and 3000&nbsp;BC. A ]ian illustration of warfare from 2500&nbsp;BC depicts some type of ] ]. By 1600&nbsp;BC, improved ] and ] designs made chariot warfare common throughout the ], and the earliest written training manual for war horses was a guide for training chariot horses written about 1350&nbsp;BC. As formal ] replaced the chariot, so did new training methods, and by 360&nbsp;BC, the Greek cavalry officer ] had written an extensive treatise on horsemanship. The effectiveness of horses in battle was also revolutionized by improvements in ], such as the invention of the ], the ], and the ].
Many different types and sizes of horses were used in war, depending on the form of warfare. The type used varied with whether the horse was being ridden or driven, and whether they were being used for ], cavalry charges, ], communication, or supply. Throughout history, ]s and ]s as well as horses played a crucial role in providing support to armies in the field.


Many different types and sizes of horses were used in war, depending on the form of warfare. The type used varied with whether the horse was being ridden or driven, and whether they were being used for ], cavalry charges, ], communication, or supply. Throughout history, ]s and ]s, as well as horses played a crucial role in providing support to armies in the field.
Horses were well suited to the warfare tactics of the ]ic cultures from the ]s of ]. Several ]n cultures made extensive use of cavalry and chariots. ] warriors relied upon ] in their campaigns throughout ], ], and Europe beginning in the 7th and 8th centuries AD. Europeans used several types of war horses in the ], and the best-known ] warrior of the period was the armoured ]. With the decline of the knight and rise of gunpowder in warfare, light cavalry again rose to prominence, used in both European warfare and in the conquest of the ]. In the Americas, the use of horses and development of mounted warfare tactics were learned by several tribes of ] and in turn, highly mobile horse regiments were critical in the ].


Horses were well suited to the warfare tactics of the ]ic cultures from the ]s of ] and ]. Several cultures in ] made extensive use of cavalry and chariots. ] warriors relied upon ] in their campaigns throughout ], ], and ] beginning in the 7th and 8th centuries AD. Europeans used several types of war horses in the ], and the best-known ] warrior of the period was the armoured ]. With the decline of the knight and rise of gunpowder in warfare, light cavalry again rose to prominence, used in both European warfare and in the conquest of the ]. Battle cavalry developed to take on a multitude of roles in the late 18th century and early 19th century and was often crucial for victory in the ]. In the Americas, the use of horses and development of mounted warfare tactics were learned by several tribes of ] and in turn, highly mobile horse regiments were critical in the ].
Horse cavalry began to be phased out after ] in favour of ], though a few horse cavalry units were still used into ]. By the end of World War II, horses were seldom seen in battle, but were still used extensively for the transport of troops and supplies. Today, formal horse cavalry units have almost disappeared, although horses are still seen in use by organised armed fighters in ] countries. Many nations still maintain small units of mounted riders for patrol and reconnaissance, and military horse units are also used for ceremonial and educational purposes. Horses are also used for ] of battles, ], and in equestrian competitions derived from the riding and training skills once used by the military.


Horse cavalry began to be phased out after ] in favour of ], though a few horse cavalry units were still used into ], especially as scouts. By the end of World War II, horses were seldom seen in battle, but were still used extensively for the transport of troops and supplies. Today, formal battle-ready horse cavalry units have almost disappeared, though the ] used horses in battle during the ]. Horses are still seen in use by organized armed fighters in the ]. Many nations still maintain small units of mounted riders for patrol and ], and military horse units are also used for ceremonial and educational purposes. Horses are also used for ] of battles, ], and in ] competitions derived from the riding and training skills once used by the military.
==Types of horses used in warfare==
A fundamental principle of ] is "form to function". Therefore, the type of horse used for various forms of warfare depended on the work performed, the weight a horse needed to carry or pull, and distance travelled.<ref>Bennett ''Conquerors'' p. 31</ref> Weight affects speed and endurance, creating a trade-off: armour added protection,<ref>Krebs ''Groundbreaking Scientific Experiments, Inventions, and Discoveries of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance'' p. 250</ref> but added weight reduces maximum speed.<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1198889,00.html|title=Bred for Speed...Built for Trouble|journal=TIME|accessdate=2008-11-07|date=2006-05-28|author=Park, Alice}}</ref> Therefore, various cultures had different military needs. In some situations, one primary type of horse was favoured over all others.<ref>Edwards, G. ''The Arabian'' p. 19</ref> In other places, multiple types were needed; warriors would travel to battle riding a lighter horse of greater speed and endurance, and then switch to a heavier horse, with greater weight-carrying capacity, when wearing heavy armour in actual combat.<ref name=NicolleCK14>Nicolle ''Crusader Knight'' p. 14</ref>


==Types of horse used in warfare==
The average horse can carry up to approximately 30% of its body weight.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://aerc.org/AERC_Rider_Handbook110303.asp|title=Chapter 3, Section IV: Size|author=American Endurance Ride Conference|accessdate=2008-08-07|date= November 2003|work=Endurance Rider's Handbook|publisher=AERC}}</ref> While all horses can pull more than they can carry, the weight horses can pull varies widely, depending on the build of the horse, the type of vehicle, road conditions, and other factors.<ref>Baker ''A Treatise on Roads and Pavements'' pp. 22&ndash;23</ref><ref name="Cotner1"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://horsepullresults.com/LacledeCountyFairgroundsarticle.asp|title=Mighty horses pull more than their weight at fair|author=Luthy, Dusty|accessdate=2008-08-08|work=The Lebanon Daily Record|publisher=Horsepull Results}}</ref> Horses ] to a wheeled vehicle on a paved road can pull as much as eight times their weight,<ref name=dynamometer>{{cite web|url=http://www.easterndrafthorse.com/History/historydyn.htm|title= History of the draft horse dynamometer machine|author=Eastern Draft Horse Association|work=History|publisher=Eastern Draft horse Association|accessdate=2008-07-17}}</ref> but far less if pulling wheelless loads over unpaved terrain.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.easterndrafthorse.com/Rules/EDHARules.htm |title=Eastern Draft Horse Association Rules|author=Eastern Draft Horse Association|work=History|publisher=Eastern Draft horse Association|accessdate=2008-07-17}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.horsepull.com/Record%20Loads.htm |title=Records |author=Horsepull.com |work=|publisher=Horsepull.com |accessdate=2008-08-07}}</ref> Thus, horses that were ], like riding animals, varied in size and had to make a trade-off between speed and weight. Light horses could pull a small war chariot at speed.<ref>Edwards ''The Arabian'' pp. 9&ndash;11</ref> Heavy supply wagons, ], and support vehicles were pulled by heavier horses or a larger number of horses.<ref name=Chamberlin146>Chamberlin ''Horse'' p. 146</ref>
A fundamental principle of ] is "form to function". Therefore, the type of horse used for various forms of warfare depended on the work performed, the weight a horse needed to carry or pull, and distance travelled.{{sfn|Bennett|1998|p=31}} Weight affects speed and endurance, creating a trade-off: armour added protection,{{sfn|Krebs|2004|p=250}} but added weight reduced maximum speed.<ref>{{cite magazine |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1198889,00.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060628234422/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1198889,00.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=June 28, 2006 |title=Bred for Speed&nbsp;... Built for Trouble |magazine=] |access-date=November 7, 2008 |date=May 28, 2006 |last=Park |first=Alice}}</ref> Therefore, various cultures had different military needs. In some situations, one primary type of horse was favoured over all others.{{sfn|Edwards|1973|p=19}} In other places, multiple types were needed; warriors would travel to battle riding a lighter horse of greater speed and endurance, and then switch to a heavier horse, with greater weight-carrying capacity, when wearing heavy armour in actual combat.{{sfn|Nicolle|1996|p=14}}


The average horse can carry up to approximately 30% of its body weight.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://aerc.org/AERC_Rider_Handbook110303.asp |title=Chapter 3, Section IV: Size |author=American Endurance Ride Conference |access-date=August 7, 2008 |date=November 2003 |work=Endurance Rider's Handbook |publisher=AERC |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080515133147/http://www.aerc.org/AERC_Rider_Handbook110303.asp |archive-date=May 15, 2008}}</ref> While all horses can pull more weight than they can carry, the maximum weight that horses can pull varies widely, depending on the build of the horse, the type of vehicle, road conditions, and other factors.{{sfn|Baker|1918|pp=22–23}}<ref name="Cotner1"/><ref>{{cite web |url=http://horsepullresults.com/LacledeCountyFairgroundsarticle.asp |title=Mighty horses pull more than their weight at fair |last=Luthy |first=Dusty |access-date=August 8, 2008 |work=The Lebanon Daily Record |publisher=Horsepull Results |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080517034841/http://horsepullresults.com/LacledeCountyFairgroundsarticle.asp |archive-date=May 17, 2008}}</ref> Horses ] to a wheeled vehicle on a paved road can pull as much as eight times their weight,<ref name=dynamometer>{{cite web |url=http://www.easterndrafthorse.com/History/historydyn.htm |title= History of the draft horse dynamometer machine |author=Eastern Draft Horse Association |work=History |publisher=Eastern Draft horse Association |access-date=July 17, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080609233345/http://www.easterndrafthorse.com/History/historydyn.htm |archive-date=June 9, 2008}}</ref> but far less if pulling wheelless loads over unpaved terrain.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.easterndrafthorse.com/Rules/EDHARules.htm |title=Eastern Draft Horse Association Rules |author=Eastern Draft Horse Association |work=History |publisher=Eastern Draft horse Association |access-date=July 17, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080609233413/http://www.easterndrafthorse.com/Rules/EDHARules.htm |archive-date=June 9, 2008}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.horsepull.com/Record%20Loads.htm |title=Records |author=Horsepull.com |publisher=Horsepull.com |access-date=August 7, 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080915143907/http://www.horsepull.com/Record%20Loads.htm |archive-date=September 15, 2008}}</ref> Thus, horses that were ] varied in size and had to make a trade-off between speed and weight, just as did riding animals. Light horses could pull a small war chariot at speed.{{sfn|Edwards|1973|pp=9–11}} Heavy supply wagons, ], and support vehicles were pulled by heavier horses or a larger number of horses.{{sfn|Chamberlin|2006|pp=146}} The method by which a horse was hitched to a vehicle also mattered: horses could pull greater weight with a ] than they could with a ], and even less with an ox ].{{sfn|Chamberlin|2006|pp=106–110}}
The method by which a horse was hitched to a vehicle also mattered: horses could pull greater weight with a ] than they could with a ], and even less with an ox ].<ref name=Chamberlin106>Chamberlin ''Horse'' pp. 106&ndash;110</ref>


===Light-weight === ===Light-weight===
Light, ]s such as the ancestors of the modern ], ], and ] were used for warfare that required speed, endurance and agility.<ref>Edwards, G. ''The Arabian'' pp. 10&ndash;11</ref> Such horses ranged from about 12 ] to just under 15 hands ({{convert|48|to|60|in|m}}), weighing approximately {{convert|800|to|1000|lb|kg}}.<ref>Bennett ''Conquerors'' p. 71</ref> To move quickly, riders had to use lightweight ] and carry relatively light weapons such as bows, light spears, javelins, or, later, rifles. This was the original horse used for early chariot warfare, raiding, and light ].<ref>Edwards, G. ''The Arabian'' pp. 9, 13&ndash;14, 22</ref> Light, ]s such as the ancestors of the modern ], ], and ] were used for warfare that required speed, endurance, and agility.{{sfn|Edwards|1973|pp=10–11}} Such horses ranged from about {{hands|12}} to just under {{hands|15}}, weighing approximately {{convert|800|to|1000|lb|kg|order=flip}}.{{sfn|Bennett|1998|p=71}} To move quickly, riders had to use lightweight ] and carry relatively light weapons such as bows, light spears, javelins, or later rifles. This was the original horse used for early chariot warfare, raiding, and light ].{{sfn|Edwards|1973|pp=9, 13–14, 22}}


Relatively light horses were used by many cultures, including the ]ians,<ref>Edwards,G. ''The Arabian'' pp. 13&ndash;14</ref> the ], the ]s,<ref>Edwards, G. ''The Arabian'' p. 16</ref> and the ]. Throughout the ], small, light animals were used to pull chariots designed to carry no more than two passengers, a driver and a warrior.<ref>Edwards, G. ''The Arabian'' pp. 2, 9</ref><ref name="Bennett29">Bennett ''Conquerers'' p. 29</ref> In the European ], a light weight war horse became known as the ].<ref>Oakeshott ''A Knight and His Horse'' pp. 11&ndash;15</ref> Relatively light horses were used by many cultures, including the ]ians,{{sfn|Edwards|1973|pp=13–14}} the ], the ]s,{{sfn|Edwards|1973|p=16}} and the ]. Throughout the ], small, light animals were used to pull chariots designed to carry no more than two passengers, a driver and a warrior.{{sfn|Edwards|1973|pp=2, 9}}{{sfn|Bennett|1998|p=29}} In the European ], a lightweight war horse became known as the ].{{sfn|Oakeshott|1998|pp=11–15}}


===Medium-weight === ===Medium-weight===
Medium-weight horses developed as early as the ] with the needs of various civilizations to pull heavier loads, such as chariots capable of holding more than two people,{{sfn|Bennett|1998|p=29}} and, as ] evolved into ], to carry heavily armoured riders.{{sfn|Edwards|1973|pp=11, 13}} The ] were among the earliest cultures to produce taller, heavier horses.{{sfn|Crowell|1951|pp=36–37}} Larger horses were also needed to pull supply wagons and, later on, artillery pieces. In Europe, horses were also used to a limited extent to maneuver ] on the battlefield as part of dedicated ] units. Medium-weight horses had the greatest range in size, from about {{hands|14.2}} but stocky,{{sfn|Edwards|1973|pp=11, 13}}{{sfn|Hyland|1994|pp=85–86}} to as much as {{hands|16}},{{sfn|Gravett|2002|p=59}} weighing approximately {{convert|1000|to|1200|lb|kg|order=flip}}. They generally were quite agile in combat,{{sfn|Bennett|1998|pp=54, 137}} though they did not have the raw speed or endurance of a lighter horse. By the ], larger horses in this class were sometimes called ]s. They may have resembled modern ] or ] breeds.{{#tag:ref|The ] used a 15.2 hand ] mare as a model for statues displaying various 15th and 16th century horse armour, as her body shape was an excellent fit.{{sfn|Hyland|1998|p=10}}|group=note}} Later, horses similar to the modern ] often carried European cavalry.<ref name="USDF"/>
] prepares to man the fortification against invaders of the ], painted c.&nbsp;1293 AD. By this time, a medium-weight horse was used.]]
Medium-weight horses developed as early as the ] with the needs of various civilisations to pull heavier loads, such as chariots capable of holding more than two people,<ref name="Bennett29"/> and, as ] evolved into ], to carry heavily-armoured riders.<ref name="Edwards11ff">Edwards, G. ''The Arabian'' pp. 11, 13</ref> The ] were among the earliest cultures to produce taller, heavier horses.<ref>Crowell ''Cavalcade'' pp. 36&ndash;37</ref> Larger horses were also needed to pull supply wagons, and to manoeuvre various types of weapons, such as ], into place. Medium-weight horses had the greatest range in size, from about 14.2 hands but stocky,<ref name="Edwards11ff"/><ref>Hyland ''The Medieval Warhorse'' pp. 85&ndash;86</ref> to as much as 16 hands ({{convert|58|to|64|in|m}}),<ref>Gravett ''English Medieval Knight 1300-1400'' p. 59</ref> weighing approximately {{convert|1000|to|1200|lb|kg}}. They generally were quite agile in combat,<ref>Bennett ''Conquerors'' pp. 54, 137</ref> though they did not have the raw speed or endurance of a lighter horse. By the ], larger horses in this class were sometimes called ]s. They may have resembled modern ] or ] breeds.{{#tag:ref|The ] used a 15.2 hand ] mare as a model for statues displaying various 15th and 16th century horse armours, as her body shape was an excellent fit.<ref>Hyland ''The Warhorse'' p. 10</ref>|group=note}} Later, horses similar to the modern ] often carried European cavalry.<ref name="USDF"/>


===Heavy-weight === ===Heavy-weight===
Large, heavy horses, weighing from {{convert|1500|to|2000|lb|kg}}, the ancestors of today's ]s, were used, particularly in Europe, from the Middle Ages onward. They pulled heavy loads, having the power to pull weapons or supply wagons and disposition to remain calm under fire. Some historians believe they may have carried the heaviest-armoured ]s of the European Late ] though others dispute this claim, indicating that the destrier, or knight's battle horse, was a medium-weight animal. It is also disputed whether the destrier class included draught animals or not.<ref>See Clark "Introduction" ''Medieval Horse'' pp. 22&ndash;27 and Prestwich ''Armies and Warfare in the Middle Ages'' p. 30</ref> Breeds at the smaller end of the heavyweight category may have included the ancestors of the ], agile for their size and physically able to manoeuvre in battle.<ref>Gies ''Daily Life in Medieval Times'' p. 88</ref> Large, heavy horses, weighing from {{convert|1500|to|2000|lb|kg|order=flip}}, the ancestors of today's ], were used, particularly in Europe, from the ] onward. They pulled heavy loads like supply wagons and were disposed to remain calm in battle. Some historians believe they may have carried the heaviest-armoured ]s of the ], though others dispute this claim, indicating that the destrier, or knight's battle horse, was a medium-weight animal. It is also disputed whether the destrier class included draught animals or not.<ref>{{harvp|Clark|2004|pp=22–27}} and {{harvp|Prestwich|1996|p=30}}</ref> Breeds at the smaller end of the heavyweight category may have included the ancestors of the ], agile for their size and physically able to maneuver in battle.{{sfn|Gies|Gies|2005|p=88}}

===Ponies===
The British Army's 2nd Dragoons in 1813 had 340 ponies of {{hands|14.2}} and 55 ponies of {{hands|14}};<ref>{{cite book |last=Morgan |first=M. |title=Wellington's Victories. A Guide to Sharpe's Army 1797–1815 |year=2004 |page= |publisher=Michael O'Mara Books Ltd. |isbn=978-1-84317-093-8 |url=https://archive.org/details/wellingtonsvicto0000morg/page/55}}</ref> the Lovat Scouts, formed in 1899, were mounted on Highland ponies;<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.qohldrs.co.uk/html/lovat_scouts.htm |title=Lovat Scouts history with links and pictures of ex members |publisher=Qohldrs.co.uk |access-date=May 28, 2012}}</ref> the British Army recruited 200 Dales ponies in World War II for use as pack and artillery animals;<ref>{{citation |last=Lynghaug |first=Fran |title=The Official Horse Breeds Standards Guide: The Complete Guide to the Standards of All North American Equine Breed Associations |publisher=Voyageur Press |location=Stillwater, MN |year=2009 |page=457 |isbn=978-0-7603-3499-7}}</ref> and the British Territorial Army experimented with the use of Dartmoor ponies as ]s in 1935, finding them to be better than mules for the job.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://archive.catholicherald.co.uk/article/30th-august-1935/15/army-experiments-with-dartmoor-ponies-better-than- |title=Army Experiments With Dartmoor Ponies Better Than Mules |newspaper=] |year=1935 |access-date=May 28, 2012}}</ref>


===Other equids=== ===Other equids===
]
Horses were not the only ] used to support human warfare. Donkeys have been used as ]s from antiquity<ref>Hamblin ''Warfare'' p. 130</ref> to the present.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fas.org/irp/doddir/army/fm3-05-213.pdf | title=Special Forces Use of Pack Animals | work= Field Manual FM 3-05.213 |publisher= Army Special Forces |date =June, 2004|accessdate=2008-11-02|format=pdf}}</ref> ]s were also commonly used, especially as pack animals and to pull wagons, but also occasionally for riding.<ref name="Hubbell">{{cite journal |author= Hubbell, Gary |year=Dec. 2006|number= |title= 21st century Horse Soldiers |journal= Western Horseman |volume=| doi = |page=pp. 45&ndash;50}}</ref> Because mules are often both calmer and hardier than horses,<ref name=Genetics190>Equine Research ''Equine Genetics'' p. 190</ref> they were particularly useful for strenuous support tasks, such as hauling supplies over difficult terrain. However, under gunfire, they were less cooperative than horses, so were not used to haul ] on battlefields.<ref name="Cotner1">{{cite web|url=http://www.historynet.com/americas-civil-war-horses-and-field-artillery.htm|author=Cotner, James R.|title=America’s Civil War: Horses and Field Artillery |work=America’s Civil War |publisher=Historynet.com |date=March, 1996 |accessdate=2008-11-02}}</ref> The size of a mule and work to which it was put depended largely on the breeding of the ] that produced the mule. Mules could be lightweight, medium weight, or even, when produced from draught horse ]s, of moderate heavy weight.<ref name=Ensminger85>Ensminger ''Horses and Horsemanship'' pp. 85&ndash;87</ref>
Horses were not the only ] used to support human warfare. ] have been used as pack animals from antiquity{{sfn|Hamblin|2006|p=130}} to the present.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://fas.org/irp/doddir/army/fm3-05-213.pdf |title=Special Forces Use of Pack Animals |work=Field Manual FM 3-05.213 |publisher=Army Special Forces |date=June 2004 |access-date=November 2, 2008}}</ref> ]s were also commonly used, especially as pack animals and to pull wagons, but also occasionally for riding.<ref name="Hubbell">{{cite journal |last=Hubbell |first=Gary |date=December 2006 |title=21st century Horse Soldiers |journal=Western Horseman |pages=45–50}}</ref> Because mules are often both calmer and hardier than horses,{{sfn|Equine Research|1978|p=190}} they were particularly useful for strenuous support tasks, such as hauling supplies over difficult terrain. However, under gunfire, they were less cooperative than horses, so were generally not used to haul ] on battlefields.<ref name="Cotner1">{{cite web |url=http://www.historynet.com/americas-civil-war-horses-and-field-artillery.htm |last=Cotner |first=James R. |title=America's Civil War: Horses and Field Artillery |work=America's Civil War |publisher=Historynet.com |date=March 1996 |access-date=November 2, 2008}}</ref> The size of a mule and work to which it was put depended largely on the breeding of the ] that produced the mule. Mules could be lightweight, medium weight, or even, when produced from draught horse ]s, of moderate heavy weight.{{sfn|Ensminger|1990|pp=85–87}}


==Training and deployment== ==Training and deployment==
:''See also ]'' {{see also|Horse training}}
The oldest known manual on training horses for chariot warfare was written c.&nbsp;1350 BC by the ] horsemaster, ].<ref name=Chamberlin48>Chamberlin ''Horse'' pp. 48&ndash;49</ref> An ancient manual on the subject of training riding horses, particularly for the ] ] is ''Hippike'' ('']'') written about 360 BC by the Greek cavalry officer ].<ref name="Hope">Hope ''The Horseman's Manual'' ch. 1 and 2.</ref> One of the earliest texts from Asia was that of ], written about 323 BC.<ref name=Chamberlin48/> The oldest known manual on training horses for chariot warfare was written c.&nbsp;1350 BC by the ] horsemaster, ].{{sfn|Chamberlin|2006|pp=48–49}} An ancient manual on the subject of training riding horses, particularly for the ] is ''Hippike'' ('']'') written about 360 BC by the Greek cavalry officer ].{{sfn|Hope|1972|loc=Chapters 1 and 2}} and another early text was that of ], written about 323 BC.{{sfn|Chamberlin|2006|pp=48–49}}


Whether horses were trained to pull chariots, to be ridden as light or heavy cavalry, or to carry the armoured knight, much training was required to overcome the horse's natural instinct to flee from noise, the smell of blood, and the confusion of combat. They also learned to accept any sudden or unusual movements of humans while using a weapon or avoiding one.<ref name=Hyland115>Hyland ''Medieval Warhorse'' pp. 115&ndash;117</ref> Horses used in close combat may have been taught, or at least permitted, to kick, strike, and even bite, thus becoming weapons themselves for the warriors they carried.<ref name=Gravett29>Gravett ''Tudor Knight'' pp. 29&ndash;30</ref> Whether horses were trained to pull chariots, to be ridden as light or heavy cavalry, or to carry the armoured knight, much training was required to overcome the horse's natural instinct to flee from noise, the smell of blood, and the confusion of combat. They also learned to accept any sudden or unusual movements of humans while using a weapon or avoiding one.{{sfn|Hyland|1994|pp=115–117}} Horses used in close combat may have been taught, or at least permitted, to kick, strike, and even bite, thus becoming weapons themselves for the warriors they carried.{{sfn|Gravett|2006|pp=29–30}}


In most cultures, a war horse used as a riding animal was trained to be controlled with limited use of ]s, responding primarily to the rider's ].<ref name="Au">{{cite web |url= http://www.efanational.com/?Page=369&MenuID=Sports%2F11757%2F0%2F%2CDressage%2F11732%2F0%2F0|title= Dressage Explained |accessdate=2008-07-16|author= Equestrian Federation of Australia|work= EFA Website|publisher=Equestrian Federation of Australia}}</ref> The horse became accustomed to any necessary ] and protective armour placed upon it, and learned to balance under a rider who would also be laden with weapons and armour.<ref name=Hyland115/> Developing the balance and agility of the horse was crucial. The origins of the discipline of ] came from the need to train horses to be both obedient and manoeuvrable.<ref name="USDF">{{cite web |url= http://www.usdf.org/about/about-dressage/history.asp|title= History of Dressage|accessdate=2008-07-16 |author= United States Dressage Federation |work= USDF Website|publisher= United States Dressage Federation}}</ref> The ''Haute ecole'' or "High School" movements of ] taught today at the ] have their roots in manoeuvres designed for the battlefield. However, the ] were unlikely to have been used in actual combat, as most would have exposed the unprotected underbelly of the horse to the weapons of foot soldiers.<ref name=Chamberlin197>Chamberlin ''Horse'' pp. 197&ndash;198</ref> In most cultures, a war horse used as a riding animal was trained to be controlled with limited use of ]s, responding primarily to the rider's ].<ref name="Au">{{cite web |url=http://www.efanational.com/?Page=369&MenuID=Sports%2F11757%2F0%2F%2CDressage%2F11732%2F0%2F0 |title=Dressage Explained |access-date=July 16, 2008 |author=Equestrian Federation of Australia |work=EFA Website |publisher=Equestrian Federation of Australia}}</ref> The horse became accustomed to any necessary ] and protective armour placed upon it, and learned to balance under a rider who would also be laden with weapons and armour.{{sfn|Hyland|1994|pp=115–117}} Developing the balance and agility of the horse was crucial. The origins of the discipline of ] came from the need to train horses to be both obedient and manoeuvrable.<ref name="USDF">{{cite web |url=http://www.usdf.org/about/about-dressage/history.asp |title=History of Dressage |access-date=July 16, 2008 |author=United States Dressage Federation |work= USDF Website |publisher=United States Dressage Federation}}</ref> The ''Haute ecole'' or "High School" movements of ] taught today at the ] have their roots in manoeuvres designed for the battlefield. However, the '']'' were unlikely to have been used in actual combat, as most would have exposed the unprotected underbelly of the horse to the weapons of foot soldiers.{{sfn|Chamberlin|2006|pp=197–198}}


Horses used for ] were not only trained for combat conditions, but because many chariots were pulled by a team of two to four horses, they also had to learn to work together with other animals in close quarters under chaotic conditions.<ref name=Roman214>Hyland ''Equus'' pp. 214&ndash;218</ref> Horses used for ] were not only trained for combat conditions, but because many chariots were pulled by a team of two to four horses, they also had to learn to work together with other animals in close quarters under chaotic conditions.{{sfn|Hyland|1990|pp=214–218}}


==Technological innovations== ==Technological innovations==
Horses were probably ridden in prehistory before they were driven. However, evidence is scant, mostly simple images of human figures on horse-like animals drawn on rock or clay.<ref>{{cite journal |author= Amschler, Wolfgang |year=June 1935|title= The Oldest Pedigree Chart |journal= The Journal of Heredity |volume= Volume 26, Number 6| doi = |page=pp. 233&ndash;238}}</ref><ref name="Trench">Trench ''A History of Horsemanship'' p. 16</ref> The earliest tools used to control horses were ]s of various sorts, which were invented nearly as soon as the horse was ].<ref>Budiansky ''The Nature of Horses'' pp. 50&ndash;55</ref> Evidence of ] wear appears on the teeth of horses excavated at the archaeology sites of the ] in northern ], dated 3500&ndash;3000 BC.<ref name="Hartwick">{{cite web|url=http://users.hartwick.edu/anthonyd/harnessing%20horsepower.html|title=The Earliest Horseback Riding and its Relation to Chariotry and Warfare|author=Anthony, David W. and Dorcas R. Brown|work= Harnessing Horsepower|publisher=Institute for Ancient Equestrian Studies|accessdate=2007-10-09}}</ref> Horses were probably ridden in prehistory before they were driven. However, evidence is scant, mostly simple images of human figures on horse-like animals drawn on rock or clay.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Amschler |first=Wolfgang |date=June 1935 |title=The Oldest Pedigree Chart |journal=] |volume=26 |issue=6 |doi=10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a104085 |pages=233–238}}</ref><ref name="Trench">Trench, ''A History of Horsemanship'', p. 16.</ref> The earliest tools used to control horses were ]s of various sorts, which were invented nearly as soon as the horse was ].<ref>Budiansky, ''The Nature of Horses'', pp. 50–55.</ref> Evidence of ] wear appears on the teeth of horses excavated at the archaeology sites of the ] in northern ], dated 3500–3000 BC.<ref name="Hartwick">{{cite web |url=http://users.hartwick.edu/anthonyd/harnessing%20horsepower.html |title=The Earliest Horseback Riding and its Relation to Chariotry and Warfare |last1=Anthony |first1=David W. |first2=Dorcas R. |last2=Brown |work=Harnessing Horsepower |publisher=Institute for Ancient Equestrian Studies |access-date=October 9, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171010200000/http://users.hartwick.edu/anthonyd/harnessing%20horsepower.html |archive-date=October 10, 2017 |url-status=dead}}</ref>


===Harness and vehicles=== ===Harness and vehicles===
] were weapons of war in ].]] ]s and ] were weapons of war in ].]]
The invention of the wheel was a major technological innovation that gave rise to ] warfare. At first, equines, both horses and ], were hitched to wheeled carts by means of a ] around their necks in a manner similar to that of ].<ref name=Pritchard>Pritchard ''The Ancient Near East'' Illustration 97</ref> However, such a design is incompatible with ], limiting both the strength and mobility of the animal. By the time of the ] invasions of ], c.&nbsp;1600 BC, horses were pulling chariots with an improved ] design that made use of a ] and ], which allowed a horse to move faster and pull more weight.<ref name=Chamberlin102>Chamberlin ''Horse'' pp. 102&ndash;108</ref> The invention of the wheel was a major technological innovation that gave rise to ] warfare. At first, equines, both horses and ], were hitched to wheeled carts by means of a ] around their necks in a manner similar to that of ].<ref name=Pritchard>Pritchard, ''The Ancient Near East'', illustration 97.</ref> However, such a design is incompatible with ], limiting both the strength and mobility of the animal. By the time of the ] invasions of ], c.&nbsp;1600 BC, horses were pulling chariots with an improved ] design that made use of a ] and ], which allowed a horse to move faster and pull more weight.{{sfn|Chamberlin|2006|pp=102–108}}


Even after the chariot had become obsolete as a tool of war, there still was a need for technological innovations in pulling technologies; horses were needed to pull heavy loads of supplies and weapons. The invention of the ] in China during the 5th century AD (]) allowed horses to pull greater weight than they could when hitched to a vehicle with the ox yokes or breast collars used in earlier times.<ref name="needham volume 4 part 2 322">Needham ''Science and Civilization in China'' p. 322</ref> The horse collar arrived in Europe during the 9th century,<ref name=Chamberlin109>Chamberlin ''Horse'' pp. 109&ndash;110</ref> and became widespread by the 12th century.<ref name="needham317">Needham ''Science and Civilization in China'' p. 317</ref> Even after the chariot had become obsolete as a tool of war, there still was a need for technological innovations in pulling technologies; horses were needed to pull heavy loads of supplies and weapons. The invention of the ] in China during the 5th century AD (]) allowed horses to pull greater weight than they could when hitched to a vehicle with the ox yokes or breast collars used in earlier times.{{sfn|Needham|1986|p=322}} The horse collar arrived in Europe during the 9th century,{{sfn|Chamberlin|2006|pp=109–110}} and became widespread by the 12th century.{{sfn|Needham|1986|p=317}}


===Riding equipment=== ===Riding equipment===
{{Main|Saddle|Stirrup}} {{Main|Saddle|Stirrup}}
] ] horse statuette, complete with saddle and stirrups, 6th century, ]]]
Two major innovations that revolutionised the effectiveness of mounted warriors in battle were the saddle and the stirrup.<ref name=Techniques70>Bennett and others ''Fighting Techniques'' pp. 70, 84</ref> Riders quickly learned to pad their horse's backs to protect themselves from the horse's spine and ], and fought on horseback for centuries with little more than a blanket or pad on the horse's back and a rudimentary bridle. To help distribute the rider's weight and protect the horse's back, some cultures created stuffed padding that resembles the panels of today's ].<ref name="Bennett43">Bennett ''Conquerers'' p. 43</ref> Both the ] and ] used pads with added felt attached with a ] or ] around the horse's ] for increased security and comfort.<ref name=Ellis14/> Xenophon mentioned the use of a padded cloth on cavalry mounts as early as the 4th century BC.<ref name="Hope"/>


Two major innovations that revolutionised the effectiveness of mounted warriors in battle were the saddle and the stirrup.{{sfn|Bennett|Bradbury|DeVries|Dickie|2005|pp=70, 84}} Riders quickly learned to pad their horse's backs to protect themselves from the horse's spine and ], and fought on horseback for centuries with little more than a blanket or pad on the horse's back and a rudimentary bridle. To help distribute the rider's weight and protect the horse's back, some cultures created stuffed padding that resembles the panels of today's ].{{sfn|Bennett|1998|p=43}} Both the ] and ]ns used pads with added felt attached with a ] or ] around the horse's ] for increased security and comfort.{{sfn|Ellis|2004|p=14}} Xenophon mentioned the use of a padded cloth on cavalry mounts as early as the 4th century BC.{{sfn|Hope|1972|loc=Chapters 1 and 2}}
The saddle with a solid framework, or "tree," provided a bearing surface to protect the horse from the weight of the rider, but was not widespread until the 2nd century AD.<ref name="Hope"/> However, it made a critical difference, as horses could carry more weight when distributed across a solid saddle tree. A solid tree, the predecessor of today's ], also allowed a more built-up seat to give the rider greater security in the saddle. The ] are credited with the invention of the solid-treed saddle.<ref name="Science Show">{{cite web |url= http://www.abc.net.au/rn/science/ss/stories/s70986.htm|title= The Horse in History|accessdate=2008-07-17 |author= Newby, Jonica, Jared Diamond and David Anthony|work= The Science Show|date=1999-11-13|publisher= Radio National}}</ref>


The saddle with a solid framework, or "]", provided a bearing surface to protect the horse from the weight of the rider, but was not widespread until the 2nd century AD.{{sfn|Hope|1972|loc=Chapters 1 and 2}} However, it made a critical difference, as horses could carry more weight when distributed across a solid saddle tree. A solid tree, the predecessor of today's ], also allowed a more built-up seat to give the rider greater security in the saddle. The ] are credited with the invention of the solid-treed saddle.<ref name="Science Show">{{cite web |url=http://www.abc.net.au/rn/science/ss/stories/s70986.htm |title=The Horse in History |access-date=July 17, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081006030339/http://www.abc.net.au/rn/science/ss/stories/s70986.htm |archive-date=October 6, 2008 |last1=Newby |first1=Jonica |first2=Jared |last2=Diamond |first3=David |last3=Anthony |work=The Science Show |date=November 13, 1999 |publisher=Radio National |via=]}}</ref>
An invention that made cavalry particularly effective was the stirrup. A toe loop that held the big toe was used in India possibly as early as 500 BC,<ref name=Chamberlin110>Chamberlin ''Horse'' pp. 110&ndash;114</ref> and later a single stirrup was used as a mounting aid. But the first set of paired stirrups appeared in China about 322 AD during the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.chinaculture.org/gb/en_madeinchina/2005-07/21/content_70825.htm|title=The invention and influences of stirrup|author=China Daily|work=The Development of Chinese Military Affairs|publisher=Chinese Ministry of Culture|accessdate=2008-07-17}}</ref><ref name=Ellis51>Ellis ''Cavalry'' pp. 51&ndash;53</ref> By the 7th century, thanks primarily to invaders from Central Asia, stirrups spread across Asia to Europe.<ref name=Dictionary300>Bennett ''Dictionary of Ancient & Medieval Warfare'' p. 300</ref> The stirrup, which allowed a rider greater leverage with weapons, as well as both increased stability and mobility while mounted, gave nomadic groups such as the ] a decisive military advantage.<ref name=Chamberlin110/> Stirrups were known in Europe in the 8th century, but pictorial and literary references to their use date only from the 9th century. Widespread use is credited to the ]s, who spread the stirrup to other cultures in the 9th and 10th centuries.<ref name=Warfare88>Nicolle ''Medieval Warfare Soucebook: Warfare in Western Christendom'' pp. 88&ndash;89</ref>

An invention that made cavalry particularly effective was the stirrup. A toe loop that held the big toe was used in India possibly as early as 500 BC,{{sfn|Chamberlin|2006|pp=110–114}} and later a single stirrup was used as a mounting aid. The first set of paired stirrups appeared in China about 322 AD during the ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.chinaculture.org/gb/en_madeinchina/2005-07/21/content_70825.htm |title=The invention and influences of stirrup |author=China Daily |work=The Development of Chinese Military Affairs |publisher=Chinese Ministry of Culture |access-date=July 17, 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081203175410/http://www.chinaculture.org/gb/en_madeinchina/2005-07/21/content_70825.htm |archive-date=December 3, 2008}}</ref>{{sfn|Ellis|2004|pp=51–53}} Following the invention of paired stirrups, which allowed a rider greater leverage with weapons, as well as both increased stability and mobility while mounted, nomadic groups such as the ] adopted this technology and developed a decisive military advantage.{{sfn|Chamberlin|2006|pp=110–114}} By the 7th century, due primarily to invaders from Central Asia, stirrup technology spread from Asia to Europe.<ref name=Dictionary300>Bennett, ''Dictionary of Ancient & Medieval Warfare'', p. 300.</ref> The ] invaders are viewed as primarily responsible for spreading the use of the stirrup into central Europe.<ref name=Curta319>Curta, ''The Other Europe,'' p. 319</ref><ref name=Fields>{{cite book |last=Fields |first=Nic |title=The Hun: Scourge of God AD 375-565 |publisher=] Ltd. |year=2006 |isbn=978-1-84603-025-3 |page=50 |others=Illustrations by Christa Hook; Page layout by Mark Holt; Index by Glyn Sutcliffe |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7eHLNqa-pc0C&pg=PA50}}</ref> However, while stirrups were known in Europe in the 8th century, pictorial and literary references to their use date only from the 9th century.{{sfn|Nicolle|1999|pp=88–89}} Widespread use in Northern Europe, including England, is credited to the ]s, who spread the stirrup in the 9th and 10th centuries to those areas.{{sfn|Nicolle|1999|pp=88–89}}<ref name=Seaby>{{cite journal |title=Viking Stirrups from England and their Background |journal=Medieval Archaeology |volume=24 |year=1980 |pages=87–122, see in particular map on page 91 "The evolution of stirrup forms in Europe" |last1=Seaby |first1=Wilfred A. |last2=Woodfield |first2=Paul |doi=10.1080/00766097.1980.11735422}}</ref><ref name=Christiansen>{{cite book |last=Christiansen |first=Eric |title=The Norsemen in the Viking age |publisher=] |year=2002 |isbn=0-631-21677-4 |page= |url=https://archive.org/details/norsemeninviking00eric/page/120}}</ref>


==Tactics== ==Tactics==
]]] ]]]

The first ] evidence of horses used in warfare dates from between 4000 and 3000 BC in the ]s of ], in what today is ], ], and ]. Not long after ], people in these locations began to live together in large fortified towns for protection from the threat of horseback-riding raiders,<ref name="Science Show"/> who could attack and escape faster than people of more sedentary cultures could follow.<ref>Bennett ''Conquerers'' p. 23</ref><ref name="HISTORYKEEGAN188">Keegan ''A History of Warfare'' p. 188</ref> The use of horses in organised warfare was also documented early in recorded history. One of the first depictions of equids is the "war panel" of the ], in ], dated c.&nbsp;2500 BC, showing horses (or possibly onagers or mules) pulling a four-wheeled wagon.<ref name=Pritchard/>
The first ] evidence of horses used in warfare dates from between 4000 and 3000 BC in the ]s of ], in what today is ], ], and ]. Not long after ], people in these locations began to live together in large fortified towns for protection from the threat of horseback-riding raiders,<ref name="Science Show"/> who could attack and escape faster than people of more sedentary cultures could follow.{{sfn|Bennett|1998|p=23}}{{sfn|Keegan|1994|p=188}} Horse-mounted nomads of the ] and current day ] spread ] as they conquered other tribes and groups.<ref>Gat, Azar. "War in Human Civilization". Oxford University Press, 2006, p. 208.</ref>

The use of horses in organised warfare was documented early in recorded history. One of the first depictions is the "war panel" of the ], in ], dated c.&nbsp;2500 BC, showing horses (or possibly onagers or mules) pulling a four-wheeled wagon.<ref name=Pritchard/>


===Chariot warfare=== ===Chariot warfare===
{{seealso|Chariot}} {{Main|Chariot|Chariot tactics}}
] sculpture of a ] with horses and rider from the ] unearthed near the tomb of China's first emperor ], ], China, 3rd century BC]]
Among the earliest evidence of chariot use are the burials of horse and chariot remains by the ] (]-]) culture in modern Russia and ], dated to approximately 2000 BC.<ref>{{cite journal |author= Crouwel, J.H. and M.A. Littauer|year=Dec. 1996|number= |title= The Origin of the True Chariot|journal= Antiquity|volume= Volume 70, Number 270| doi = |pages=pp. 934&ndash;939}}</ref> The oldest documentary evidence of what was probably chariot warfare in the ] is the Old Hittite ] text, of the 18th century BC, which mentioned 40 teams of horses at the siege of ].<ref>Drower "Syria" ''Cambridge Ancient History'' pp. 493&ndash;495</ref> The ] became well known throughout the ancient world for their prowess with the chariot. Widespread use of the chariot in warfare across most of Eurasia coincides approximately with the development of the ], known from c.&nbsp;1600 BC. Further improvements in wheels and axles, as well as innovations in weaponry, soon resulted in chariots being driven in battle by ] societies from China to Egypt.<ref name="Hartwick"/>
Among the earliest evidence of chariot use are the burials of horse and chariot remains by the ] (Sintashta-Petrovka) culture in modern Russia and ], dated to approximately 2000 BC.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Crouwel |first1=J. H. |first2=M. A. |last2=Littauer |date=Dec 1996 |title=The Origin of the True Chariot |journal=] |volume=70 |issue=270 |doi=10.1017/S0003598X00084192 |pages=934–939 |s2cid=161568465}}</ref> The oldest documentary evidence of what was probably chariot warfare in the ] is the Old Hittite ] text, of the 18th century BC, which mentioned 40 teams of horses at the siege of ].{{sfn|Drower|1973|pp=493–495}} The ] became well known throughout the ancient world for their prowess with the chariot. Widespread use of the chariot in warfare across most of Eurasia coincides approximately with the development of the ], known from c.&nbsp;1600 BC. Further improvements in wheels and axles, as well as innovations in weaponry, soon resulted in chariots being driven in battle by ] societies from China to Egypt.<ref name="Hartwick"/>


The ] invaders brought the chariot to ] in the 16th century BC and the Egyptians adopted its use from that time forward.<ref>Hitti ''Lebanon in History'' pp. 77&ndash;78.</ref><ref>Drower "Syria" ''Cambridge Ancient History'' pp. 452, 458</ref><ref>Kupper "Egypt" ''Cambridge Ancient History'' p. 52</ref> The oldest preserved text related to the handling of war horses in the ancient world is the Hittite manual of ], which dates to about 1350 BC, and describes the conditioning of chariot horses.<ref name=Chamberlin48/><ref>Drower "Syria" ''Cambridge Ancient History'' p. 493</ref> The ] invaders brought the chariot to ] in the 16th century BC and the Egyptians adopted its use from that time forward.{{sfn|Hitti|1957|pp=77–78}}{{sfn|Drower|1973|pp=452, 458}}{{sfn|Kupper|1973|p=52}} The oldest preserved text related to the handling of war horses in the ancient world is the Hittite manual of ], which dates to about 1350 BC, and describes the conditioning of chariot horses.{{sfn|Chamberlin|2006|pp=48–49}}{{sfn|Drower|1973|p=493}}


Chariots existed in the ], as they were inventoried on storage lists from ] in ],<ref name=Life94>Adkins ''Handbook to Life in Ancient Greece'' pp. 94&ndash;95</ref> dating to around 1450 BC.<ref name=Willetts209>Willetts "Minoans" ''Penguin Encyclopedia of Ancient Civilizations'' p. 209</ref> Chariots were also used in China as far back as the ] (c.&nbsp;1600&ndash;1050 BC), where they appear in burials. The high point of chariot use in China was in the ] (770&ndash;476 BC), although they continued in use up until the 2nd century BC.<ref name=Dictionary67>Bennett ''Dictionary of Ancient & Medieval Warfare'' p. 67</ref> Chariots existed in the ], as they were inventoried on storage lists from ] in ],<ref name=Life94>Adkins, ''Handbook to Life in Ancient Greece'', pp. 94–95.</ref> dating to around 1450 BC.<ref name=Willetts209>Willetts, "Minoans" in ''Penguin Encyclopedia of Ancient Civilizations'' p. 209.</ref> Chariots were also used in China as far back as the ] (c.&nbsp;1600–1050 BC), where they appear in burials. The high point of chariot use in China was in the ] (770–476 BC), although they continued in use up until the 2nd century BC.<ref name=Dictionary67>Bennett, ''Dictionary of Ancient & Medieval Warfare'', p. 67.</ref>


Descriptions of the tactical role of chariots in ] and ] are rare. The ], possibly referring to ]n practices used c.&nbsp;1250 BC, describes the use of chariots for transporting warriors to and from battle, rather than for actual fighting.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.mala.bc.ca/~johnstoi/homer/iliad_title.htm|title= Homer's The Iliad|accessdate=2008-07-17 |author= Johnston, Ian (translator)|work= Johnstonia|publisher= Vancouver Island University}}</ref><ref name=Life94/> Later, ], invading Britain in 55 and 54 BC, noted British charioteers throwing javelins, then leaving their chariots to fight on foot.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.gutenberg.org/files/10657/10657.txt|title= "De Bello Gallico" and Other Commentaries, Chapter 33 |accessdate=2008-07-17 |author= Caius Julius Caesar|work= Project Gutenberg EBook|publisher= Project Gutenberg}}</ref><ref name=Warry220>Warry ''Warfare in the Classical World'' pp. 220&ndash;221</ref> Descriptions of the tactical role of chariots in ] and ] are rare. The ], possibly referring to ]n practices used c.&nbsp;1250 BC, describes the use of chariots for transporting warriors to and from battle, rather than for actual fighting.<ref name=Life94/><ref>{{cite web |url=http://classics.mit.edu/Homer/iliad.html |title=The Iliad |access-date=October 30, 2011 |author=] |work=The Internet Classics Archive |publisher=] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110714194245/http://classics.mit.edu/Homer/iliad.html |archive-date=July 14, 2011 |url-status=dead}}</ref> Later, ], invading Britain in 55 and 54 BC, noted British charioteers throwing javelins, then leaving their chariots to fight on foot.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.gutenberg.org/files/10657/10657.txt |title="De Bello Gallico" and Other Commentaries, Chapter 33 |access-date=July 17, 2008 |first=Caius Julius |last=Caesar |author-link=Caius Julius Caesar |work= Project Gutenberg EBook |publisher=]}}</ref><ref name=Warry220>Warry, ''Warfare in the Classical World'', pp. 220–221.</ref>


===Cavalry=== ===Cavalry===
{{Main|Cavalry|Cavalry tactics}} {{Main|Cavalry|Cavalry tactics}}
] Persian ] from ]]]
Some of the earliest examples of horses being ridden in warfare were ] or spear-throwers, dating to the reigns of the ]n rulers ] and ].<ref name="Trench"/> However, these riders sat far back on their horses, a precarious position for moving quickly, and the horses were held by a handler on the ground, keeping the archer free to use the bow. Thus, these archers were more a type of ] than true cavalry.<ref name="Hope"/> The Assyrians developed ] in response to invasions by nomadic people from the north, such as the ], who entered ] in the 8th century BC and took over parts of ] during the reign of ], approximately 721 BC.<ref>Edwards, G. ''The Arabian'' p. 13</ref> Mounted warriors such as the ] also had an influence on the region in the 7th century BC.<ref name=Ellis14>Ellis ''Cavalry'' p. 14</ref> By the reign of ] in 669 BC, the Assyrians had learned to sit forward on their horses in the classic riding position still seen today and could be said to be true ].<ref name="Hope"/> The ] used both light horse scouts and heavy cavalry,<ref name="Hope"/><ref name="Trench"/> although not extensively, possibly due to the cost of keeping horses.<ref name=Life94/>


Some of the earliest examples of horses being ridden in warfare were ] or javelin-throwers, dating to the reigns of the ]n rulers ] and ].<ref name="Trench"/> However, these riders sat far back on their horses, a precarious position for moving quickly, and the horses were held by a handler on the ground, keeping the archer free to use the bow. Thus, these archers were more a type of ] than true cavalry.{{sfn|Hope|1972|loc=Chapters 1 and 2}} The Assyrians developed ] in response to invasions by nomadic people from the north, such as the ], who entered ] in the 8th century BC and took over parts of ] during the reign of ], approximately 721 BC.{{sfn|Edwards|1973|p=13}} Mounted warriors such as the ] also had an influence on the region in the 7th century BC.{{sfn|Ellis|2004|p=14}} By the reign of ] in 669 BC, the Assyrians had learned to sit forward on their horses in the classic riding position still seen today and could be said to be true ].{{sfn|Hope|1972|loc=Chapters 1 and 2}} The ] used both light horse scouts and heavy cavalry,{{sfn|Hope|1972|loc=Chapters 1 and 2}}<ref name="Trench"/> although not extensively, possibly due to the cost of keeping horses.<ref name=Life94/>
] was believed to have been developed by the Ancient ],<ref name="Trench"/> although others argue for the ].<ref name=Perevalov>{{cite journal |author=Perevalov, S. M. (translated M. E. Sharpe) |title=The Sarmatian Lance and the Sarmatian Horse-Riding Posture |journal=Anthropology & Archeology of Eurasia |volume=41|issue=4|year=2002 |month=Spring |pages=7–21 }}</ref> By the time of ] (558&ndash;486 BC), Persian military tactics required horses and riders that were completely armoured, and ] a heavier, more muscled horse to carry the additional weight.<ref name="Edwards11ff"/> The ] was a type of heavily armored cavalry with distinct tactics, armour, and weaponry used from the time of the Persians up until the Middle Ages.<ref name=Techniques76>Bennett and others ''Fighting Techniques'' pp. 76&ndash;81</ref>


] was believed to have been developed by the Ancient ],<ref name="Trench"/> although others argue for the ].<ref name=Perevalov>{{cite journal |last=Perevalov |first=S. M. |translator-first=M. E. |translator-last=Sharpe |title=The Sarmatian Lance and the Sarmatian Horse-Riding Posture |journal=] |volume=41|issue=4|date=Spring 2002 |pages=7–21 |doi=10.2753/aae1061-195940047 |s2cid=161826066}}</ref> By the time of ] (558–486 BC), Persian military tactics required horses and riders that were completely armoured, and ] a heavier, more muscled horse to carry the additional weight.{{sfn|Edwards|1973|pp=11, 13}} The ] was a type of heavily armoured cavalry with distinct tactics, armour, and weaponry used from the time of the Persians up until the Middle Ages.{{sfn|Bennett|Bradbury|DeVries|Dickie|2005|pp=76–81}}
In ], ] is credited with developing tactics allowing massed cavalry charges.<ref> Pers ''Cavalcade'' p. 27</ref> The most famous Greek heavy cavalry units were the ] of ].<ref name=Chamberlin154>Chamberlin ''Horse'' pp. 154&ndash;158</ref> The Chinese of the 4th century BC during the ] (403&ndash;221 BC) began to use cavalry against rival states.<ref name="ebrey 29 30">Ebrey and others ''Pre-Modern East Asia'' pp. 29&ndash;30.</ref> To fight nomadic raiders from the north and west, the Chinese of the ] (202 BC &ndash; 220 AD) developed effective mounted units.<ref name=Goodrich32>Goodrich ''Short History'' p. 32</ref> Cavalry was not used extensively by the ] during the ] period, but by the time of the ], they made use of heavy cavalry.<ref name=Ellis30>Ellis ''Cavalry'' pp. 30&ndash;35</ref><ref name=RomeLife51>Adkins ''Handbook to Life in Ancient Rome'' pp. 51&ndash;55</ref> However, the backbone of the Roman army was the infantry.<ref>Whitby ''Rome at War'' pp. 19&ndash;21</ref>

In ], ] is credited with developing tactics allowing massed cavalry charges.<ref>Pers ''Cavalcade'' p. 27</ref> The most famous Greek heavy cavalry units were the ] of ].<ref name=Chamberlin154>Chamberlin, ''Horse'', pp. 154–158.</ref> The Chinese of the 4th century BC during the ] (403–221 BC) began to use cavalry against rival states.<ref name="ebrey 29 30">Ebrey and others, ''Pre-Modern East Asia'', pp. 29–30.</ref> To fight nomadic raiders from the north and west, the Chinese of the ] (202 BC – 220 AD) developed effective mounted units.{{sfn|Goodrich|1959|p=32}} Cavalry was not used extensively by the ] during the ] period, but by the time of the ], they made use of heavy cavalry.{{sfn|Ellis|2004|pp=30–35}}<ref name=RomeLife51>Adkins, ''Handbook to Life in Ancient Rome'', pp. 51–55.</ref> However, the backbone of the Roman army was the infantry.<ref>Whitby, ''Rome at War'', pp. 19–21.</ref>


===Horse artillery=== ===Horse artillery===
{{main|Horse artillery}} {{Main|Horse artillery}}
] ]
Once gunpowder was invented, another major use of horses was as ] for ], or ]s. In addition to ], where horse-drawn guns were attended by gunners on foot, many armies had ] where each gunner was provided with a mount.<ref name="Nofi124">Nofi ''The Waterloo Campaign'' p. 124</ref> Horse artillery units generally used lighter pieces, pulled by six horses. "9-pounders" were pulled by eight horses, and heavier artillery pieces needed a team of twelve. ], a type of ], required about 25 horses. With the individual riding horses required for officers, surgeons and other support staff, as well as those pulling the artillery guns and supply wagons, an artillery battery of six guns could require 160 to 200 horses.<ref name="Nofi130">Nofi ''The Waterloo Campaign'' pp. 128&ndash;130</ref> Horse artillery usually came under the command of cavalry divisions, but in some battles, such as ], the horse artillery were used as a rapid response force, repulsing attacks and assisting the infantry.<ref name="MH415">Holmes ''Military History'' p. 415</ref> Agility was important; the ideal artillery horse was 15 to 16 hands high, strongly built, but able to move quickly.<ref name="Cotner1">{{cite web|url= http://www.historynet.com/americas-civil-war-horses-and-field-artillery.htm |author=Cotner, James R.|title=America’s Civil War: Horses and Field Artillery|work=America’s Civil War|publisher=Historynet.com|date=March, 1996|accessdate=2008-11-02}}</ref> Once gunpowder was invented, another major use of horses was as ] for ], or ]. In addition to ], where horse-drawn guns were attended by gunners on foot, many armies had ] where each gunner was provided with a mount.{{sfn|Nofi|1993|p=124}} Horse artillery units generally used lighter pieces, pulled by six horses. "9-pounders" were pulled by eight horses, and heavier artillery pieces needed a team of twelve. With the individual riding horses required for officers, surgeons and other support staff, as well as those pulling the artillery guns and supply wagons, an artillery battery of six guns could require 160 to 200 horses.{{sfn|Nofi|1993|pp=128–130}} Horse artillery usually came under the command of cavalry divisions, but in some battles, such as ], the horse artillery were used as a rapid response force, repulsing attacks and assisting the infantry.{{sfn|Holmes|2001|p=415}} Agility was important; the ideal artillery horse was {{convert|15|to|16|hand|m|order=flip|abbr=off}} high, strongly built, but able to move quickly.<ref name="Cotner1" />


==Asia== ==Asia==
] horseman from the general area of the ], ], c.&nbsp;300&nbsp;BC]]<!-- I don't know where to move this image, it violates ACCESS and MOS#Images, but no place to move it to. Images within sections, not above, but no left-aligned images under third-level headings, but images face the text. Can't do all of them. Can it go to another section? --><!--Does moving the "main" headers solve the problem, so it is under a second-level heading?-->


===Central Asia=== ===Central Asia===
{{seealso|Mongol military tactics and organization|Nomadic empire}} {{See also|Mongol military tactics and organization|Nomadic empire}}
] origin: the rider wears a hairbun characteristic of the oriental steppes, and his horse has characteristically Xiongnu ].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Francfort |first1=Henri-Paul |title=Sur quelques vestiges et indices nouveaux de l'hellénisme dans les arts entre la Bactriane et le Gandhāra (130 av. J.-C.-100 apr. J.-C. environ) |journal=Journal des Savants |date=2020 |pages=35–39 |url=https://www.academia.edu/45042820 |language=en}}</ref> 2nd–1st century BC. Excavated in ] (near Farkhor), ]. ].]]
Relations between ] nomads and the settled people in and around ] were often marked by conflict.<ref name=WarfareNeighbors185>Nicolle ''Medieval Warfare Source Book: Christian Europe and its Neighbors'' p. 185</ref><ref name=Ellis120>Ellis ''Cavalry'' p. 120</ref> The nomadic lifestyle was well suited to warfare, and steppe cavalry became some of the most militarily potent forces in the world, only limited by nomads' frequent lack of internal unity. Periodically, strong leaders would organise several tribes into one force, creating an almost unstoppable power.<ref name=Attila6>Nicolle ''Attila'' pp. 6&ndash;10</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.allempires.com/article/index.php?q=Central_Asia|title=Introduction: The Restless Horsemen |work=Steppe Nomads and Central Asia|accessdate=2008-07-17|author=All Empires|publisher=All Empires}}</ref> These unified groups included the ], who invaded Europe,<ref name=Attila20>Nicolle ''Attila'' pp. 20&ndash;23</ref> and under ], conducted campaigns in both eastern France and northern Italy, over 500&nbsp;miles apart, within two successive campaign seasons.<ref name="HISTORYKEEGAN188">Keegan ''A History of Warfare'' p. 188</ref> Other unified nomadic forces included the ] attacks on China,<ref name=Goodrich83>Goodrich ''Short History'' p. 83</ref> and the ] of much of Eurasia.<ref name=WarfareNeighbors91>Nicolle ''Medieval Warfare Source Book: Christian Europe and its Neighbors'' pp. 91&ndash;94</ref>
Relations between ] nomads and the settled people in and around ] were often marked by conflict.{{sfn|Nicolle|1998|p=185}}{{sfn|Ellis|2004|p=120}} The nomadic lifestyle was well suited to warfare, and steppe cavalry became some of the most militarily potent forces in the world, only limited by nomads' frequent lack of internal unity. Periodically, strong leaders would organise several tribes into one force, creating an almost unstoppable power.{{sfn|Nicolle|1990|pp=6–10}}<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.allempires.com/article/index.php?q=Central_Asia |title=Introduction: The Restless Horsemen |work=Steppe Nomads and Central Asia |access-date=July 17, 2008 |author=All Empires |publisher=All Empires |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080529004408/http://www.allempires.com/article/index.php?q=Central_Asia |archive-date=May 29, 2008}}</ref> These unified groups included the ], who invaded Europe,{{sfn|Nicolle|1990|pp=20–23}} and under ], conducted campaigns in both eastern France and northern Italy, over 500&nbsp;miles apart, within two successive campaign seasons.{{sfn|Keegan|1994|p=188}} Other unified nomadic forces included the ] rebellions in China,{{sfn|Goodrich|1959|p=83}} and the ] of much of Eurasia.{{sfn|Nicolle|1998|pp=91–94}}


===India=== ===South Asia===
{{main|History of the horse in South Asia|}} {{main|History of the horse in the Indian subcontinent|}}
The literature of ancient ] describes numerous Central Asian horse nomads. Some of the earliest references to the use of horses in central Asian warfare are ] texts, which refer to an invasion of India by the joint cavalry forces of the ]s, ], ], ], and ], called the "five hordes" (''pañca.ganah'') or "]" hordes (''Kśatriya ganah''). About 1600 BC, they captured the throne of ] by dethroning the ] king, Bahu.<ref name="Partiger">Partiger ''Ancient Indian Historical Tradition'' pp. 147&ndash;148, 182&ndash;183</ref> Later texts, such as the ], c.&nbsp;950 BC, appear to recognise efforts taken to ] war horses and develop trained mounted warriors, stating that the horses of the ] and Kamboja regions were of the finest quality, and the Kambojas, Gandharas, and Yavanas were expert in fighting from horses.<ref>Sinha ''Post-Gupta Polity (A.D. 500-750)'' p. 136</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author=Hopkins, Edward W. |year=1889|number= |title= The Social and Military Position of the Ruling Caste in Ancient India, as Represented by the Sanskrit Epic |journal= Journal of American Oriental Society |volume=Volume 13 | doi = |page=p. 257}}</ref><ref>Bongard-Levin ''Ancient Indian Civilization'' p. 120</ref> The literature of ancient ] describes numerous horse nomads. Some of the earliest references to the use of horses in South Asian warfare are ] texts, which refer to an attempted invasion of India by the joint cavalry forces of the ]s, ], ], ], and ], called the "five hordes" (''pañca.ganah'') or "]" hordes (''Kśatriya ganah''). About 1600 BC, they captured the throne of ] by dethroning the ] king, Bahu.{{sfn|Partiger|1997|pp=147–148, 182–183}} Later texts, such as the ], c.&nbsp;950 BC, appear to recognise efforts taken to ] war horses and develop trained mounted warriors, stating that the horses of the ] and Kamboja regions were of the finest quality, and the Kambojas, Gandharas, and Yavanas were expert in fighting from horses.<ref>Sinha, ''Post-Gupta Polity (A.D. 500–750)'', p. 136.</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Hopkins |first=Edward W. |year=1889 |title=The Social and Military Position of the Ruling Caste in Ancient India, as Represented by the Sanskrit Epic |journal=] |volume=13 |doi=10.2307/592444 |page=257 |jstor=592444 |hdl=2027/hvd.hn6er4 |hdl-access=free}}</ref>{{sfn|Bongard-Levin||1985|p=120}}


In technological innovation, the early toe loop stirrup is credited to the cultures of India, and may have been in use as early as 500 BC.<ref name=Chamberlin110/> Not long after, the cultures of ] and ] clashed with those of central Asia and India. ] (484&ndash;425 BC) wrote that ] mercenaries of the ] were recruited into the army of emperor ] (486&ndash;465 BC), which he led against the Greeks.<ref>Herodotus, IV.65&ndash;66.</ref> A century later, the "Men of the Mountain Land," from north of ],{{#tag:ref|Possibly the ] cavalry, from south of the ] near medieval ]<ref name=Olmstead232>Olmstead ''History of Persian Empire'' p. 232; Raychaudhuri ''Political History of Ancient India p. 216.</ref>|group=note}} served in the army of ] when he fought against ] at ] in 331 BC.<ref name=Olmstead232/> In battle against Alexander at Massaga in 326 BC, the Assakenoi forces included 20,000 cavalry.<ref>Sastri ''Age of the Nandas and Mauryas'' p. 49</ref> The ] recounted how cavalry of the Shakas, Yavanas, Kambojas, ]s, ]s, and ] helped ] (c.&nbsp;320&ndash;298 BC) defeat the ruler of ] and take the throne, thus laying the foundations of ] in Northern India.<ref>Mudra-Rakshasa II.</ref> In technological innovation, the early toe loop stirrup is credited to the cultures of India, and may have been in use as early as 500 BC.{{sfn|Chamberlin|2006|pp=110–114}} Not long after, the cultures of ] and ] clashed with those of central Asia and India. ] (484–425 BC) wrote that ] mercenaries of the ] were recruited into the army of emperor ] (486–465 BC), which he led against the Greeks.<ref>Herodotus, IV.65–66.</ref> A century later, the "Men of the Mountain Land," from north of ],{{#tag:ref|Possibly the ] cavalry, from south of the ] near medieval ]<ref name=Olmstead232>{{harvp|Olmstead|1959|p=232}}; {{harvp|Raychaudhuri|1996|p=216}}</ref>|group=note}} served in the army of ] when he fought against ] at ] in 331 BC.<ref name=Olmstead232/> In battle against Alexander at Massaga in 326 BC, the Assakenoi forces included 20,000 cavalry.<ref>Sastri, ''Age of the Nandas and Mauryas'', p. 49.</ref> The ] recounted how cavalry of the Shakas, Yavanas, Kambojas, ]s, ], and ] helped ] (c.&nbsp;320–298 BC) defeat the ruler of ] and take the throne, thus laying the foundations of ] in Northern India.<ref>Mudra-Rakshasa II.</ref>


] cavalry used gunpowder weapons, but were slow to replace the traditional composite bow.<ref name=Gordon230>Gordon ''The Limited Adoption of European-style Military Forces by Eighteenth Century Rulers in India'' pp. 229&ndash;232</ref> Under the impact of European military successes in India, some Indian rulers adopted the European system of massed cavalry charges, although others did not.<ref name=Gordon241>Gordon ''The Limited Adoption of European-style Military Forces by Eighteenth Century Rulers in India'' p. 241</ref> By the 18th century, Indian armies continued to field cavalry, but mainly of the heavy variety. ] cavalry used gunpowder weapons, but were slow to replace the traditional composite bow.<ref name=Gordon230>Gordon, ''The Limited Adoption of European-style Military Forces by Eighteenth Century Rulers in India'', pp. 229–232.</ref> Under the impact of European military successes in India, some Indian rulers adopted the European system of massed cavalry charges, although others did not.<ref name=Gordon241>Gordon, ''The Limited Adoption of European-style Military Forces by Eighteenth Century Rulers in India'', p. 241.</ref> By the 18th century, Indian armies continued to field cavalry, but mainly of the heavy variety.


===China and Japan=== ===East Asia===
].]] ]]]
{{main|Horses in East Asian warfare}}
The Chinese used chariots for horse-based warfare until light cavalry forces became common during the ] era (402&ndash;221 BC). A major proponent of the change to riding horses from chariots was ], c.&nbsp;320 BC. However, conservative forces in China often opposed change, and cavalry never became as dominant as in Europe. Cavalry in China also did not benefit from the additional cachet attached to being the military branch dominated by the nobility.<ref name=Ellis19>Ellis ''Cavalry'' pp. 19&ndash;20</ref>
The Chinese used ] for horse-based warfare until light cavalry forces became common during the ] era (402–221 BC). A major proponent of the change to riding horses from chariots was ], c.&nbsp;320 BC. However, conservative forces in China often opposed change, as cavalry did not benefit from the additional cachet attached to being the military branch dominated by the nobility as in medieval Europe.{{sfn|Ellis|2004|pp=19–20}} Nevertheless, during the reign of ] (r. 141–87 BC), it is recorded that 300,000 ] horses were insufficient for the cavalry and ]s of the ] in ] to expel the ] nomads from the ], ], ] and ], spurring new policies that encouraged households to hand over privately-bred horses in exchange for military and corvee labor exemptions.<ref>Di Cosmo, Nicola, (2002), ''Ancient China and Its Enemies: The Rise of Nomadic Power in East Asian History'', Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, {{ISBN|978-0-521-77064-4}}, pp. 232, 237–240.</ref>


The Japanese ] were particularly skilled in the art of using archery from horseback. The archery skills of mounted samurai were developed by training such as ], which originated in 530 AD and reached its peak under ] (1147&ndash;1199 AD) in the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.yabusame.or.jp/english/html/t_Trekishi_E.html|title= The History of the Takeda school Kyuubadou |publisher=he Takeda school of Horseback Archery|accessdate=2008-11-35}}</ref> They switched from an emphasis on ] to mounted spearmen during the ] (1467&ndash;1615 AD). The samurai continued to fight as cavalry, as they had been for centuries.<ref name=Turnbull15>Turnbull ''War in Japan'' pp. 15&ndash;20</ref> The Japanese ] fought as cavalry for many centuries.<ref name=Turnbull15>Turnbull, ''War in Japan'', pp. 15–20.</ref> They were particularly skilled in the art of using archery from horseback. The archery skills of mounted samurai were developed by training such as ], which originated in 530 AD and reached its peak under ] (1147–1199 AD) in the ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.yabusame.or.jp/english/html/t_Trekishi_E.html |title=The History of the Takeda school Kyuubadou |publisher=The Takeda School of Horseback Archery |access-date=November 30, 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120518050330/http://www.yabusame.or.jp/english/html/t_Trekishi_E.html |archive-date=May 18, 2012}}</ref> They switched from an emphasis on ] to mounted spearmen during the ] (1467–1615 AD).


==Islamic world== ===Middle East===
{{further|Furusiyya}}
], 1431. Spanish heavy cavalry fighting the light cavalry Moorish forces of ] of ].]]
]) skirmish at the 1431 ]]]
] warriors conquered North Africa and the ] during the 7th and 8th centuries AD following the Hegira, or ], of ] in 622 AD. By 630 AD, their influence expanded across the ] and into ]. By 711 AD, the light cavalry of Muslim warriors had reached Spain,<ref>Bennett ''Conquerers'' pp. 97&ndash;98</ref> and controlled most of the Iberian peninsula by 720. Their mounts were of various oriental types, including the ] from North Africa. A few ]s may have come with Syrian horsemen who settled in the ] valley. Another strain of horse that came with Islamic invaders was the ].<ref name=Hyland55>Hyland ''Medieval Warhorse'' pp. 55&ndash;57</ref>


During the period when various ] controlled much of the ] as well as parts of ] and the ], ] armies consisted mostly of cavalry, made up of fighters from various local groups, ] and ] tribesmen. The latter were considered particularly skilled as both ]s and ]s from horseback. In the 9th century the use of ]s, slaves raised to be soldiers for various Muslim rulers, became increasingly common.{{sfn|Hyland|1994|pp=108–110}} Mobile tactics, advanced ] of horses, and detailed training manuals made Mamluk cavalry a highly efficient fighting force.{{sfn|Hyland|1994|p=123}} The use of armies consisting mostly of cavalry continued among the Turkish people who founded the ]. Their need for large mounted forces led to an establishment of the ], cavalry soldiers who were granted lands in exchange for providing ] in times of war.{{sfn|Hyland|1998|p=130}}
Muslim invaders travelled north from Spain into France, where they were stopped by ] at the ] in 732 AD. Although this battle is often cited as the reason that the Franks turned to heavy cavalry, to fight the light cavalry of the Muslims, the Franks were also facing mounted enemies in the ] and ]. Thus the need to carry more armour led to the Franks developing heavier, bigger horses.<ref name=Ellis47>Ellis ''Cavalry'' pp. 47&ndash;50</ref> Over time, this type of breeding gave rise to the powerful but agile medieval war horse known as the ].<ref name=Hyland55>Hyland ''Medieval Warhorse'' pp. 55&ndash;57</ref>


Mounted Muslim warriors conquered North Africa and the ] during the 7th and 8th centuries AD following the ], of ] in 622 AD. By 630 AD, their influence expanded across the ] and into western ]. By 711 AD, the light cavalry of Muslim warriors had reached Spain, and controlled most of the Iberian peninsula by 720.{{sfn|Bennett|1998|pp=97–98}} Their mounts were of various oriental types, including the North African ]. A few ]s may have come with the ]s who settled in the ] valley. Another strain of horse that came with Islamic invaders was the ].{{sfn|Hyland|1994|pp=55–57}} Muslim invaders travelled north from present-day Spain into France, where they were defeated by the ] ruler ] at the ] in 732 AD.{{sfn|Bennett|Bradbury|DeVries|Dickie|2005|pp=19–20}}
==Europe ==
===The Middle Ages===
{{Main|Horses in the Middle Ages}}
During the European ], there were three primary types of war horses: The ], the ], and the ]. A generic word used to describe medieval war horses was ''charger,'' which appears interchangeable with the other terms.<ref name=Prestwich347>Prestwich ''Armies and Warfare'' p. 347</ref> The rouncey was the everyday horse of a ] or for the mounted ], suitable for general riding and war.<ref>Oakeshott ''A Knight and His Horse'' p. 12</ref><ref name=Contamine67>Contamine ''War in the Middle Ages'' pp. 67&ndash;73</ref><ref name=Labarge158>Labarge ''Mistress, Maids, and Men'' pp. 158&ndash;160</ref> The courser was a fast horse, well-suited to carrying messages,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.imh.org/museum/history.php?chapter=37|title=Horses Were Specifically Bred for Warfare and Chivalry|author=International Museum of the Horse|work=Legacy of the Horse: Medieval Horse: 476 - c. 1450|publisher=International Museum of the Horse|accessdate=2008-07-17}}</ref> while the highly-trained destrier was reserved for the richest knights and nobility.<ref name=Warfare124>Nicolle ''Medieval Warfare Sourcebook: Warfare in Western Christendom'' pp. 124&ndash;125, 169</ref>


==Europe==
] and ]'s 879 victory over the ]; ], '']'']]

The medieval war horse was of moderate size, rarely exceeding 15.2 ] ({{convert|62|in|m}}). Heavy horses were logistically difficult to maintain and less adaptable to varied terrains.<ref name="MH416"/> The destrier of the ] was moderately larger than the courser or rouncey, in part to accommodate heavier armoured ]s.<ref name=France23>France ''Western Warfare'' pp. 23&ndash;25</ref> However, destriers were not as large as ]. For example, the horse ridden by ] in the ] in 1066 was said to be an ] brought from Spain. It was probably a bit taller than the average horses ridden by William's knights, which were between 14.2 hands and 15 hands ({{convert|58|to|60|in|m}}).<ref name=Hyland85>Hyland ''Medieval Warhorse'' pp. 85&ndash;86</ref> As the amount of armour and equipment increased in the later Middle Ages, the height of the horses increased; some late medieval horse skeletons were of horses over 15 hands.<ref name=France23/>
===Antiquity===
{{See|Hippeis|Companion cavalry|Auxilia|Roman cavalry|Celtic warfare|Ancient warfare|Ancient Macedonian army|Hellenistic armies}}

===Middle Ages===
{{Main|Horses in the Middle Ages}}
] and ]'s 879 victory over the ]; ], '']'']]
During the European ], there were three primary types of war horses: the ], the ], and the ], which differed in size and usage. A generic word used to describe medieval war horses was ''charger,'' which appears interchangeable with the other terms.{{sfn|Prestwich|1996|p=347}} The medieval war horse was of moderate size, rarely exceeding {{hands|15.2}}. Heavy horses were logistically difficult to maintain and less adaptable to varied terrains.{{sfn|Holmes|2001|p=416}} The destrier of the ] was moderately larger than the courser or rouncey, in part to accommodate heavier armoured ]s.{{sfn|France|1999|pp=23–25}} However, destriers were not as large as ], averaging between {{hands|14.2}} and {{hands|15}}.{{sfn|Hyland|1994|pp=85–86}} On the European continent, the need to carry more armour against mounted enemies such as the ] and ] led to the ] developing heavier, bigger horses.{{sfn|Ellis|2004|pp=47–50}} As the amount of armour and equipment increased in the later Middle Ages, the height of the horses increased; some late medieval horse skeletons were of horses over {{convert|15|hand|m|order=flip|abbr=off|sigfig=2}}.{{sfn|France|1999|pp=23–25}}


], uncastrated male horses, were often used as destriers due to their natural aggression. A 13th century work describes destriers "biting and kicking" on the battlefield.<ref name="Bumke">Bumke ''Courtly Culture'' pp. 175-178</ref> However, the use of ]s, female horses, by European warriors cannot be discounted from literary references,<ref name="Bumke"/> and mares, who were quieter and less likely to call out and betray their position to the enemy, were the preferred war horse of the ], the ]ic invaders who attacked various European nations from 700 AD through the 15th century.<ref>Edwards, G. ''The Arabian'' p. 22</ref> ]s were often used as destriers due to their natural aggression.{{sfn|Bumke|2000|pp=175–178}} However, there may have been some use of ]s by European warriors,{{sfn|Bumke|2000|pp=175–178}} and mares, who were quieter and less likely to call out and betray their position to the enemy, were the preferred war horse of the ], who invaded various parts of Southern Europe from 700 AD through the 15th century.{{sfn|Edwards|1973|p=22}} ]s were used in war by the ], and known as "monk horses" ({{langx|de|Mönchpferde}} or {{lang|de|Mönchhengste}}). One advantage was if captured by the enemy, they could not be used to improve local bloodstock, thus maintaining the Knights' superiority in horseflesh.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Ekdahl |first1=Sven |editor1-first=Helen |editor1-last=Nicholson |title=The Military Orders |volume=2 Welfare and Warfare |year=1998 |publisher=] |location=Farnham, Surrey |isbn=978-0-86078-679-5 |chapter=Horses and Crossbows: Two Important Warfare Advantages of the Teutonic Order in Prussia}}</ref>


====Uses==== ====Uses====
The heavy cavalry charge, while it could be effective, was not a common occurrence.<ref>Prestwich ''Armies and Warfare in the Middle Ages'' p. 325</ref> Battles were rarely fought on land suitable for heavy cavalry. While mounted riders remained effective for initial attacks,<ref>Barber ''The Reign of Chivalry'' p. 33</ref> by the end of the 14th century, it was common for knights to dismount to fight,<ref>Prestwich ''Armies and Warfare'' p 31</ref> while their horses were sent to the rear, kept ready for pursuit.<ref name="Sadler32">Sadler ''Border Fury'' p. 32</ref> ]s were avoided if possible, with most offensive ] in the early Middle Ages taking the form of ]s,<ref>Bennett and others ''Fighting Techniques of the Medieval World'' p. 121</ref> or swift mounted raids called '']s'', with lightly armed warriors on swift horses, leaving their heavy war horses safely in the stable.{{#tag:ref|Chevauchées were the preferred form of warfare for the English during the ]<ref>''See, e.g.,'' Barber ''The Reign of Chivalry'' pp. 34&ndash;38</ref> and the Scots in the ].<ref>Prestwich ''Armies and Warfare in the Middle Ages'' pp. 10, 198&ndash;200</ref>|group=note}} The heavy cavalry charge, while it could be effective, was not a common occurrence.{{sfn|Prestwich|1996|p=325}} Battles were rarely fought on land suitable for heavy cavalry. While mounted riders remained effective for initial attacks,{{sfn|Barber|2005|p=33}} by the end of the 14th century, it was common for knights to dismount to fight,{{sfn|Prestwich|1996|p=31}} while their horses were sent to the rear, kept ready for pursuit.{{sfn|Sadler|2005|p=32}} ]s were avoided if possible, with most offensive ] in the early Middle Ages taking the form of ]s,{{sfn|Bennett|Bradbury|DeVries|Dickie|2005|p=121}} and in the later Middle Ages as mounted raids called '']s'', with lightly armed warriors on swift horses.{{#tag:ref|Chevauchées were the preferred form of warfare for the English during the ]{{sfn|Barber|2005|pp=34–38}} and the Scots in the ].{{sfn|Prestwich|1996|pp=10, 198–200}}|group=note}}
] is a ] that evolved out of ] practice.]] ] is a ] that evolved out of ] practice.]]


The war horse was also seen in ]s—martial war games such as the ], which began in the 11th century both as sport and to provide training for battle.<ref>Barker ''The Tournament in England'' pp. 4&ndash;15</ref> Specialised destriers were bred for the purpose,<ref name=Hyland88>Hyland ''Medieval Warhorse'' p. 88</ref> although the expense of keeping, training, and outfitting them kept the majority of the population from owning one.<ref name=Ellis43>Ellis ''Cavalry'' pp. 43, 49&ndash;50</ref> While some historians suggest that the tournament had become a theatrical event by the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, others argue that ] continued to help cavalry train for battle until the ].<ref name=Tournaments>{{cite journal |author=Watanabe-O'Kelly, Helen |title=Tournaments and their Relevance for Warfare in the Early Modern Period |journal=European History Quarterly |issue=20 |year=1990 |pages=451–463 |doi=10.1177/026569149002000401 |volume=20}}</ref> The war horse was also seen in ]s&nbsp;– martial war games such as the ], which began in the 11th century both as sport and to provide training for battle.{{sfn|Barker|1986|pp=4–15}} Specialised destriers were bred for the purpose,{{sfn|Hyland|1994|p=88}} although the expense of keeping, training, and outfitting them kept the majority of the population from owning one.{{sfn|Ellis|2004|pp=43, 49–50}} While some historians suggest that the tournament had become a theatrical event by the 15th and 16th centuries, others argue that ] continued to help cavalry train for battle until the ].<ref name=Tournaments>{{cite journal |last=Watanabe-O'Kelly |first=Helen |title=Tournaments and their Relevance for Warfare in the Early Modern Period |journal=] |issue=4 |year=1990 |pages=451–463 |doi=10.1177/026569149002000401 |volume=20 |s2cid=144885339}}</ref>


====Transition==== ====Transition====
It is likely that the decline of the armoured knight was linked to the changing structures of armies and various economic factors, and not obsolescence due to new technologies. However, some historians attribute the demise of the knight to the invention of ].<ref name=Hale54>Hale ''War and Society'' pp. 54&ndash;56</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rediscov.com/spring/VFPCGI.exe?IDCFile=/spring/DETAILS.IDC,SPECIFIC=545,DATABASE=objects,|title= Musket|accessdate=2008-07-18|author=Springfield Armory Museum|work=Springfield Armory Museum - Collection Record|publisher=Springfield Armory Museum}}</ref> Other historians look earlier and claim the use of the ], introduced in 1250, marked the beginning of the end.<ref name=Ellis65>Ellis ''Cavalry'' pp. 65&ndash;67</ref> Some relate the decline of armoured knights to both technologies.<ref name=Techniques123>Bennett ''Medieval Fighting Techniques'' pp. 123&ndash;124</ref> Yet, other theories argue that new technologies actually contributed to the development of knights. For example, plate armour was first developed to resist early medieval ] bolts,<ref name="Williams">Williams "The Metallurgy of Medieval Arms and Armour" ''Companion to Medieval Arms and Armour'' pp. 51&ndash;54</ref> and the rise of the English longbow increased the use and sophistication of armour, culminating in the full harness worn by the early 15th century.<ref name="Carey"/> Also, from the 14th century on, most plate was made from hardened steel, which could resist early musket ammunition.<ref name="Williams"/> Stronger designs did not make plate heavier or impracticable; a full harness of musket-proof plate from the 17th century weighed {{convert|70|lb|kg}}, significantly less than 16th century tournament armour.<ref>Oakeshott ''A Knight and his Horse'' p. 104</ref> The decline of the armoured knight was probably linked to changing structures of armies and various economic factors, and not obsolescence due to new technologies. However, some historians attribute the demise of the knight to the invention of ],{{sfn|Hale|1986|pp=54–56}} or to the ].{{sfn|Ellis|2004|pp=65–67}} Some link the decline to both technologies.{{sfn|Bennett|Bradbury|DeVries|Dickie|2005|pp=123–124}} Others argue these technologies actually contributed to the development of knights: ] was first developed to resist early medieval ] bolts,<ref name="Williams">Williams, "The Metallurgy of Medieval Arms and Armour" in ''Companion to Medieval Arms and Armour'', pp. 51–54.</ref> and the full harness worn by the early 15th century developed to resist longbow arrows.<ref name="Carey"/> From the 14th century onwards, most plate was made from hardened steel, which resisted early musket ammunition.<ref name="Williams"/> In addition, stronger designs did not make plate heavier; a full harness of musket-proof plate from the 17th century weighed {{convert|70|lb|kg}}, significantly less than 16th century tournament armour.{{sfn|Oakeshott|1998|p=104}}


The move to predominately infantry-based battles from 1300–1550 was linked to improved ] and changes in ].<ref>Bennett and others ''Fighting Techniques of the Medieval World'' p. 123</ref> By the 16th century, the concept of a combined-arms professional army, with improved infantry tactics, had spread throughout Europe.<ref name="Carey">Carey and others ''Warfare in the Medieval World'' pp. 149&ndash;50, 200&ndash;02</ref> Professional armies emphasized training, and were paid via contracts, a change from the ransom and pillaging which reimbursed knights in the past. This situation, when coupled with the rising costs involved in outfitting and maintaining armour and horses, probably led many members of the traditional knightly classes to abandon their profession.<ref>Robards, ''The Medieval Knight at War'', p 152</ref> Nonetheless, throughout the period, light horses, or ''prickers'', were used for scouting and reconnaissance; they also provided a defensive screen for marching armies.<ref name="Sadler32"/> Large teams of draught horses or ] pulled the heavy early ].<ref>Sadler ''Border Fury'' p. 45</ref> Other horses pulled wagons and carried supplies for the armies. The move to predominately infantry-based battles from 1300 to 1550 was linked to both improved ] and changes in ].{{sfn|Bennett|Bradbury|DeVries|Dickie|2005|p=123}} By the 16th century, the concept of a combined-arms professional army had spread throughout Europe.<ref name="Carey">Carey and others, ''Warfare in the Medieval World'', pp. 149–50, 200–02.</ref> Professional armies emphasized training, and were paid via contracts, a change from the ransom and pillaging which reimbursed knights in the past. When coupled with the rising costs involved in outfitting and maintaining armour and horses, the traditional knightly classes began to abandon their profession.<ref>Robards, ''The Medieval Knight at War'', p. 152.</ref> Light horses, or ''prickers'', were still used for scouting and reconnaissance; they also provided a defensive screen for marching armies.{{sfn|Sadler|2005|p=32}} Large teams of draught horses or ] pulled the heavy early ].{{sfn|Sadler|2005|p=45}} Other horses pulled wagons and carried supplies for the armies.


===Early modern period=== ===Early modern period===
During the ] the shift continued from heavy cavalry and the armoured knight to unarmoured light cavalry. The latter allowed better communication, using fast, agile horses to move quickly across battlefields.<ref name=Ellis98>Ellis ''Cavalry'' pp. 98&ndash;103</ref> The ratio of footmen to horsemen also increased over the period as infantry weapons improved and footmen became more mobile and versatile, particularly once the musket ] replaced the more cumbersome pike.<ref>Carver ''Seven Ages of the British Army'' p. 30</ref> During the ], mounted units included ]s, heavily armoured and equipped with lances; light cavalry, who wore mail and bore light lances and pistols; and "]s", who carried a early ].<ref name="Ages32">Carver ''Seven Ages of the British Army'' p. 32</ref> During the ] the shift continued from heavy cavalry and the armoured knight to unarmoured ], including ] and ].<ref name=Cowley>{{cite book |title=The Reader's Companion to Military History |publisher=] |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-618-12742-9 |page=215 |last1=Cowley |first1=Robert |first2=Geoffrey |last2=Parker}}</ref> Light cavalry facilitated better communication, using fast, agile horses to move quickly across battlefields.{{sfn|Ellis|2004|pp=98–103}} The ratio of footmen to horsemen also increased over the period as infantry weapons improved and footmen became more mobile and versatile, particularly once the musket ] replaced the more cumbersome pike.{{sfn|Carver|1984|p=30}} During the ], mounted units included ]s, heavily armoured and equipped with lances; light cavalry, who wore mail and bore light lances and pistols; and "]s", who carried an early ].{{sfn|Carver|1984|p=32}} As heavy cavalry use declined armour was increasingly abandoned and ]s, whose horses were rarely used in combat, became more common: ] provided reconnaissance, escort and security.{{sfn|Carver|1984|p=32}} However, many generals still used the heavy mounted charge, from the late 17th century and early 18th century, where sword-wielding wedge-formation shock troops penetrated enemy lines,{{sfn|Carver|1984|p=64}} to the early 19th century, where armoured heavy cuirassiers were employed.{{sfn|Holmes|2001|p=188}}
] (]) to the left and ] (]) to the right, at the ].]]


Light cavalry continued to play a major role, particularly after the ] when Hussars started to play a larger part in battles.<ref name=Hollins>{{cite book |title=Hungarian Hussar 1756–1815 |publisher=Osprey |year=2003 |isbn=1-84176-524-4 |page=5 |last1=Hollins |first1=Emir |first2=Darko |last2=Pavlovic}}</ref> Though some leaders preferred tall horses for their mounted troops this was as much for prestige as for increased shock ability and many troops used more typical horses, averaging 15 hands.{{sfn|Holmes|2001|p=416}} Cavalry tactics altered with fewer mounted charges, more reliance on drilled maneuvers at the ], and use of firearms once within range.{{sfn|Carver|1984|p=33}} Ever-more elaborate movements, such as wheeling and ], were developed to facilitate the use of firearms from horseback. These tactics were not greatly successful in battle since ] protected by ] could deny cavalry room to manoeuvre. However the advanced ] required survives into the modern world as ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.dressage.ponyclub.org/PDFs/Articles/history%20of%20dressage%20by%20rebecca%20barber.pdf |title=The History of Classical Horsemanship |access-date=September 19, 2010 |last=Barber |first=Rebecca A. |publisher=United States Pony Clubs |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110727182012/http://www.dressage.ponyclub.org/PDFs/Articles/history%20of%20dressage%20by%20rebecca%20barber.pdf |archive-date=July 27, 2011}}</ref>{{sfn|Keegan|1994|p=341}} While restricted, cavalry was not rendered obsolete. As infantry formations developed in tactics and skills, artillery became essential to break formations; in turn, cavalry was required to both combat enemy artillery, which was susceptible to cavalry while deploying, and to charge enemy infantry formations broken by artillery fire. Thus, successful warfare depended in a balance of the three arms: cavalry, artillery and infantry.{{sfn|Keegan|1994|p=344}}
As heavy cavalry use declined, armour was increasingly abandoned, and ]s, whose horses were rarely used in combat, became more common: ] provided reconnaissance, escort and security.<ref name="Ages32"/> However, many generals still used the heavy mounted charge, from the ], in the late 17th and early 18th centuries, whose sword-wielding wedge-formation shock troops penetrated enemy lines,<ref>Carver ''Seven Ages of the British Army'' p. 64</ref> to ] in the early 19th century, who employed armoured heavy cuirassiers, and claimed that "without cavalry, battles are without result".<ref>Holmes ''Military History'' p. 188</ref>
] in 1809]]


As regimental structures developed many units selected horses of uniform type and some, such as the ], even specified colour. Trumpeters often rode distinctive horses so they stood out. Regional armies developed type preferences, such as British ], ] in central Europe, and ] of the ]s, but once in the field, the lack of supplies typical of wartime meant that horses of all types were used.{{sfn|Holmes|2001|p=417}} Since horses were such a vital component of most armies in early modern Europe, many instituted ] to breed horses for the military. However, in wartime, supply rarely matched the demand, resulting in some cavalry troops fighting on foot.{{sfn|Holmes|2001|p=416}}
Light cavalry continued to play a major role. Though some leaders preferred tall horses for their mounted troops, this was as much for prestige as for increased shock ability. While ] preferred horses 16 hands high ({{convert|64|in|m}}) for his ]s, the ] mounts of ]'s ] were more typical, averaging 15 hands.<ref name="MH416">Holmes ''Military History'' p. 416</ref> Cavalry tactics altered, with fewer mounted charges, more reliance on drilled manoeuvres at the ], and use of firearms once within range.<ref>Carver ''Seven Ages of the British Army'' p. 33</ref> Ever-more elaborate movements, such as wheeling and ], were developed to facilitate the use of firearms from horseback. These tactics were not greatly successful in battle, since ] protected by ] could deny cavalry room to manoeuvre. However, the advanced ] required survives into the modern world as ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.srs.at/index.php?id=329|title=The Renaissance of Classical Equitation|work=Der Spanischen Hofreitschule Wien|accessdate=2008-07-21|author=Spanish Riding School|publisher=Spanish Riding School}}</ref><ref name="Keegan341">Keegan ''History of Warfare'' p. 341</ref> While restricted, cavalry was not rendered obsolete. As infantry formations developed in tactics and skills, artillery became essential to break formations; in turn, cavalry was required to both combat enemy artillery, which was susceptible to cavalry while deploying, and to charge enemy infantry formations broken by artillery fire. Thus, successful warfare depended in a balance of the three arms: cavalry, artillery and infantry.<ref>Keegan ''History of Warfare'' p. 344</ref>

As regimental structures developed, many units selected horses of uniform type. Some, such as the ] even specified colour. Trumpeters often rode distinctive horses, so they stood out. Regional armies developed type preferences, such as British ], German ], and ] of the ]s, but once in the field, the lack of supplies typical of wartime meant that horses of all types were used.<ref name="MH417">Holmes ''Military History'' p. 417</ref> Since horses were such a vital component of most armies in early modern Europe, many instituted ] to breed horses for the military. However, in wartime, supply rarely matched the demand, resulting in some cavalry troops fighting on foot.<ref name="MH416"/>


===19th century=== ===19th century===
{{see also|Horses in the Napoleonic Wars}}
]
] with his Generals" by ]. This painting shows light cavalry horses which come into use as officer's mounts in 18th- and 19th-century Europe.]]
In the 19th century, distinctions between heavy and light cavalry became less significant; by the end of the ], heavy cavalry were performing the scouting and outpost duties previously undertaken by light cavalry, and by the end of the 19th century the roles had effectively merged.<ref name="Colonial25">Haythornthwaite ''The Colonial Wars Source Book'' p. 25</ref> Most armies at the time preferred cavalry horses to stand 15.2 hands ({{convert|62|in|cm}}) and weigh {{convert|990|to|1100|lb|kg}}, although ] frequently had heavier horses. Lighter horses were used for scouting and raiding. Cavalry horses were generally obtained at 5 years of age, and were in service from 10 or 12 years, barring loss. However, losses of 30–40% were common during a campaign, due to conditions of the march as well as enemy action.<ref name="Nofi109">Nofi ''The Waterloo Campaign'' p. 109</ref> Mares and ]s were preferred over less-easily managed stallions.<ref name="Nofi108">Nofi ''The Waterloo Campaign'' p. 108</ref>

In the 19th century distinctions between heavy and light cavalry became less significant; by the end of the ], heavy cavalry were performing the scouting and outpost duties previously undertaken by light cavalry, and by the end of the 19th century the roles had effectively merged.{{sfn|Haythornthwaite|1995|p=25}} Most armies at the time preferred cavalry horses to stand {{hands|15.2}} and weigh {{convert|990|to|1100|lb|kg}}, although ]s frequently had heavier horses. Lighter horses were used for scouting and raiding. Cavalry horses were generally obtained at 5 years of age and were in service from 10 to 12 years, barring loss. However losses of 30–40% were common during a campaign due to conditions of the march as well as enemy action.{{sfn|Nofi|1993|p=109}} Mares and ]s were preferred over less-easily managed stallions.{{sfn|Nofi|1993|p=108}}

During the ] and the ] the cavalry's main offensive role was as shock troops. In defence cavalry were used to attack and harass the enemy's infantry flanks as they advanced. Cavalry were frequently used prior to an infantry assault, to force an infantry line to break and reform into formations vulnerable to infantry or artillery.{{sfn|Nofi|1993|p=204}} Infantry frequently followed behind in order to secure any ground won{{sfn|Nofi|1993|pp=175–176}} or the cavalry could be used to break up enemy lines following a successful infantry action.


Mounted charges were carefully managed. A charge's maximum speed was 20&nbsp;km/h; moving faster resulted in a break in formation and fatigued horses. Charges occurred across clear rising ground, and were effective against infantry both on the march and when deployed in a ] or ].{{sfn|Nofi|1993|p=176}} A foot ] formed in line was vulnerable to cavalry, and could be broken or destroyed by a well-formed charge.{{sfn|Haythornthwaite|1987|p=12}} Traditional cavalry functions altered by the end of the 19th century. Many cavalry units transferred in title and role to "mounted rifles":&nbsp;troops trained to fight on foot, but retaining mounts for rapid deployment, as well as for patrols, scouting, communications, and defensive screening. These troops differed from ], who used horses for transport but did not perform the old cavalry roles of reconnaissance and support.{{sfn|Kinloch|2005|pp=18–19}}
During the ] and the ], the cavalry's main offensive role were as shock troops. In defence, cavalry were used to attack and harass the enemy's infantry flanks as they advanced. Cavalry were frequently used prior to an infantry assault, to force an infantry line to break and reform into formations vulnerable to infantry or artillery.<ref name="Nofi204">Nofi ''The Waterloo Campaign'' p. 204</ref> Frequently, infantry followed behind in order to secure any ground won.<ref name="Nofi1756">Nofi ''The Waterloo Campaign'' pp. 175&ndash;176</ref> Conversely, cavalry also broke up enemy lines following successful infantry action.


==Sub-Saharan Africa==
Mounted charges were carefully managed. A charge's maximum speed was 20 km/h; moving faster resulted in a break in formation and fatigued horses. Charges occurred across clear rising ground, and were effective against infantry both on the march and when deployed in a ] or ].<ref name="Nofi176">Nofi ''The Waterloo Campaign'' p. 176</ref> A foot ] formed in line was vulnerable to cavalry, and could be broken or destroyed by a well-formed charge. For example, in the ], French cavalry decimated a regiment, killing 1,250 out of 1,650 men.<ref name="Hay12">Haythornthwaite ''British Infantry of the Napoleonic Wars'' p. 12</ref> During the ], cavalry and other mounted troops were the major combat force for the British, since the horse-mounted Boers moved too quickly for infantry to engage.<ref name="Kinloch20">Kinloch ''Echoes of Gallipoli'' p. 20</ref> However, the terrain was not well-suited to the British horses, resulting in the loss of over 300,000 animals. As the campaign wore on, losses were replaced by more durable African ], and ]s from ].<ref name="MH416"/>
]
Horses were used for warfare in the central ] since the 9th century, where they were considered "the most precious commodity following the slave."<ref>Azevedo, ''Roots of Violence'', p. 54</ref> The first conclusive evidence of horses playing a major role in the warfare of ] dates to the 11th century when the region was controlled by the ]s, a Muslim ] dynasty.{{sfn|Law|1980|p=119}} During the 13th and 14th centuries, cavalry became an important factor in the area. This coincided with the introduction of larger breeds of horse and the widespread adoption of saddles and stirrups.{{sfn|Law|1980|pp=127–133}} Increased mobility played a part in the formation of new power centers, such as the ] in what today is ]. The authority of many African Islamic states such as the ] also rested in large part on their ability to subject neighboring peoples with cavalry.{{sfn|Law|1980|pp=176–181}} Despite harsh climate conditions, endemic diseases such as ], the ], and unsuitable terrain that limited the effectiveness of horses in many parts of Africa, horses were continuously imported and were, in some areas, a vital instrument of war.{{sfn|Law|1980|pp=76–82}} The introduction of horses also intensified existing conflicts, such as those between the ] and ] in Namibia during the 19th century.{{sfn|Cocker|2000|p=279}}


The African slave trade was closely tied to the imports of war horses, and as the prevalence of slaving decreased, fewer horses were needed for raiding. This significantly decreased the amount of mounted warfare seen in West Africa.{{sfn|Law|1980|pp=176–177}} By the time of the ] and the introduction of modern firearms in the 1880s, the use of horses in African warfare had lost most of its effectiveness.{{sfn|Law|1980|pp=176–177}} Nonetheless, in ] during the ] (1899–1902), cavalry and other mounted troops were the major combat force for the British, since the horse-mounted Boers moved too quickly for infantry to engage.{{sfn|Kinloch|2005|p=20}} The Boers presented a mobile and innovative approach to warfare, drawing on strategies that had first appeared in the ].{{sfn|Pakenham|1979|p=30}} The terrain was not well-suited to the British horses, resulting in the loss of over 300,000 animals. As the campaign wore on, losses were replaced by more durable African ], and ]s from ].{{sfn|Holmes|2001|p=416}}
Traditional cavalry functions altered by the end of the 19th century. Many cavalry units transferred in title and role to "mounted rifles":&nbsp;troops trained to fight on foot, but retaining mounts for rapid deployment, as well as for patrols, scouting, communications, and defensive screening. These troops differed from ], who used horses for transport but did not perform the old cavalry roles of reconnaissance and support.<ref>Kinloch ''Echoes of Gallipoli'' p. 18&ndash;19</ref>


==The Americas== ==The Americas==
{{seealso|Conquistador|American Indian Wars|Cavalry (United States)|Cavalry in the American Civil War}} {{See also|Conquistador|American Indian Wars|Cavalry (United States)|Cavalry in the American Civil War}}
] ] quickly adopted the horse and were highly effective light cavalry. ''Comanche-Osage fight.'' ], 1834]]


The horse had been extinct in the ] for approximately 10,000 years prior to the arrival of Spanish ]s in the early 16th century. Consequently, the ] had no warfare technologies that could overcome the considerable advantage provided by European horses and gunpowder weapons. In particular this resulted in the conquest of the ] and ] empires.<ref>Bennett ''Conquerers'' pp. 195, 237</ref> The speed and increased impact of cavalry contributed to a number of early victories by European fighters in open terrain, though their success was limited in more mountainous regions.<ref name="Parker143">Parker ''Warfare'' p. 143</ref> The Incas' well-maintained roads in the ] enabled quick mounted raids, such as those undertaken by the Spanish while resisting the ] in 1536&ndash;7.<ref name="Parker143"/> The horse had been extinct in the ] for approximately 10,000 years prior to the arrival of Spanish ]s in the early 16th century. Consequently, the ] had no warfare technologies that could overcome the considerable advantage provided by European horses and gunpowder weapons. In particular this resulted in the conquest of the ] and ] empires.{{sfn|Bennett|1998|pp=195, 237}} The speed and increased impact of cavalry contributed to a number of early victories by European fighters in open terrain, though their success was limited in more mountainous regions.<ref name="Parker143">Parker, ''Warfare'', p. 143.</ref> The Incas' well-maintained roads in the ] enabled quick mounted raids, such as those undertaken by the Spanish while resisting the ] in 1536–37.<ref name="Parker143"/>


However, indigenous populations of South America soon learned to use horses. In Chile, the ] began using cavalry in the ] in 1586. They drove the Spanish out of ] at the beginning of the 17th century. Later, the Mapuche conducted mounted raids known as ]es, first on Spanish, then on Chilean and Argentine settlements until well into the 19th century.<ref>Jones "Warfare Reorganization and Readaptation at the Margins of Spanish Rule" ''The Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Americas'' pp. 138&ndash;187</ref> Indigenous populations of South America soon learned to use horses. In Chile, the ] began using cavalry in the ] in 1586. They drove the Spanish out of ] at the beginning of the 17th century. Later, the Mapuche conducted mounted raids known as ]es, first on Spanish, then on Chilean and Argentine settlements until well into the 19th century.<ref>Jones, "Warfare Reorganization and Readaptation at the Margins of Spanish Rule" in ''The Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Americas'', pp. 138–187.</ref> In North America, ] also quickly learned to use horses. In particular, the people of the ], such as the ] and the ], became renowned horseback fighters. By the 19th century, they presented a formidable force against the ].{{sfn|Ellis|2004|pp=156–163}}
] and ]. Cavalry played a significant role in the American Civil War.]]


During the ] (1775–1783), the ] made relatively little use of cavalry, primarily relying on infantry and a few dragoon regiments.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.history.army.mil/books/RevWar/ContArmy/CA-07.htm |last=Wright |first=Robert K. |title=The Continental Army |work=Army Lineage Series |pages=160, 168 |publisher=Center of Military History, United States Army |year=1983 |access-date=2008-11-09 |archive-date=2010-11-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101104225240/http://www.history.army.mil/books/RevWar/ContArmy/CA-07.htm |url-status=dead}}</ref> The ] eventually authorized regiments specifically designated as cavalry in 1855. The newly formed American cavalry adopted tactics based on experiences fighting over vast distances during the ] (1846–1848) and against indigenous peoples on the western frontier, abandoning some European traditions.<ref name="OSU">{{cite web |url=http://ehistory.osu.edu/uscw/features/regimental/cavalry.cfm |last=Sayers |first=Alethea D. |title=Introduction To Civil War Cavalry |work=ehistory archive |publisher=] Department of History |access-date=2008-11-02 |archive-date=2008-11-12 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081112003807/http://ehistory.osu.edu/uscw/features/regimental/cavalry.cfm |url-status=dead }}</ref>
In North America, ] also quickly learned to use horses. In particular, the people of the ], such as the ] and the ], became renowned horseback fighters. By the 19th century, they presented a formidable force against the ].<ref name=Ellis156>Ellis ''Cavalry'' pp. 156&ndash;163</ref>


During the ] (1861–1865), cavalry held the most important and respected role it would ever hold in the American military.<ref name="OSU"/>{{#tag:ref|Over one million horses and mules died during the American Civil War.<ref name="Grace">{{cite web |url=http://www.reillysbattery.org/Newsletter/Jul00/deborah_grace.htm|author=Grace, Deborah |title=The Horse in the Civil War |work=Rolling Thunder Newsletter |publisher=Reilly's Battery |date=July 2002 |access-date=2008-10-31 |archive-date=2008-11-03 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081103151336/http://www.reillysbattery.org/Newsletter/Jul00/deborah_grace.htm |url-status=dead}}</ref>|group=note}} ] was also highly mobile. Both horses and mules pulled the guns, though only horses were used on the battlefield.<ref name="Cotner1"/> At the beginning of the war, most of the experienced cavalry officers were from the South and thus joined the ], leading to the ]'s initial battlefield superiority.<ref name="OSU"/> The tide turned at the 1863 ], part of the ] campaign, where the ], in the largest cavalry battle ever fought on the American continent,{{#tag:ref|Of a total of 20,500 troops, at least 17,000 were cavalry<ref name="Brandy Station"/>|group=note}} ended the dominance of the South.<ref name="Brandy Station">{{cite web |url=http://brandystationfoundation.com/|title=The Battle of Brandy Station |publisher=Brandy Station Foundation |access-date=2011-10-30}}</ref> By 1865, Union cavalry were decisive in achieving victory.<ref name="OSU"/> So important were ] that the surrender terms at ] allowed every Confederate cavalryman to take his horse home with him. This was because, unlike their Union counterparts, Confederate cavalrymen provided their own horses for service instead of drawing them from the government.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.historynet.com/ulysses-s-grant-the-unconditional-surrender-continues.htm/5 |author=Selcer, Richard F. |title=Ulysses S. Grant: The 'Unconditional Surrender' Continues |work=Civil War Times Magazine |publisher=HistoryNet |date=January 2007 |access-date=2008-10-31 |archive-date=2008-11-23 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081123031556/http://www.historynet.com/ulysses-s-grant-the-unconditional-surrender-continues.htm/5 |url-status=dead}}</ref>
During the ] (1775&ndash;1783), the ] made relatively little use of cavalry, primarily relying on infantry and a few dragoon regiments.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.history.army.mil/books/RevWar/ContArmy/CA-07.htm| author=Wright, Robert K. | title=The Continental Army |work=Army Lineage Series| page=160, 168| publisher=Center of Military History, United States Army |date=1983| accessdate=2008-11-09}}</ref> The ] eventually authorized federal horse regiments in 1855. The newly-formed American cavalry adopted tactics based on experiences fighting over vast distances during the ] (1846&ndash;1848) and against indigenous peoples on the western frontier, abandoning some European traditions.<ref name="OSU"> {{cite web| url=http://ehistory.osu.edu/uscw/features/regimental/cavalry.cfm |author=Sayers, Alethea D.|title=Introduction To Civil War Cavalry|work=ehistory archive|publisher=Ohio State University Department of History|date=|accessdate=2008-11-02}}</ref>
During the ] (1861&ndash;1865), cavalry held the most important and respected role it would ever hold in the American military.<ref name="OSU"/>{{#tag:ref|Over one million horses and mules died during the American Civil War.<ref name="Grace">{{cite web|url=http://www.reillysbattery.org/Newsletter/Jul00/deborah_grace.htm|author=Grace, Deborah|title=The Horse in the Civil War|work=Rolling Thunder Newsletter|publisher=Reilly's Battery|date=July, 2002|accessdate=2008-10-31}}</ref>|group=note}} ] was also highly mobile. Both horses and mules pulled the guns, though only horses were used on the battlefield.<ref name="Cotner1"/> At the beginning of the war, most of the experienced cavalry officers were from the South and thus joined the ], leading to the ]'s initial battlefield superiority.<ref name="OSU"/> The tide turned at the 1863 ], part of the ] campaign, where the ], in the largest cavalry battle ever fought on the North American continent,{{#tag:ref|Of a total of 20,500 troops, at least 17,000 were cavalry<ref name="Brandy Station"/>|group=note}} ended the dominance of the South.<ref name="Brandy Station">{{cite web| url=http://brandystationfoundation.com/pages/battle.htm |author=|title=The Battle of Brandy Station|work=|publisher=Brandy Station Foundation |date=|accessdate=2008-11-02}}</ref> By 1865, Union cavalry were decisive in achieving victory.<ref name="OSU"/> So important were ] that the surrender terms at ] allowed every Confederate cavalryman to take his horse home with him.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.historynet.com/ulysses-s-grant-the-unconditional-surrender-continues.htm/5 |author=Selcer, Richard F. |title=Ulysses S. Grant: The 'Unconditional Surrender' Continues |work= Civil War Times Magazine|publisher=HistoryNet |date=January 2007| accessdate=2008-10-31}}</ref>


==20th century== ==20th century==
] was still seen on the battlefield at the beginning of the 20th century. Though formal mounted cavalry began to be phased out for combat during and immediately after ], units that included horses still had military uses well into ].<ref name=Waller>{{cite web|url=http://www.qmfound.com/horse.htm|author= Waller, Anna L. |title=Horses and Mules and National Defense|date= 1958|accessdate=2008-07-17|work=Office of the Quartermaster General|publisher=Army Quartermaster Foundation, Inc.}}</ref> Although cavalry was used extensively throughout the world during the 19th century, horses became less important in warfare at the beginning of the 20th century. ] was still seen on the battlefield, but formal mounted cavalry began to be phased out for combat during and immediately after ], although units that included horses still had military uses well into ].<ref name=Waller>{{cite web |url=http://www.qmfound.com/horse.htm |last=Waller |first=Anna L. |title=Horses and Mules and National Defense |year=1958 |access-date=July 17, 2008 |work=Office of the Quartermaster General |publisher=Army Quartermaster Foundation, Inc. |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080827181403/http://www.qmfound.com/horse.htm |archive-date=August 27, 2008}}</ref>


===World War I=== ===World War I===
] light horsemen, 1914]] ] light horsemen, 1914]]
{{main|Horses in World War I}}
] saw great changes in the use of cavalry. Tanks were beginning to take over the role of shock combat.<ref name="Carver123"/> The mode of warfare changed, and the use of ], ] and ]s rendered traditional cavalry almost obsolete.<ref name="Carver123">Carver ''Britain's Army in the 20th Century'' p. 123</ref>
] saw great changes in the use of cavalry. The mode of warfare changed, and the use of ], ] and ]s rendered traditional cavalry almost obsolete. ]s, introduced in 1917, began to take over the role of shock combat.{{sfn|Carver|1998|p=123}}


Early in the War, cavalry skirmishes were common, and horse-mounted troops widely used for reconnaissance.<ref name="WILL46">Willmott ''First World War'' p. 46</ref> On the ] cavalry were an effective flanking force during the "]" in 1914, but were less useful once ] was established.<ref name="WILL60">Willmott ''First World War'' p. 60</ref><ref name="WILL99">Willmott ''First World War'' p. 99</ref> There a few examples of successful shock combat, and cavalry divisions also provided important mobile fire power.<ref name="MH188"/> Cavalry played a greater role on the ], where trench warfare was less common.<ref name="WILL99"/> On the Eastern Front, and also against the ], the "cavalry was literally indispensable."<ref name="MH188"/> In 1917, one of the greatest cavalry charges in modern times occurred, during the ], when the ] successfully charged Turkish trenches,<ref>Mitchell ''Light Horse'' p. 5</ref> securing ] victory in Palestine.<ref name="MH188">Holmes ''Military History'' p. 188</ref> Cavalry was also used with in the ] and ].<ref name="Carver123">Carver ''Britain's Army in the 20th Century'' p. 123</ref> ] cavalry proved adaptable, since they were trained to fight both on foot and while mounted, while other European cavalry relied primarily on shock action.<ref name="MH188"/> Early in the War, cavalry skirmishes were common, and horse-mounted troops widely used for reconnaissance.<ref name="WILL46">Willmott, ''First World War'', p. 46.</ref> On the ] cavalry were an effective flanking force during the "]" in 1914, but were less useful once ] was established.<ref name="WILL60">Willmott, ''First World War'', p. 60.</ref><ref name="WILL99">Willmott, ''First World War'', p. 99.</ref> There a few examples of successful shock combat, and cavalry divisions also provided important mobile firepower.{{sfn|Holmes|2001|p=188}} Cavalry played a greater role on the ], where trench warfare was less common.<ref name="WILL99"/> On the Eastern Front, and also against the ], the "cavalry was literally indispensable."{{sfn|Holmes|2001|p=188}} ] cavalry proved adaptable, since they were trained to fight both on foot and while mounted, while other European cavalry relied primarily on shock action.{{sfn|Holmes|2001|p=188}}


On both fronts, the horse was also used as a ]. Because railway lines could not withstand artillery bombardments, horses carried ammunition and supplies between the railheads and the rear trenches, though the horses generally were not used in the actual trench zone.<ref name="HISTORYKEEGAN308">Keegan ''A History of Warfare'' p. 308</ref> This role of horses was critical, and thus horse ] was the single largest commodity Britain shipped to its Army in France during the war, even above ammunition and shells.<ref name="HISTORYKEEGAN308"/> In 1917, Britain had over a million horses and mules in service, but harsh conditions, especially in winter, resulted in heavy losses, particularly amongst the heavy ] that drew the guns. Over the course of the war, Britain lost 484,000 horses, roughly one horse for every two men.<ref name="MH417">Holmes ''Military History'' p. 417</ref> On both fronts, the horse was also used as a ]. Because railway lines could not withstand artillery bombardments, horses carried ammunition and supplies between the railheads and the rear trenches, though the horses generally were not used in the actual trench zone.{{sfn|Keegan|1994|p=308}} This role of horses was critical, and thus horse ] was the single largest commodity shipped to the front by some countries.{{sfn|Keegan|1994|p=308}} Following the war, many cavalry regiments were converted to mechanised, armoured divisions, with light tanks developed to perform many of the cavalry's original roles.{{sfn|Carver|1998|pp=7, 154}}


===World War II===
Following the war, many cavalry regiments were converted to mechanised, armoured divisions, with light tanks developed to perform many of the cavalry's original roles.<ref>Carver ''Britain's Army in the 20th Century'' pp. 7, 154</ref>
] manoeuvre in late 1930s.]]
{{main|Horses in World War II}}
Several nations used horse units during ]. The ] army used mounted infantry to defend against the armies of ] during the ].<ref name=Davies324>Davies, ''God's Playground Volume II'', pp. 324–325.</ref> Both the Germans and the ] maintained cavalry units throughout the war,{{sfn|Holmes|2001|p=417}} particularly on the ].{{sfn|Holmes|2001|p=188}} The British Army used horses early in the war, and the final British cavalry charge was on March 21, 1942, when the ] encountered ]ese infantry in central ].{{sfn|Tucker|Roberts|2004|p=309}} The only American cavalry unit during World War II was the ]. They challenged the Japanese invaders of ], holding off armoured and infantry regiments during the ], repelled a unit of tanks in ], and successfully held ground for the Allied armies' retreat to ].{{sfn|Urwin|1983|p=186}}


Throughout the war, horses and mules were an essential form of transport, especially by the British in the rough terrain of ] and the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ams-museum.org.uk/historyRAVC.htm|title=History of the Royal Army Veterinary Corps|access-date=2008-07-18|author=Army Medical Services Museum|work=RAVC History|publisher=Army Medical Services Museum|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080821184002/http://www.ams-museum.org.uk/historyRAVC.htm|archive-date=2008-08-21}}</ref> The United States Army utilised a few cavalry and supply units during the war, but there were concerns that the Americans did not use horses often enough. In the campaigns in ], generals such as ] lamented their lack, saying, "had we possessed an American cavalry division with pack artillery in Tunisia and in Sicily, not a German would have escaped."<ref name=Waller/>
=== World War II===
]
Several nations used horse units during ]. The ] army used cavalry to defend against the armies of ] during the ].<ref name=Davies324>Davies ''God's Playground Volume II'' pp. 324&ndash;325</ref> Both the Germans and the ] maintained cavalry units throughout the war,<ref name="MH417"/> particularly on the ].<ref name="MH188"/> The British Army used horses early in the war, and the final British cavalry charge was on March 21, 1942, when the Burma Frontier Force encountered ] infantry in central ].<ref>Tucker ''Encyclopedia of World War II'' p. 309</ref> The only American cavalry unit during World War II was the ]. They challenged the Japanese invaders of ], holding off armoured and infantry regiments during the ], repelled a unit of tanks in ], and successfully held ground for the Allied armies' retreat to ].<ref>Urwin ''The United States Cavalry'' p. 186</ref>


The German and the Soviet armies used horses until the end of the war for transportation of troops and supplies. The German Army, strapped for motorised transport because its factories were needed to produce tanks and aircraft, used around 2.75 million horses&nbsp;– more than it had used in World War I.{{sfn|Keegan|1994|p=308}} One German infantry division in Normandy in 1944 had 5,000 horses.{{sfn|Holmes|2001|p=417}} The Soviets used 3.5 million horses.{{sfn|Keegan|1994|p=308}}
Throughout the war, horses and mules were an essential form of transport, especially in by the British in the rough terrain of Italy and the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ams-museum.org.uk/historyRAVC.htm|title=History of the Royal Army Veterinary Corps|accessdate=2008-07-18|author=Army Medical Services Museum|work=RAVC History|publisher=Army Medical Services Museum}}</ref> The United States Army utilised a few cavalry and supply units during the war, but there were concerns that the Americans did not use horses often enough. In the campaigns in ], generals such as ] lamented their lack, saying, "had we possessed an American cavalry division with pack artillery in Tunisia and in Sicily, not a German would have escaped."<ref name=Waller/>


==Recognition==
The German and the Soviet armies used horses until the end of the war for transportation of troops and supplies. The German Army, strapped for motorised transport because its factories were needed to produce tanks and aircraft, used around 2.75 million horses—more than it had used in World War I.<ref name="HISTORYKEEGAN308"/> One German infantry division in Normandy in 1944 had 5,000 horses.<ref name="MH417"/> The Soviets used 3.5 million horses.<ref name="HISTORYKEEGAN308"/>
].]]
While many statues and memorials have been erected to human heroes of war, often shown with horses, a few have also been created specifically to honor horses or animals in general. One example is the ] in ] in the ] province of ].<ref name="sahra">{{cite web |url=http://196.35.231.29/sahra/HeritageSitesDetail.aspx?id=21179 |title=Horse Memorial |publisher=] |access-date=July 16, 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110529154818/http://196.35.231.29/sahra/HeritageSitesDetail.aspx?id=21179 |archive-date=May 29, 2011}}</ref> Both horses and mules are honored in the ] in ].<ref name="BBC">{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/4037873.stm |title=Animal war heroes statue unveiled |work=] |date=November 24, 2004 |access-date=January 6, 2010}}</ref>

Horses have also at times received medals for extraordinary deeds. After the ] during the ], a surviving horse named Drummer Boy, ridden by an officer of the ], was given an unofficial campaign medal by his rider that was identical to those awarded to British troops who served in the Crimea, engraved with the horse's name and an inscription of his service.<ref name="Telegraph">{{cite web |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1458954/War-horses-medal-from-valley-of-death-up-for-sale.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220112/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1458954/War-horses-medal-from-valley-of-death-up-for-sale.html |archive-date=January 12, 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |title=War horse's medal from valley of death up for sale |last=Bennett |first=Will |publisher=] |date=April 4, 2004 |access-date=January 6, 2010}}{{cbignore}}</ref> A more formal award was the ] ], an animals' equivalent of the ], awarded by the ] charity in the United Kingdom to three horses that served in World War II.<ref name="BBC"/>


==Modern uses== ==Modern uses==
] ]

Today, many of the historical military uses of the horse have evolved into peacetime applications, including exhibitions, ]s, work of ]s, and competitive events. Formal combat units of mounted cavalry are mostly a thing of the past, with horseback units within the modern military used for reconnaissance, ceremonial, or crowd control purposes. With the rise of mechanised technology, horses in formal national militias were displaced by modern tanks, sometimes still referred to as "cavalry".<ref>{{cite journal |author= Bielakowski, Alexander M. |year=Jan. 2007|title= General Hawkins's war: The Future of the Horse in the U.S. Cavalry |journal= The Journal of Military History |volume= Volume 71, Number 1|page=p. 137}}</ref>
Today, many of the historical military uses of the horse have evolved into peacetime applications, including exhibitions, ]s, work of ], and competitive events. Formal combat units of mounted cavalry are mostly a thing of the past, with horseback units within the modern military used for reconnaissance, ceremonial, or crowd control purposes. With the rise of mechanised technology, horses in formal national militias were displaced by ]s and ]s, often still referred to as "cavalry".<ref>{{cite journal |last=Bielakowski |first=Alexander M. |date=January 2007 |title=General Hawkins's war: The Future of the Horse in the U.S. Cavalry |journal=The Journal of Military History |volume=71 |issue=1 |page=137 |doi=10.1353/jmh.2007.0004 |s2cid=159472223}}</ref>


===Active military=== ===Active military===
Organised armed fighters on horseback are occasionally seen, particularly in the ], though they usually are not officially recognised as part of any national army. The best-known current examples are the ], militia groups seen in the ] region of ], who became notorious for their attacks upon unarmed civilian populations in the ].<ref>{{cite journal |author= Lacey, Marc|year= May 4, 2004|number= |title= In Sudan, Militiamen on Horses Uproot a Million |journal= New York Times|volume= |url= http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/04/international/africa/04DARF.html?ex=1399003200&en=b72ea0a4b892076d&ei=5007&partner=USERLAND |accessdate=2008-07-17}}</ref> Many nations still maintain small numbers of mounted military units for certain types of patrol and reconnaissance duties in extremely rugged terrain, including the current conflict in ].<ref>{{cite journal |author= Pelton, Robert Young |year=Feb. 15, 2002|title= Afghan War Eyewitness on Warlords, Future, More |journal= National Geographic News|url=http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/02/0215_020215_peltoninterview.html|accessdate=2008-07-28}}</ref> The only remaining operationally-ready, fully horse-mounted regular regiment in the world is the ]'s 61st Cavalry.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.deccanherald.com/content/Jan92008/national2008010945655.asp?section=updatenews|title=61st India's 61st Cavalry rides into 56th year|accessdate=2008-08-04|author=Deccan Herald|work=National News|publisher=The Printers (Mysore) Private Ltd.}}</ref> Organised armed fighters on horseback are occasionally seen. The best-known current examples are the ], militia groups seen in the ] region of ], who became notorious for their attacks upon unarmed civilian populations in the ].<ref>{{cite news |last=Lacey |first=Marc |date=May 4, 2004 |title=In Sudan, Militiamen on Horses Uproot a Million |work=] |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/04/international/africa/04DARF.html?ex=1399003200&en=b72ea0a4b892076d&ei=5007&partner=USERLAND |access-date=July 17, 2008}}</ref> Many nations still maintain small numbers of mounted military units for certain types of patrol and reconnaissance duties in extremely rugged terrain, including the conflict in ].<ref>{{cite journal |last=Pelton |first=Robert Young |date=February 15, 2002 |title=Afghan War Eyewitness on Warlords, Future, More |journal=] |url=http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/02/0215_020215_peltoninterview.html |access-date=July 28, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20020220035927/http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/02/0215_020215_peltoninterview.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=February 20, 2002}}</ref>

At the beginning of ], ]s were covertly inserted into ] on October 19, 2001.<ref name=briscoe>{{cite book |last1=Briscoe |first1=Charles H. |first2=Richard L. |last2=Kiper |first3=James A. |last3=Schroder |first4=Kalev I. |last4=Sepp |title=Weapon of Choice: U.S. Army Special Operations Forces in Afghanistan |year=2003 |publisher=Combat studies institute Press |location=Fort Leavenworth, Kansas |isbn=978-0-16-072958-4}}</ref> Horses were the only suitable method of transport in the difficult mountainous terrain of ].<ref name=bissell>{{cite news |last=Bissell |first=Brandon |title='Horse Soldier' statue dedicated near Ground Zero |url=http://www.wkdzradio.com/pages/11505214.php? |access-date=January 12, 2012 |date=November 18, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131014141054/http://www.wkdzradio.com/pages/11505214.php |archive-date=October 14, 2013}}</ref> They were the first U.S. soldiers to ride horses into battle since January 16, 1942, when the U.S. Army’s ] charged an advanced guard of the 14th Japanese Army as it advanced from Manila.<ref>{{cite news |title=WWII cavalry officer in the Philippines |first=Elaine |last=Woo |newspaper=] |date=March 17, 2013 |url=http://articles.latimes.com/2013/mar/17/local/la-me-edwin-ramsey-20130317 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130319154950/http://articles.latimes.com/2013/mar/17/local/la-me-edwin-ramsey-20130317 |url-status=dead |archive-date=March 19, 2013}}</ref><ref name=Independent>{{cite news |title=Lieutenant-Colonel Edwin Ramsey: Soldier who led the last cavalry charge by the US army |first=Phil |last=Davison |newspaper=] |date=April 3, 2013 |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/lieutenantcolonel-edwin-ramsey-soldier-who-led-the-last-cavalry-charge-by-the-us-army-8557345.html}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Stilwell |first1=Blake |title=Special Forces Who Avenged 9/11 on Horseback |url=http://www.realcleardefense.com/articles/2015/09/12/special_forces_who_avenged_911_on_horseback_108457.html |access-date=February 7, 2016}}</ref>

The only remaining operationally ready, fully horse-mounted regular ] in the world is the ]'s ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.indiapolo.com/Polopedia/Genesis/Indian_Army/61st_Cavalry/61st_cavalry.html |title=61st Cavalry |access-date=September 19, 2010 |work=India Polo |publisher=IndiaPolo.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090703113133/http://www.indiapolo.com/Polopedia/Genesis/Indian_Army/61st_Cavalry/61st_cavalry.html |archive-date=July 3, 2009}}</ref>


===Law enforcement and public safety=== ===Law enforcement and public safety===
], ]]]
{{Main|Mounted police|Mounted search and rescue}} {{Main|Mounted police|Mounted search and rescue}}
], Poland]]
] have been used since the 18th century, and still are used worldwide to control traffic and crowds, patrol public parks, keep order in processionals and during ceremonies and perform general street patrol duties. Today, many cities still have mounted police units. In rural areas, horses are used by law enforcement for mounted patrols over rugged terrain, crowd control at religious shrines, and border patrol.<ref>Edwards, E. ''The Encyclopedia of the Horse'' p. 308</ref>


] have been used since the 18th century, and still are used worldwide to control traffic and crowds, patrol public parks, keep order in processionals and during ceremonies and perform general street patrol duties. Today, many cities still have mounted police units. In rural areas, horses are used by law enforcement for mounted patrols over rugged terrain, crowd control at religious shrines, and border patrol.{{sfn|Edwards|1994|p=308}}
In rural areas, law enforcement that operates outside of incorporated cities may also have mounted units. These include specially deputised, paid or volunteer ] units sent into roadless areas on horseback to locate missing people.<ref>For example: {{cite web |url= http://www.nwhsar.org/|title= Northwest Horseback Search and Rescue|accessdate=2008-07-17 |author=Northwest Horseback Search and Rescue |work= NHSR Website|publisher=Northwest Horseback Search and Rescue }}</ref> Law enforcement in ]s may use horses in places where mechanised transport is difficult or prohibited. Horses can be an essential part of an overall team effort as they can move faster on the ground than a human on foot, can transport heavy equipment, and provide a more rested rescue worker when a subject is found.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.nwhsar.org/pages/whyhorseback.html|title= Why Search on Horseback?|accessdate=2006-11-09 |author=Northwest Horseback Search and Rescue |work= NHSR Website|publisher=Northwest Horseback Search and Rescue}}</ref>

In rural areas, law enforcement that operates outside of incorporated cities may also have mounted units. These include specially deputised, paid or volunteer ] units sent into roadless areas on horseback to locate missing people.<ref>For example: {{cite web |url=http://www.nwhsar.org/ |title=Northwest Horseback Search and Rescue |access-date=July 17, 2008 |author=Northwest Horseback Search and Rescue |work=NHSR Website |publisher=Northwest Horseback Search and Rescue}}</ref> Law enforcement in ]s may use horses in places where mechanised transport is difficult or prohibited. Horses can be an essential part of an overall team effort as they can move faster on the ground than a human on foot, can transport heavy equipment, and provide a more rested rescue worker when a subject is found.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nwhsar.org/pages/whyhorseback.html |title=Why Search on Horseback? |access-date=November 9, 2006 |author=Northwest Horseback Search and Rescue |work=NHSR Website |publisher=Northwest Horseback Search and Rescue |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080513003817/http://www.nwhsar.org/pages/whyhorseback.html |archive-date=May 13, 2008}}</ref>


===Ceremonial and educational uses=== ===Ceremonial and educational uses===
{{Seealso|Historical reenactment}} {{See also|Historical reenactment|Horse symbolism}}
] ]]]
Many countries throughout the world maintain traditionally-trained and historically uniformed cavalry units for ceremonial, exhibition, or educational purposes. One example is the Horse Cavalry Detachment of the U.S. Army's ].<ref>{{cite web| url=http://pao.hood.army.mil/1stCavDiv/horseDet/default.html|title=Horse Cavalry Detachment |accessdate=2008-07-17|author=First Cavalry Division |work=FCD Website|publisher=First Cavalry Division}}</ref> This unit of active duty soldiers approximates the weapons, tools, equipment and techniques used by the United States Cavalry in the 1880s.<ref name="Hubbell"/> It is seen at change of command ceremonies and other public appearances.<ref name="Hubbell"/> A similar detachment is the Governor General's Horse Guards, Canada's ] regiment, the last remaining mounted cavalry unit in the Canadian Forces.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.army.dnd.ca/GGHG/home.html|title= Governor General's Horse Guards|accessdate=2007-01-06 |author= Canadian Department of National Defense|work= Canadian National Defense Website|publisher= Canadian Department of National Defense}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.saskd.ca/heritage.pdf|title= The Honours, Flags and Heritage Structure of the Canadian Forces|accessdate=2008-07-18|date=1999-01-04 |author= Canadian Department of National Defense|work= The Saskatchewan Dragoons Website|publisher= Canadian Department of National Defense|format=pdf}}</ref> ]'s King's Household Cavalry is a ceremonial unit with over 100 horses and is the remainder of the Nepalese cavalry that existed since the 19th century.<ref>{{cite journal |author= Haviland, Charles|year=June 8, 2008|title= Nepalese cavalry to be relocated|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7442323.stm|accessdate=2008-08-07|journal= BBC News}}</ref>


Many countries throughout the world maintain traditionally trained and historically uniformed cavalry units for ceremonial, exhibition, or educational purposes. One example is the Horse Cavalry Detachment of the U.S. Army's ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hood.army.mil/1stcavdiv/horseDet/history.asp |title=Horse Cavalry Detachment |access-date=July 17, 2008 |author=First Cavalry Division |work=FCD Website |publisher=First Cavalry Division |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110614014807/http://www.hood.army.mil/1stcavdiv/horseDet/history.asp |archive-date=June 14, 2011}}</ref> This unit of active duty soldiers approximates the weapons, tools, equipment and techniques used by the United States Cavalry in the 1880s.<ref name="Hubbell"/> It is seen at change of command ceremonies and other public appearances.<ref name="Hubbell"/> A similar detachment is the ], Canada's ] regiment, the last remaining mounted cavalry unit in the Canadian Forces.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.army.forces.gc.ca/gghg/regiment/cavalry-cavalerie-eng.asp |title=Governor General's Horse Guards |access-date=March 20, 2012 |author=Canadian Department of National Defense |work=Canadian National Defense Website |publisher=] |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120214111220/http://www.army.forces.gc.ca/gghg/regiment/cavalry-cavalerie-eng.asp |archive-date=February 14, 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.saskd.ca/heritage.pdf |title=The Honours, Flags and Heritage Structure of the Canadian Forces |access-date=2008-07-18 |date=January 4, 1999 |author=Canadian Department of National Defense |work=The Saskatchewan Dragoons Website |publisher=] |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090325162006/http://www.saskd.ca/heritage.pdf |archive-date=2009-03-25}}</ref> ]'s King's Household Cavalry is a ceremonial unit with over 100 horses and is the remainder of the Nepalese cavalry that existed since the 19th century.<ref>{{cite news |last=Haviland |first=Charles |date=June 8, 2008 |title=Nepalese cavalry to be relocated |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7442323.stm |access-date=August 7, 2008 |work=]}}</ref> An important ceremonial use is in military funerals, which often have a ] as part of the procession, "to symbolize that the warrior will never ride again".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.defense.gov/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=26315 |title=Military to Support Reagan Funeral |work=American Forces Press Service News Articles |access-date=December 16, 2008 |publisher=] |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110608214206/http://www.defense.gov/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=26315 |archive-date=June 8, 2011}}</ref>
Horses are also used in many historical reenactments.<ref>''see, e.g. {{cite web |url=http://www.1066country.com/hastings/events/hastingsweek/battle.aspx|title=1066 Battle Re-enactment: The Big Match - King Harold V William of Normandy at the Battle of Hastings|accessdate=2008-08-03|author=|work=1066country.com|publisher=Hastings Borough Council}} and {{cite web |url= http://www.lighthorse.org.au/|title= Australian Light Horse Association Homepage|accessdate=2008-07-31 |author=Australian Light Horse Association|work= ALHA Website|publisher=Australian Light Horse Association}}</ref> Reenactors try to recreate the conditions of the battle or tournament with equipment that is as authentic as possible.<ref>{{cite journal |author= Handler, Richard and William Saxton |year=August 1988|title= Dyssimulation: Reflexivity, Narrative and the Quest for Authenticity in "Living History"|journal= Cultural Anthropology|volume= Volume 3, Number 3| doi = |pages=pp. 243&ndash;244}}</ref>

Horses are also used in many historical reenactments.<ref>See for example {{cite web |url=http://www.1066country.com/hastings/events/hastingsweek/battle.aspx |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071209074934/http://www.1066country.com/hastings/events/hastingsweek/battle.aspx |url-status=dead |archive-date=December 9, 2007 |title=1066 Battle Re-enactment: The Big Match - King Harold V William of Normandy at the Battle of Hastings |access-date=August 3, 2008 |work=1066country.com |publisher=Hastings Borough Council}} and {{cite web |url=http://www.lighthorse.org.au/ |title=Australian Light Horse Association Homepage |access-date=July 31, 2008 |author=] |work=ALHA Website |publisher=Australian Light Horse Association}}</ref> Reenactors try to recreate the conditions of the battle or tournament with equipment that is as authentic as possible.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Handler |first1=Richard |first2=William |last2=Saxton |date=August 1988 |title=Dyssimulation: Reflexivity, Narrative and the Quest for Authenticity in "Living History" |journal=] |volume=3 |issue=3 |doi=10.1525/can.1988.3.3.02a00020 |pages=243–244}}</ref>


===Equestrian sport=== ===Equestrian sport===
{{Main|Equestrian at the Summer Olympics|Dressage|Show jumping|Eventing}} {{Main|Equestrian events at the Summer Olympics|Dressage|Show jumping|Eventing}}
Modern-day Olympic equestrian events are rooted in cavalry skills and classical horsemanship.<ref>Bryant, ''Olympic Equestrian'', pp. 14–15.</ref> The first equestrian events at the ] were introduced in 1912, and through 1948, competition was restricted to active-duty officers on military horses.{{sfn|Edwards|Geddes|1987|p=292}} Only after 1952, as mechanisation of warfare reduced the number of military riders, were civilian riders allowed to compete.{{sfn|Edwards|Geddes|1987|p=296}}<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/GCA-Olympics/idUSKUA76733420080807 |title=Factbox for Equestrianism |work=] |access-date=August 7, 2008 |agency=Reuters |date=August 7, 2008 |publisher=Reuters}}</ref> Dressage traces its origins to ] and his works on cavalry training methods, developing further during the ] in response to a need for different tactics in battles where firearms were used.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.visitingvienna.com/sights/other/spanishridingschool/history/ |title=History of the Spanish Riding School |work=Visiting Vienna |access-date=July 21, 2008 |last=Brownlow |first=Mark |publisher=Mark Brownlow}}</ref> The three-phase competition known as ] developed out of cavalry officers' needs for versatile, well-schooled horses.<ref>Price & Burt, ''The American Quarter Horse'', p. 238.</ref> Though ] developed largely from ], the cavalry considered jumping to be good training for their horses,<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.cbc.ca/sports/2.720/gold-silver-bronze-not-in-1932-1.752142 |title=Gold, silver, bronze? Not in 1932 |author=CBC Sports |work=Olympic Games |access-date=July 28, 2008 |publisher=] |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080603133849/http://www.cbc.ca/olympics/equestrian/story/2008/05/02/f-olympics-equestrian-history-showjumping.html |archive-date=June 3, 2008}}</ref> and leaders in the development of modern riding techniques over fences, such as ], came from military ranks.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.imh.org/museum/history.php?chapter=92 |title=The Horse in 19th century American Sport |author=International Museum of the Horse |work=The Legacy of the Horse |access-date=July 28, 2008 |publisher=International Museum of the Horse |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071025112734/http://www.imh.org/museum/history.php?chapter=92 |archive-date=October 25, 2007}}</ref> Beyond the Olympic disciplines are other events with military roots. Competitions with weapons, such as ] and ], test the combat skills of mounted riders.{{sfn|Edwards|Geddes|1987|pp=326–327}}

Modern-day Olympic equestrian events are rooted in cavalry skills and classical horsemanship.<ref>Bryant ''Olympic Equestrian'' pp. 14&ndash;15</ref> The first equestrian events at the ] were introduced in 1912, and through 1948, competition was restricted to active-duty officers on military horses.<ref>Edwards and Geddes ''The Complete Horse Book'' p. 292</ref> Only after 1952, as mechanisation of warfare reduced the number of military riders, were civilian riders allowed to compete.<ref>Edwards and Geddes ''The Complete Horse Book'' p. 296</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.reuters.com/article/GCA-Olympics/idUSKUA76733420080807|title=Factbox for Equestrianism|work=Reuters Website|accessdate=2008-08-07|author=Reuters|date=August 7, 2008|publisher=Reuters}}</ref> Dressage traces its origins to ] and his works on cavalry training methods, developing further during the ] in response to a need for different tactics in battles where firearms were used.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.visitingvienna.com/sights/other/spanishridingschool/history/ |title=History of the Spanish Riding School |work=Visiting Vienna|accessdate=2008-07-21|author=Brownlow, Mark|publisher=Mark Brownlow}}</ref> The three-phase competition known as ] developed out of cavalry officers' needs for versatile, well-schooled horses.<ref>Price and Burt ''The American Quarter Horse'' p. 238</ref> Though ] developed largely from ], the cavalry considered jumping to be good training for their horses,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cbc.ca/olympics/equestrian/story/2008/05/02/f-olympics-equestrian-history-showjumping.html| title=Gold, silver, bronze? Not in 1932|author=CBC Sports|work=Olympic Games|accessdate=2008-07-28|publisher=Canadian Broadcasting Corporation}}</ref> and leaders in the development of modern riding techniques over fences, such as ], came from military ranks.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.imh.org/museum/history.php?chapter=92|title=The Horse in 19th century American Sport|author=International Museum of the Horse|work=The Legacy of the Horse|accessdate=2008-07-28|publisher=International Museum of the Horse}}</ref> Beyond the Olympic disciplines are other events with military roots. Competitions with weapons, such as ] and ], test the combat skills of mounted riders.<ref>Edwards and Geddes ''The Complete Horse Book'' pp. 326&ndash;327</ref>


== See also == == See also ==
* ]
* ]
* ] * ]
* ]
* ]
* ]


==Notes== == Notes ==
<references group=note/> <references group=note/>

== Footnotes ==
{{Reflist|3}}


== References == == References ==
{{reflist}}

== Sources ==
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* {{cite book |author= Edwards, Elwyn Hartley and Candida Geddes (editors) |title= The Complete Horse Book |publisher= Trafalgar Square, Inc. |edition=|location= North Pomfret, VT|year= 1987 |isbn=0-943955-00-9}} * {{cite book |last1=Ebrey |first1=Patricia Buckley |last2=Walthall |first2=Anne |last3=Palais |first3=James B. |title=Pre-Modern East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and Political History |publisher=] |location=Boston |year=2005 |isbn=0-618-13386-0}}
* {{cite book |author= Edwards, Elwyn Hartley |title= The Encyclopedia of the Horse |publisher= Dorling Kindersley |edition=1st American Edition|location=New York, NY |year=1994|isbn=1-56458-614-6}} * {{cite book |editor1-last=Edwards |editor1-first=Elwyn Hartley |editor2-last=Geddes |editor2-first=Candida |title=The Complete Horse Book |publisher=Trafalgar Square, Inc. |location=North Pomfret, VT |year=1987 |isbn=0-943955-00-9 |url=https://archive.org/details/completehorseboo00edwa}}
* {{cite book |author= Edwards, Gladys Brown |title= The Arabian: War Horse to Show Horse |publisher= Arabian Horse Association of Southern California, Rich Publishing |edition=Revised Collectors Edition|location= Covina, CA|year= 1973 |oclc=1148763}} * {{cite book |last=Edwards |first=Elwyn Hartley |title=The Encyclopedia of the Horse |publisher=] |edition=1st American |location=New York |year=1994 |isbn=1-56458-614-6}}
* {{cite book |author=Ellis, John |title=Cavalry: The History of Mounted Warfare |series=Pen & Sword Military Classics |publisher=Pen and Sword |location=Barnsley, UK |year=2004 |isbn=1-84415-096-8 }} * {{cite book |last=Edwards |first=Gladys Brown |title=The Arabian: War Horse to Show Horse |publisher=Arabian Horse Association of Southern California, Rich Publishing |edition=Revised Collectors |location=Covina, CA |year=1973 |oclc=1148763 |isbn=0-938276-00-X}}
* {{cite book |author=Ensminger, M. E. |title=Horses and Horsemanship: Animal Agriculture Series |publisher=Interstate Publishers |location=Danville, IL |year=1990 |edition=Sixth Edition |isbn=0-8134-2883-1}} * {{cite book |last=Ellis |first=John |title=Cavalry: The History of Mounted Warfare |series=Pen & Sword Military Classics |publisher=Pen and Sword |location=Barnsley, UK |year=2004 |isbn=1-84415-096-8}}
* {{cite book |author=Equine Research, Inc. |title=Equine Genetics & Selection Procedures |publisher=Equine Research |location=Grand Prairie, TX |year= 1978 |oclc=4750182}} * {{cite book |last=Ensminger |first=M. E. |title=Horses and Horsemanship: Animal Agriculture Series |publisher=Interstate Publishers |location=Danville, IL |year=1990 |edition=Sixth |isbn=0-8134-2883-1}}
* {{cite book |author=France, John |title=Western Warfare in the Age of the Crusades 1000-1300 |publisher=Cornell University Press |location=Ithaca, NY |year=1999 |isbn=0-8014-8607-6 }} * {{cite book |author=Equine Research |title=Equine Genetics & Selection Procedures |publisher=Equine Research, Inc. |location=Grand Prairie, TX |year=1978 |oclc=4750182}}
* {{cite book |author= Gies, Frances and Gies, Joseph |authorlink= Frances Gies and Joseph Gies | title= Daily Life in Medieval Times |publisher= Grange Books |location=Hoo, UK |year= 2005|edition=2nd Edition |isbn=1-84013-811-4}} * {{cite book |last=France |first=John |title=Western Warfare in the Age of the Crusades 1000–1300 |publisher=] |location=Ithaca, NY |year=1999 |isbn=0-8014-8607-6}}
* {{cite book |title=A Short History of the Chinese People |author= Goodrich, L. Carrington |year= 1959 |edition=Third |publisher= Harper Torchbooks |location= New York |oclc= 3388796}} * {{cite book |last1=Gies |first1=Frances |last2=Gies |first2=Joseph |author-link=Frances Gies and Joseph Gies |title=Daily Life in Medieval Times |publisher=Grange Books |location=Hoo, UK |year=2005 |edition=2nd |isbn=1-84013-811-4}}
* {{cite book |last=Goodrich |first=L. Carrington |title=A Short History of the Chinese People |url=https://archive.org/details/shorthistoryofch00good |url-access=registration |year=1959 |edition=Third |publisher=Harper Torchbooks |location=New York |oclc=3388796 |isbn=0-04-951015-0}}
*{{cite journal |author=Gordon, Stewart | title=The Limited Adoption of European-style Military Forces by Eighteenth Century Rulers in India |journal=Indian Economic Social History Review |issue=35 |year=1998 |doi=10.1177/001946469803500301 |volume=35 }}
* {{cite journal |last=Gordon |first=Stewart |title=The Limited Adoption of European-style Military Forces by Eighteenth Century Rulers in India |journal=] |issue=3 |year=1998 |doi=10.1177/001946469803500301 |volume=35 |page=229 |hdl=2027.42/67903 |s2cid=144736169 |url=https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/67903/2/10.1177_001946469803500301.pdf |hdl-access=free}}
* {{cite book|title= English Medieval Knight 1300-1400|author=Gravett, Christopher |authorlink= Christopher Gravett |year=2002|publisher= Osprey Publishing|location=Oxford|isbn= 1-84176-145-1}}
* {{cite book |title=Tudor Knight |author=Gravett, Christopher|year= 2006 |publisher= Osprey Publishing |location=Oxford |isbn=1-84176-970-3}} * {{cite book |last=Gravett |first=Christopher |author-link=Christopher Gravett |title=English Medieval Knight 1300–1400 |year=2002 |publisher=] |location=Oxford |isbn=1-84176-145-1}}
* {{cite book |author=Hale, J. R. |title=War and society in Renaissance Europe, 1450-1620 |publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press |location=Baltimore |year=1986 |isbn=0-8018-3196-2 }} * {{cite book |last=Gravett |first=Christopher |author-link=Christopher Gravett |title=Tudor Knight |year=2006 |publisher=] |location=Oxford |isbn=1-84176-970-3}}
* {{cite book |last=Hale |first=J. R. |title=War and society in Renaissance Europe, 1450–1620 |publisher=] |location=Baltimore |year=1986 |isbn=0-8018-3196-2}}
*{{cite book |author=Hamblin, William James |title= Warfare in the Ancient Near East to 1600 BC: Holy Warriors at the Dawn of History |publisher=Routledge |location=New York, NY|year=2006|isbn=0-415-25589-9|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=en9tzr1-VM4C&dq=donkey+pack+animal+military&source=gbs_summary_s&cad=0}}
* {{cite book |last=Hamblin |first=William James |title=Warfare in the Ancient Near East to 1600 BC: Holy Warriors at the Dawn of History |publisher=] |location=New York |year=2006 |isbn=0-415-25589-9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=en9tzr1-VM4C&q=donkey+pack+animal+military}}
*{{cite book |title=British Infantry of the Napoleonic Wars |last=Haythornthwaite |first=Philip J. |authorlink=Philip Haythornthwaite |coauthors= |year=1987 |publisher=Arms and Armour Press |location=London |isbn=0-85368-890-7}}
*{{cite book |title=The Colonial Wars Source Book |last=Haythornthwaite |first=Philip J.|coauthors= |year=1995 |publisher=Arms and Armour Press |location=London |isbn=1-85409-196-4 }} * {{cite book |last=Haythornthwaite |first=Philip J. |author-link=Philip Haythornthwaite |title=British Infantry of the Napoleonic Wars |year=1987 |publisher=Arms and Armour Press |location=London |isbn=0-85368-890-7}}
* {{cite book |author= Hitti, Phillip K. |authorlink= Philip Khuri Hitti |title= Lebanon in History |publisher= MacMillan and Co.|location= London |year= 1957 |oclc= 185202493}} * {{cite book |last=Haythornthwaite |first=Philip J. |author-link=Philip Haythornthwaite |title=The Colonial Wars Source Book |year=1995 |publisher=Arms and Armour Press |location=London |isbn=1-85409-196-4}}
*{{cite book |title=The Oxford Companion to Military History |last=Holmes |first=Richard (ed) |authorlink=Richard Holmes (military historian) |coauthors= |year=2001 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford |isbn=0-19-866209-2}} * {{cite book |last=Hitti |first=Phillip K. |author-link=Philip Khuri Hitti |title=Lebanon in History |publisher=MacMillan and Co. |location=London |year=1957 |oclc=185202493}}
* {{cite book |author= Hope, Lt. Col. C.E.G |title= The Horseman's Manual |publisher= Charles Scribner's Sons |location= New York|year= 1972 |isbn=0-684-13622-8}} * {{cite book |editor-last=Holmes |editor-first=Richard |editor-link=Richard Holmes (military historian) |title=The Oxford Companion to Military History |year=2001 |publisher=] |location=Oxford |isbn=0-19-866209-2}}
* {{cite book |author=Hyland, Ann |authorlink=Ann Hyland |title=Equus: The Horse in the Roman world |publisher=Yale University Press |location=New Haven, CT |year=1990 |isbn=0-300-04770-3 }} * {{cite book |last=Hope |first=Charles Evelyn Graham |title=The Horseman's Manual |publisher=] |location=New York |year=1972 |isbn=0-684-13622-8 |url=https://archive.org/details/horsemansmanual00hope}}
* {{cite book |author= Hyland, Ann |title= The Medieval Warhorse: From Byzantium to the Crusades |publisher= Grange Books |location= London |year= 1994|isbn=1-85627-990-1}} * {{cite book |last=Hyland |first=Ann |author-link=Ann Hyland |title=Equus: The Horse in the Roman world |publisher=] |location=New Haven, CT |year=1990 |isbn=0-300-04770-3}}
* {{cite book|author=Hyland, Ann|title= The Warhorse 1250-1600| publisher= Sutton Publishing|location=UK|year=1998|isbn= 0-7509-0746-0}} * {{cite book |last=Hyland |first=Ann |author-link=Ann Hyland |title=The Medieval Warhorse: From Byzantium to the Crusades |publisher=Grange Books |location=London |year=1994 |isbn=1-85627-990-1}}
* {{cite book |last=Hyland |first=Ann |author-link=Ann Hyland |title=The Warhorse 1250–1600 |publisher=Sutton Publishing |location=UK |year=1998 |isbn=0-7509-0746-0}}
* {{cite encyclopedia|author=Jones, Kristine L.|title=Warfare Reorganization and Readaptation at the Margins of Spanish Rule: The Southern Margin|encyclopedia=The Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Americas|volume=Volume III South America Part 2|publisher=Cambridge University Press|date=2000|oclc=33359444}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |last=Jones |first=Kristine L. |title=Warfare Reorganization and Readaptation at the Margins of Spanish Rule: The Southern Margin |encyclopedia=The Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Americas |volume=III South America Part 2 |publisher=] |year=2000 |oclc=33359444}}
* {{cite book |author=Keegan, John |authorlink=John Keegan |title=A History of Warfare |publisher=Vintage Books|location=|year=1994|edition=1st Edition |isbn=0-679-73082-6}}
*{{cite book |title=Echoes of Gallipoli: In the Words of New Zealand's Mounted Riflemen|last=Kinloch |first=Terry |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2005 |publisher=Exisle Publishing |location=Auckland |isbn=0-908988-60-5}} * {{cite book |last=Keegan |first=John |author-link=John Keegan |title=A History of Warfare |publisher=] |year=1994 |edition=1st |isbn=0-679-73082-6 |title-link=A History of Warfare}}
* {{cite book |last=Kinloch |first=Terry |title=Echoes of Gallipoli: In the Words of New Zealand's Mounted Riflemen |year=2005 |publisher=Exisle Publishing |location=Auckland |isbn=0-908988-60-5}}
* {{cite book|author=Krebs, Robert E.|title=Groundbreaking Scientific Experiments, Inventions, and Discoveries of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance: Middle Ages and the Renaissance|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=MTXdplfiz-cC&pg=PA250&dq=medieval+increase+in+armor+provides+increase+in+protection&lr=&as_brr=3&sig=ACfU3U3DPiOQHZdap3tOzO1Jds-GRY25Xw|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group|date=2004|isbn=0-313-32433-6}}
* {{cite book |last=Krebs |first=Robert E. |title=Groundbreaking Scientific Experiments, Inventions, and Discoveries of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance: Middle Ages and the Renaissance |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MTXdplfiz-cC&q=medieval+increase+in+armor+provides+increase+in+protection&pg=PA250 |publisher=] |year=2004 |isbn=0-313-32433-6}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |author=Kupper, J. R. | title=Egypt: From the Death of Ammenemes III to Seqenenre II |encyclopedia=The Cambridge Ancient History: The Middle East and the Aegean Region c. 1800-1380 BC Volume II Part I|pages=pp. 42-76 |edition=Third Edition | publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge, UK | year=1973 |isbn=0-521-29823-7}}
* {{cite book |author=LaBarge, Margaret Wade |title=Mistress, Maids and Men: Baronial Life in the Thirteenth Century |publisher=Phoenix Press |location=London |year=2004 |isbn=1-84212-499-4 }} * {{cite encyclopedia |last=Kupper |first=J. R. |title=Egypt: From the Death of Ammenemes III to Seqenenre II |encyclopedia=The Cambridge Ancient History: The Middle East and the Aegean Region c. 1800–1380 BC Volume II Part I |pages=42–76 |edition=Third |publisher=] |location=Cambridge, UK |year=1973 |isbn=0-521-29823-7}}
*{{cite book |title=Light Horse: The Story of Australia's Mounted Troops |last=Mitchell |first=Elyne |authorlink=Elyne Mitchell |coauthors= |year=1982 |publisher=MacMillan |location=Melbourne |isbn=0-7251-0389-2 }} * {{cite book |last=Law |first=Robin |title=The horse in West African history: the role of the horse in the societies of pre-colonial West Africa |publisher=] |location=Oxford & New York |isbn=0-19-724206-5 |year=1980}}
* {{cite book |author= Needham, Joseph |title= Science and Civilization in China: Volume 4, Physics and Physical Technology, Part 2, Mechanical Engineering |publisher= Caves Books Ltd.|location= Taipei|year= 1986 |oclc=48999277}} * {{cite book |last=Mitchell |first=Elyne |author-link=Elyne Mitchell |title=Light Horse: The Story of Australia's Mounted Troops |year=1982 |publisher=MacMillan |location=Melbourne |isbn=0-7251-0389-2}}
* {{cite book |author=Nicolle, David |authorlink=David Nicolle |title=Attila and the Nomad Hordes: Warfare on the Eurasian steppes 4th-12th centuries |publisher=Osprey |location=London |year=1990 |isbn=0-85045-996-6}} * {{cite book |last=Needham |first=Joseph |title=Science and Civilization in China |volume=4: Physics and Physical Technology, Part 2, Mechanical Engineering |publisher=Caves Books Ltd. |location=Taipei |year=1986 |oclc=48999277}}
* {{cite book |author= Nicolle, David |title= Companion to Medieval Arms and Armour |publisher= Boydell Press |location=London |year=2002 |isbn=0-85115-872-2}} * {{cite book |last=Nicolle |first=David |author-link=David Nicolle |title=Attila and the Nomad Hordes: Warfare on the Eurasian steppes 4th–12th centuries |publisher=] |location=London |year=1990 |isbn=0-85045-996-6 |url=https://archive.org/details/attilanomadhorde00davi}}
* {{cite book |title=Crusader Knight |author=Nicolle, David |year=1996 |publisher= Osprey Publishing |location=Oxford |isbn=1-85532-934-4}} * {{cite book |last=Nicolle |first=David |author-link=David Nicolle |title=Companion to Medieval Arms and Armour |publisher=] |location=London |year=2002 |isbn=0-85115-872-2}}
* {{cite book |author=Nicolle, David|title=Medieval Warfare Source Book: Christian Europe and its Neighbors |publisher=Brockhampton Press |location=Leicester |year=1998 |isbn=1-86019-861-9 }} * {{cite book |last=Nicolle |first=David |author-link=David Nicolle |title=Crusader Knight |year=1996 |publisher=] |location=Oxford |isbn=1-85532-934-4}}
* {{cite book |author=Nicolle, David|title=Medieval Warfare Source Book: Warfare In Western Christendom |publisher=Brockhampton Press |location=Dubai |year=1999 |isbn=1-86019-889-9 }} * {{cite book |last=Nicolle |first=David |author-link=David Nicolle |title=Medieval Warfare Source Book: Christian Europe and its Neighbors |publisher=] |location=Leicester |year=1998 |isbn=1-86019-861-9}}
*{{cite book |title=The Waterloo Campaign: June 1815 |last=Nofi |first=Albert A. |authorlink=Albert Nofi |coauthors= |year=1993 |publisher=De Capo Press |location=USA |isbn=0-938289-98-5 }} * {{cite book |last=Nicolle |first=David |author-link=David Nicolle |title=Medieval Warfare Source Book: Warfare In Western Christendom |publisher=] |location=Dubai |year=1999 |isbn=1-86019-889-9}}
* {{cite book |author= Oakeshott, Ewart |authorlink= Ewart Oakeshott |title= A Knight and His Horse |publisher= Dufour Editions |location=Chester Springs, PA |year= 1998 |isbn=0-8023-1297-7}} * {{cite book |last=Nofi |first=Albert A. |author-link=Albert Nofi |title=The Waterloo Campaign: June 1815 |year=1993 |publisher=Da Capo Press |location=US |isbn=0-938289-98-5}}
* {{cite book |author= Olmstead, A.T.|title= History of Persian Empire |publisher= University of Chicago Press|location= Chicago |year= 1959 |isbn=0-226-62777-2}} * {{cite book |last=Oakeshott |first=Ewart |author-link=Ewart Oakeshott |title=A Knight and His Horse |publisher=Dufour Editions |location=Chester Springs, PA |year=1998 |isbn=0-8023-1297-7}}
*{{cite book |title=Warfare: The Triumph of the West |last=Parker |first=Geoffrey (ed) |authorlink=Geoffrey Parker (historian) |coauthors= |year=1995 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge |isbn=0-521-79431-5 }} * {{cite book |last=Olmstead |first=A. T. |title=History of Persian Empire |publisher=] |location=Chicago |year=1959 |isbn=0-226-62777-2}}
* {{cite book |editor-last=Parker |editor-first=Geoffrey |editor-link=Geoffrey Parker (historian) |title=Warfare: The Triumph of the West |year=1995 |publisher=] |location=Cambridge |isbn=0-521-79431-5}}
* {{cite book |author= Partiger, F.E.|title= Ancient Indian Historical Tradition |publisher= Motilal Banarsidass |location= Delhi|edition=Reprint Edition|year= 1997|oclc=247010245}}
* {{cite book |author= Prestwich, Michael |authorlink= Michael Prestwich |title= Armies and Warfare in the Middle Ages: The English Experience |publisher= Yale University Press |location= New Haven |year= 1996 |isbn=0-300-07663-0}} * {{cite book |last=Pakenham |first=Thomas |title=The Boer War |publisher=] |location=New York |year=1979 |isbn=0-394-42742-4 |url=https://archive.org/details/boerwar00pake}}
* {{cite book |author= Price, Steven D. and Don Burt |title= The American Quarter Horse: An Introduction to Selection, Care, and Enjoyment |publisher= Globe Pequot|location= |year= 1998|isbn=1-55821-643-X}} * {{cite book |last=Partiger |first=F. E. |title=Ancient Indian Historical Tradition |publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |location=Delhi |edition=Reprint |year=1997 |oclc=247010245}}
* {{cite book |author= Pritchard, James B |title= The Ancient Near East |volume= Volume 1|publisher= Princeton University Press |location=Princeton, NJ |year= 1958 |oclc= 382004}} * {{cite book |last=Prestwich |first=Michael |author-link=Michael Prestwich |title=Armies and Warfare in the Middle Ages: The English Experience |publisher=] |location=New Haven |year=1996 |isbn=0-300-07663-0}}
* {{cite book |author= Raychaudhuri, Hemchandra|title= Political History of Ancient India |publisher= Oxford University Press |location= New York|year= 1996 |isbn=0-19-564376-3}} * {{cite book |last1=Price |first1=Steven D. |last2=Burt |first2=Don |title=The American Quarter Horse: An Introduction to Selection, Care, and Enjoyment |publisher=Globe Pequot |year=1998 |isbn=1-55821-643-X}}
* {{cite book |author= Robards, Brooks |title= The Medieval Knight at War |publisher= Tiger Books |location=London |year= 1997 |isbn=1-85501-919-1}} * {{cite book |last=Pritchard |first=James B. |title=The Ancient Near East |volume=1 |publisher=] |location=Princeton, NJ |year=1958 |oclc=382004 |isbn=0-691-03532-6}}
* {{cite book| author=Sadler, John |authorlink=John Sadler (historian)| title=Border Fury: England and Scotland at War 1296-1568 |publisher= Pearson Education Ltd |location=UK |year= 2005 | isbn= 1-4058-4022-6}} * {{cite book |last=Raychaudhuri |first=Hemchandra |title=Political History of Ancient India |publisher=] |location=New York |year=1996 |isbn=0-19-564376-3}}
* {{cite book |author= Sastri, K. A. Nilakanta |title= Age of the Nandas and Mauryas |publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |location= Delhi|year= 1967 |oclc=248749546}} * {{cite book |last=Robards |first=Brooks |title=The Medieval Knight at War |publisher=Tiger Books |location=London |year=1997 |isbn=1-85501-919-1}}
* {{cite book |author= Sinha, Ganesh Prasad |title= Post-Gupta Polity (A.D. 500-750): A Study of the Growth of Feudal Elements and Rural Administration |publisher= Punthi Pustak |location= Calcutta |year= 1972|oclc= 695415}} * {{cite book |last=Sadler |first=John |author-link=John Sadler (historian) |title=Border Fury: England and Scotland at War 1296–1568 |publisher=] Ltd |location=UK |year=2005 |isbn=1-4058-4022-6}}
* {{cite book |author= Trench, Charles Chenevix |title= A History of Horsemanship |publisher= Doubleday and Company|location= London |year= 1970 |isbn=0-385-03109-2}} * {{cite book |last=Sastri |first=K. A. Nilakanta |title=Age of the Nandas and Mauryas |publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |location=Delhi |year=1967 |oclc=248749546 |isbn=81-208-0466-X}}
* {{cite book |author= Tucker, Spencer and Priscilla Mary Roberts |title= Encyclopedia of World War II: A Political, Social and Military History|publisher= ABC-CLIO|location=Santa Barbara, CA |year= 2004 |isbn=1-57607-999-6}} * {{cite book |last=Sinha |first=Ganesh Prasad |title=Post-Gupta Polity (A.D. 500–750): A Study of the Growth of Feudal Elements and Rural Administration |publisher=Punthi Pustak |location=Calcutta |year=1972 |oclc=695415}}
* {{cite book |author=Turnbull, Stephen R. |authorlink= Stephen Turnbull (historian) |title=War in Japan 1467-1615 |series=Essential Histories |publisher=Osprey Publishing |location= Oxford, UK |year=2002 |isbn=1-84176-480-9}} * {{cite book |last=Trench |first=Charles Chenevix |author-link=Charles Chenevix Trench |title=A History of Horsemanship |publisher=Doubleday and Company |location=London |year=1970 |isbn=0-385-03109-2}}
*{{cite book |title=The United States Cavalry: An Illustrated History |last=Urwin |first=Gregory J. W. |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=1983 |publisher=Blandford Books |location=Poole, UK |isbn=0-7137-1219-8 }} * {{cite book |last1=Tucker |first1=Spencer |last2=Roberts |first2=Priscilla Mary |title=Encyclopedia of World War II: A Political, Social and Military History |publisher=] |location=Santa Barbara, CA |year=2004 |isbn=1-57607-999-6}}
* {{cite book |author=Warry, John Gibson |title=Warfare in the Classical World |publisher=Barnes & Noble |location=New York |year=2000 ||isbn=0-7607-1696-X }} * {{cite book |last=Turnbull |first=Stephen R. |author-link=Stephen Turnbull (historian) |title=War in Japan 1467–1615 |series=Essential Histories |publisher=] |location=Oxford, UK |year=2002 |isbn=1-84176-480-9}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |author=Willetts, R. F. |title=The Minoans |encyclopedia=The Penguin Encyclopedia of Ancient Civilizations |editor=Arthur Cotterell |publisher=Penguin Books |location=New York |year=1980 |isbn=0-14-011434-3 }} * {{cite book |last=Urwin |first=Gregory J. W. |title=The United States Cavalry: An Illustrated History |year=1983 |publisher=Blandford Books |location=Poole, UK |isbn=0-7137-1219-8 |url=https://archive.org/details/unitedstatescava00urwi_0}}
* {{cite book |author=Willmott, H.P. |title=First World War |publisher=Dorling Kindersley Limited |location=|year=2003 |isbn=1-4053-0029-9}} * {{cite book |last=Warry |first=John Gibson |title=Warfare in the Classical World |publisher=] |location=New York |year=2000 |isbn=0-7607-1696-X}}
* {{cite book |author=Whitby, Michael |title=Rome at War 229-696 AD |publisher=Osprey Publishing |location= Oxford, UK |year=2002 |isbn=1-84176-359-4 }} * {{cite encyclopedia |last=Willetts |first=R. F. |title=The Minoans |encyclopedia=The Penguin Encyclopedia of Ancient Civilizations |editor-last=Cotterell |editor-first=Arthur |publisher=] |location=New York |year=1980 |isbn=0-14-011434-3 |url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofan00cott}}
* {{cite book |last=Willmott |first=H. P. |title=First World War |publisher=] Limited |year=2003 |isbn=1-4053-0029-9}}
* {{cite book |last=Whitby |first=Michael |title=Rome at War 229–696 AD |publisher=] |location=Oxford, UK |year=2002 |isbn=1-84176-359-4}}
{{refend}} {{refend}}


== Further reading == == Further reading ==
* {{citation |title=The Medieval Powys Warhorse |journal=Montgomeryshire Collections |first=P. G. |last=Barton |volume=107 |year=2019}}
* {{cite journal |author=Hacker, Barton C. |title=Military Technology and World History: A Reconnaissance |journal=The History Teacher |url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/494141 |format=fee required |volume=30 |issue=4 |year=1997 |month=August |pages=461–487 |doi=10.2307/494141}}
* {{cite journal |author=Hacker, Barton C. |title=Military Technology and World History: A Reconnaissance |journal=The History Teacher |volume=30 |issue=4 |date=August 1997 |pages=461–487 |doi=10.2307/494141 |jstor=494141 |jstor-access=free}}
* Harrison, Sunny (2022). "]". ''Journal of Medieval History''.


== External links == == External links ==
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* Historic films showing horses in World War I at
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* , AHRC funded research project by the University of Exeter and the University of East Anglia


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Latest revision as of 18:32, 27 December 2024

Use of equines in combat "War horse" redirects here. For other uses, see War horse (disambiguation).

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The first evidence of horses in warfare dates from Eurasia between 4000 and 3000 BC. A Sumerian illustration of warfare from 2500 BC depicts some type of equine pulling wagons. By 1600 BC, improved harness and chariot designs made chariot warfare common throughout the Ancient Near East, and the earliest written training manual for war horses was a guide for training chariot horses written about 1350 BC. As formal cavalry tactics replaced the chariot, so did new training methods, and by 360 BC, the Greek cavalry officer Xenophon had written an extensive treatise on horsemanship. The effectiveness of horses in battle was also revolutionized by improvements in technology, such as the invention of the saddle, the stirrup, and the horse collar.

Many different types and sizes of horses were used in war, depending on the form of warfare. The type used varied with whether the horse was being ridden or driven, and whether they were being used for reconnaissance, cavalry charges, raiding, communication, or supply. Throughout history, mules and donkeys, as well as horses played a crucial role in providing support to armies in the field.

Horses were well suited to the warfare tactics of the nomadic cultures from the steppes of Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Several cultures in East Asia made extensive use of cavalry and chariots. Muslim warriors relied upon light cavalry in their campaigns throughout Northern Africa, Asia, and Europe beginning in the 7th and 8th centuries AD. Europeans used several types of war horses in the Middle Ages, and the best-known heavy cavalry warrior of the period was the armoured knight. With the decline of the knight and rise of gunpowder in warfare, light cavalry again rose to prominence, used in both European warfare and in the conquest of the Americas. Battle cavalry developed to take on a multitude of roles in the late 18th century and early 19th century and was often crucial for victory in the Napoleonic Wars. In the Americas, the use of horses and development of mounted warfare tactics were learned by several tribes of indigenous people and in turn, highly mobile horse regiments were critical in the American Civil War.

Horse cavalry began to be phased out after World War I in favour of tank warfare, though a few horse cavalry units were still used into World War II, especially as scouts. By the end of World War II, horses were seldom seen in battle, but were still used extensively for the transport of troops and supplies. Today, formal battle-ready horse cavalry units have almost disappeared, though the United States Army Special Forces used horses in battle during the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan. Horses are still seen in use by organized armed fighters in the Global South. Many nations still maintain small units of mounted riders for patrol and reconnaissance, and military horse units are also used for ceremonial and educational purposes. Horses are also used for historical reenactment of battles, law enforcement, and in equestrian competitions derived from the riding and training skills once used by the military.

Types of horse used in warfare

A fundamental principle of equine conformation is "form to function". Therefore, the type of horse used for various forms of warfare depended on the work performed, the weight a horse needed to carry or pull, and distance travelled. Weight affects speed and endurance, creating a trade-off: armour added protection, but added weight reduced maximum speed. Therefore, various cultures had different military needs. In some situations, one primary type of horse was favoured over all others. In other places, multiple types were needed; warriors would travel to battle riding a lighter horse of greater speed and endurance, and then switch to a heavier horse, with greater weight-carrying capacity, when wearing heavy armour in actual combat.

The average horse can carry up to approximately 30% of its body weight. While all horses can pull more weight than they can carry, the maximum weight that horses can pull varies widely, depending on the build of the horse, the type of vehicle, road conditions, and other factors. Horses harnessed to a wheeled vehicle on a paved road can pull as much as eight times their weight, but far less if pulling wheelless loads over unpaved terrain. Thus, horses that were driven varied in size and had to make a trade-off between speed and weight, just as did riding animals. Light horses could pull a small war chariot at speed. Heavy supply wagons, artillery, and support vehicles were pulled by heavier horses or a larger number of horses. The method by which a horse was hitched to a vehicle also mattered: horses could pull greater weight with a horse collar than they could with a breast collar, and even less with an ox yoke.

Light-weight

Light, oriental horses such as the ancestors of the modern Arabian, Barb, and Akhal-Teke were used for warfare that required speed, endurance, and agility. Such horses ranged from about 12 hands (48 inches, 122 cm) to just under 15 hands (60 inches, 152 cm), weighing approximately 360 to 450 kilograms (800 to 1,000 lb). To move quickly, riders had to use lightweight tack and carry relatively light weapons such as bows, light spears, javelins, or later rifles. This was the original horse used for early chariot warfare, raiding, and light cavalry.

Relatively light horses were used by many cultures, including the Ancient Egyptians, the Mongols, the Arabs, and the Native Americans. Throughout the Ancient Near East, small, light animals were used to pull chariots designed to carry no more than two passengers, a driver and a warrior. In the European Middle Ages, a lightweight war horse became known as the rouncey.

Medium-weight

Medium-weight horses developed as early as the Iron Age with the needs of various civilizations to pull heavier loads, such as chariots capable of holding more than two people, and, as light cavalry evolved into heavy cavalry, to carry heavily armoured riders. The Scythians were among the earliest cultures to produce taller, heavier horses. Larger horses were also needed to pull supply wagons and, later on, artillery pieces. In Europe, horses were also used to a limited extent to maneuver cannons on the battlefield as part of dedicated horse artillery units. Medium-weight horses had the greatest range in size, from about 14.2 hands (58 inches, 147 cm) but stocky, to as much as 16 hands (64 inches, 163 cm), weighing approximately 450 to 540 kilograms (1,000 to 1,200 lb). They generally were quite agile in combat, though they did not have the raw speed or endurance of a lighter horse. By the Middle Ages, larger horses in this class were sometimes called destriers. They may have resembled modern Baroque or heavy warmblood breeds. Later, horses similar to the modern warmblood often carried European cavalry.

Heavy-weight

Large, heavy horses, weighing from 680 to 910 kilograms (1,500 to 2,000 lb), the ancestors of today's draught horses, were used, particularly in Europe, from the Middle Ages onward. They pulled heavy loads like supply wagons and were disposed to remain calm in battle. Some historians believe they may have carried the heaviest-armoured knights of the Late Medieval Period, though others dispute this claim, indicating that the destrier, or knight's battle horse, was a medium-weight animal. It is also disputed whether the destrier class included draught animals or not. Breeds at the smaller end of the heavyweight category may have included the ancestors of the Percheron, agile for their size and physically able to maneuver in battle.

Ponies

The British Army's 2nd Dragoons in 1813 had 340 ponies of 14.2 hands (58 inches, 147 cm) and 55 ponies of 14 hands (56 inches, 142 cm); the Lovat Scouts, formed in 1899, were mounted on Highland ponies; the British Army recruited 200 Dales ponies in World War II for use as pack and artillery animals; and the British Territorial Army experimented with the use of Dartmoor ponies as pack animals in 1935, finding them to be better than mules for the job.

Other equids

A soldier with a mule in World War I, 1918.

Horses were not the only equids used to support human warfare. Donkeys have been used as pack animals from antiquity to the present. Mules were also commonly used, especially as pack animals and to pull wagons, but also occasionally for riding. Because mules are often both calmer and hardier than horses, they were particularly useful for strenuous support tasks, such as hauling supplies over difficult terrain. However, under gunfire, they were less cooperative than horses, so were generally not used to haul artillery on battlefields. The size of a mule and work to which it was put depended largely on the breeding of the mare that produced the mule. Mules could be lightweight, medium weight, or even, when produced from draught horse mares, of moderate heavy weight.

Training and deployment

See also: Horse training

The oldest known manual on training horses for chariot warfare was written c. 1350 BC by the Hittite horsemaster, Kikkuli. An ancient manual on the subject of training riding horses, particularly for the Ancient Greek cavalry is Hippike (On Horsemanship) written about 360 BC by the Greek cavalry officer Xenophon. and another early text was that of Kautilya, written about 323 BC.

Whether horses were trained to pull chariots, to be ridden as light or heavy cavalry, or to carry the armoured knight, much training was required to overcome the horse's natural instinct to flee from noise, the smell of blood, and the confusion of combat. They also learned to accept any sudden or unusual movements of humans while using a weapon or avoiding one. Horses used in close combat may have been taught, or at least permitted, to kick, strike, and even bite, thus becoming weapons themselves for the warriors they carried.

In most cultures, a war horse used as a riding animal was trained to be controlled with limited use of reins, responding primarily to the rider's legs and weight. The horse became accustomed to any necessary tack and protective armour placed upon it, and learned to balance under a rider who would also be laden with weapons and armour. Developing the balance and agility of the horse was crucial. The origins of the discipline of dressage came from the need to train horses to be both obedient and manoeuvrable. The Haute ecole or "High School" movements of classical dressage taught today at the Spanish Riding School have their roots in manoeuvres designed for the battlefield. However, the airs above the ground were unlikely to have been used in actual combat, as most would have exposed the unprotected underbelly of the horse to the weapons of foot soldiers.

Horses used for chariot warfare were not only trained for combat conditions, but because many chariots were pulled by a team of two to four horses, they also had to learn to work together with other animals in close quarters under chaotic conditions.

Technological innovations

Horses were probably ridden in prehistory before they were driven. However, evidence is scant, mostly simple images of human figures on horse-like animals drawn on rock or clay. The earliest tools used to control horses were bridles of various sorts, which were invented nearly as soon as the horse was domesticated. Evidence of bit wear appears on the teeth of horses excavated at the archaeology sites of the Botai culture in northern Kazakhstan, dated 3500–3000 BC.

Harness and vehicles

Chariots and archers were weapons of war in Ancient Egypt.

The invention of the wheel was a major technological innovation that gave rise to chariot warfare. At first, equines, both horses and onagers, were hitched to wheeled carts by means of a yoke around their necks in a manner similar to that of oxen. However, such a design is incompatible with equine anatomy, limiting both the strength and mobility of the animal. By the time of the Hyksos invasions of Egypt, c. 1600 BC, horses were pulling chariots with an improved harness design that made use of a breastcollar and breeching, which allowed a horse to move faster and pull more weight.

Even after the chariot had become obsolete as a tool of war, there still was a need for technological innovations in pulling technologies; horses were needed to pull heavy loads of supplies and weapons. The invention of the horse collar in China during the 5th century AD (Northern and Southern dynasties) allowed horses to pull greater weight than they could when hitched to a vehicle with the ox yokes or breast collars used in earlier times. The horse collar arrived in Europe during the 9th century, and became widespread by the 12th century.

Riding equipment

Main articles: Saddle and Stirrup
Haniwa horse statuette, complete with saddle and stirrups, 6th century, Kofun period

Two major innovations that revolutionised the effectiveness of mounted warriors in battle were the saddle and the stirrup. Riders quickly learned to pad their horse's backs to protect themselves from the horse's spine and withers, and fought on horseback for centuries with little more than a blanket or pad on the horse's back and a rudimentary bridle. To help distribute the rider's weight and protect the horse's back, some cultures created stuffed padding that resembles the panels of today's English saddle. Both the Scythians and Assyrians used pads with added felt attached with a surcingle or girth around the horse's barrel for increased security and comfort. Xenophon mentioned the use of a padded cloth on cavalry mounts as early as the 4th century BC.

The saddle with a solid framework, or "tree", provided a bearing surface to protect the horse from the weight of the rider, but was not widespread until the 2nd century AD. However, it made a critical difference, as horses could carry more weight when distributed across a solid saddle tree. A solid tree, the predecessor of today's Western saddle, also allowed a more built-up seat to give the rider greater security in the saddle. The Romans are credited with the invention of the solid-treed saddle.

An invention that made cavalry particularly effective was the stirrup. A toe loop that held the big toe was used in India possibly as early as 500 BC, and later a single stirrup was used as a mounting aid. The first set of paired stirrups appeared in China about 322 AD during the Jin dynasty. Following the invention of paired stirrups, which allowed a rider greater leverage with weapons, as well as both increased stability and mobility while mounted, nomadic groups such as the Mongols adopted this technology and developed a decisive military advantage. By the 7th century, due primarily to invaders from Central Asia, stirrup technology spread from Asia to Europe. The Avar invaders are viewed as primarily responsible for spreading the use of the stirrup into central Europe. However, while stirrups were known in Europe in the 8th century, pictorial and literary references to their use date only from the 9th century. Widespread use in Northern Europe, including England, is credited to the Vikings, who spread the stirrup in the 9th and 10th centuries to those areas.

Tactics

The "War Panel" of the Standard of Ur

The first archaeological evidence of horses used in warfare dates from between 4000 and 3000 BC in the steppes of Eurasia, in what today is Ukraine, Hungary, and Romania. Not long after domestication of the horse, people in these locations began to live together in large fortified towns for protection from the threat of horseback-riding raiders, who could attack and escape faster than people of more sedentary cultures could follow. Horse-mounted nomads of the steppe and current day Eastern Europe spread Indo-European Languages as they conquered other tribes and groups.

The use of horses in organised warfare was documented early in recorded history. One of the first depictions is the "war panel" of the Standard of Ur, in Sumer, dated c. 2500 BC, showing horses (or possibly onagers or mules) pulling a four-wheeled wagon.

Chariot warfare

Main articles: Chariot and Chariot tactics
A Qin dynasty sculpture of a chariot with horses and rider from the Terracotta Army unearthed near the tomb of China's first emperor Qin Shihuangdi, Xi'an, China, 3rd century BC

Among the earliest evidence of chariot use are the burials of horse and chariot remains by the Andronovo (Sintashta-Petrovka) culture in modern Russia and Kazakhstan, dated to approximately 2000 BC. The oldest documentary evidence of what was probably chariot warfare in the Ancient Near East is the Old Hittite Anitta text, of the 18th century BC, which mentioned 40 teams of horses at the siege of Salatiwara. The Hittites became well known throughout the ancient world for their prowess with the chariot. Widespread use of the chariot in warfare across most of Eurasia coincides approximately with the development of the composite bow, known from c. 1600 BC. Further improvements in wheels and axles, as well as innovations in weaponry, soon resulted in chariots being driven in battle by Bronze Age societies from China to Egypt.

The Hyksos invaders brought the chariot to Ancient Egypt in the 16th century BC and the Egyptians adopted its use from that time forward. The oldest preserved text related to the handling of war horses in the ancient world is the Hittite manual of Kikkuli, which dates to about 1350 BC, and describes the conditioning of chariot horses.

Chariots existed in the Minoan civilization, as they were inventoried on storage lists from Knossos in Crete, dating to around 1450 BC. Chariots were also used in China as far back as the Shang dynasty (c. 1600–1050 BC), where they appear in burials. The high point of chariot use in China was in the Spring and Autumn period (770–476 BC), although they continued in use up until the 2nd century BC.

Descriptions of the tactical role of chariots in Ancient Greece and Rome are rare. The Iliad, possibly referring to Mycenaen practices used c. 1250 BC, describes the use of chariots for transporting warriors to and from battle, rather than for actual fighting. Later, Julius Caesar, invading Britain in 55 and 54 BC, noted British charioteers throwing javelins, then leaving their chariots to fight on foot.

Cavalry

Main articles: Cavalry and Cavalry tactics
Depiction of a Sasanian Persian Cataphract from Taq-e Bostan

Some of the earliest examples of horses being ridden in warfare were horse-mounted archers or javelin-throwers, dating to the reigns of the Assyrian rulers Ashurnasirpal II and Shalmaneser III. However, these riders sat far back on their horses, a precarious position for moving quickly, and the horses were held by a handler on the ground, keeping the archer free to use the bow. Thus, these archers were more a type of mounted infantry than true cavalry. The Assyrians developed cavalry in response to invasions by nomadic people from the north, such as the Cimmerians, who entered Asia Minor in the 8th century BC and took over parts of Urartu during the reign of Sargon II, approximately 721 BC. Mounted warriors such as the Scythians also had an influence on the region in the 7th century BC. By the reign of Ashurbanipal in 669 BC, the Assyrians had learned to sit forward on their horses in the classic riding position still seen today and could be said to be true light cavalry. The ancient Greeks used both light horse scouts and heavy cavalry, although not extensively, possibly due to the cost of keeping horses.

Heavy cavalry was believed to have been developed by the Ancient Persians, although others argue for the Sarmatians. By the time of Darius (558–486 BC), Persian military tactics required horses and riders that were completely armoured, and selectively bred a heavier, more muscled horse to carry the additional weight. The cataphract was a type of heavily armoured cavalry with distinct tactics, armour, and weaponry used from the time of the Persians up until the Middle Ages.

In Ancient Greece, Phillip of Macedon is credited with developing tactics allowing massed cavalry charges. The most famous Greek heavy cavalry units were the companion cavalry of Alexander the Great. The Chinese of the 4th century BC during the Warring States period (403–221 BC) began to use cavalry against rival states. To fight nomadic raiders from the north and west, the Chinese of the Han dynasty (202 BC – 220 AD) developed effective mounted units. Cavalry was not used extensively by the Romans during the Roman Republic period, but by the time of the Roman Empire, they made use of heavy cavalry. However, the backbone of the Roman army was the infantry.

Horse artillery

Main article: Horse artillery
Life-size model depicting c. 1850 horse artillery team with a light artillery piece

Once gunpowder was invented, another major use of horses was as draught animals for heavy artillery, or cannon. In addition to field artillery, where horse-drawn guns were attended by gunners on foot, many armies had artillery batteries where each gunner was provided with a mount. Horse artillery units generally used lighter pieces, pulled by six horses. "9-pounders" were pulled by eight horses, and heavier artillery pieces needed a team of twelve. With the individual riding horses required for officers, surgeons and other support staff, as well as those pulling the artillery guns and supply wagons, an artillery battery of six guns could require 160 to 200 horses. Horse artillery usually came under the command of cavalry divisions, but in some battles, such as Waterloo, the horse artillery were used as a rapid response force, repulsing attacks and assisting the infantry. Agility was important; the ideal artillery horse was 1.5 to 1.6 metres (15 to 16 hands) high, strongly built, but able to move quickly.

Asia

Central Asia

See also: Mongol military tactics and organization and Nomadic empire
A horserider of probable Xiongnu origin: the rider wears a hairbun characteristic of the oriental steppes, and his horse has characteristically Xiongnu horse trappings. 2nd–1st century BC. Excavated in Saksanokhur (near Farkhor), Tajikistan. National Museum of Antiquities of Tajikistan.

Relations between steppe nomads and the settled people in and around Central Asia were often marked by conflict. The nomadic lifestyle was well suited to warfare, and steppe cavalry became some of the most militarily potent forces in the world, only limited by nomads' frequent lack of internal unity. Periodically, strong leaders would organise several tribes into one force, creating an almost unstoppable power. These unified groups included the Huns, who invaded Europe, and under Attila, conducted campaigns in both eastern France and northern Italy, over 500 miles apart, within two successive campaign seasons. Other unified nomadic forces included the Wu Hu rebellions in China, and the Mongol conquest of much of Eurasia.

South Asia

Main article: History of the horse in the Indian subcontinent

The literature of ancient India describes numerous horse nomads. Some of the earliest references to the use of horses in South Asian warfare are Puranic texts, which refer to an attempted invasion of India by the joint cavalry forces of the Sakas, Kambojas, Yavanas, Pahlavas, and Paradas, called the "five hordes" (pañca.ganah) or "Kśatriya" hordes (Kśatriya ganah). About 1600 BC, they captured the throne of Ayodhya by dethroning the Vedic king, Bahu. Later texts, such as the Mahābhārata, c. 950 BC, appear to recognise efforts taken to breed war horses and develop trained mounted warriors, stating that the horses of the Sindhu and Kamboja regions were of the finest quality, and the Kambojas, Gandharas, and Yavanas were expert in fighting from horses.

In technological innovation, the early toe loop stirrup is credited to the cultures of India, and may have been in use as early as 500 BC. Not long after, the cultures of Mesopotamia and Ancient Greece clashed with those of central Asia and India. Herodotus (484–425 BC) wrote that Gandarian mercenaries of the Achaemenid Empire were recruited into the army of emperor Xerxes I of Persia (486–465 BC), which he led against the Greeks. A century later, the "Men of the Mountain Land," from north of Kabul River, served in the army of Darius III of Persia when he fought against Alexander the Great at Arbela in 331 BC. In battle against Alexander at Massaga in 326 BC, the Assakenoi forces included 20,000 cavalry. The Mudra-Rakshasa recounted how cavalry of the Shakas, Yavanas, Kambojas, Kiratas, Parasikas, and Bahlikas helped Chandragupta Maurya (c. 320–298 BC) defeat the ruler of Magadha and take the throne, thus laying the foundations of Mauryan dynasty in Northern India.

Mughal cavalry used gunpowder weapons, but were slow to replace the traditional composite bow. Under the impact of European military successes in India, some Indian rulers adopted the European system of massed cavalry charges, although others did not. By the 18th century, Indian armies continued to field cavalry, but mainly of the heavy variety.

East Asia

Yabusame archers, Edo period
Main article: Horses in East Asian warfare

The Chinese used chariots for horse-based warfare until light cavalry forces became common during the Warring States era (402–221 BC). A major proponent of the change to riding horses from chariots was Wu Ling, c. 320 BC. However, conservative forces in China often opposed change, as cavalry did not benefit from the additional cachet attached to being the military branch dominated by the nobility as in medieval Europe. Nevertheless, during the reign of Emperor Wu of Han (r. 141–87 BC), it is recorded that 300,000 government-owned horses were insufficient for the cavalry and baggage trains of the Han military in the campaigns to expel the Xiongnu nomads from the Ordos Desert, Qilian Mountains, Khangai Mountains and Gobi Desert, spurring new policies that encouraged households to hand over privately-bred horses in exchange for military and corvee labor exemptions.

The Japanese samurai fought as cavalry for many centuries. They were particularly skilled in the art of using archery from horseback. The archery skills of mounted samurai were developed by training such as Yabusame, which originated in 530 AD and reached its peak under Minamoto no Yoritomo (1147–1199 AD) in the Kamakura period. They switched from an emphasis on mounted bowmen to mounted spearmen during the Sengoku period (1467–1615 AD).

Middle East

Further information: Furusiyya
Spanish and Moorish light cavalry (jinetes) skirmish at the 1431 Battle of La Higueruela

During the period when various Islamic empires controlled much of the Middle East as well as parts of West Africa and the Iberian peninsula, Muslim armies consisted mostly of cavalry, made up of fighters from various local groups, mercenaries and Turkoman tribesmen. The latter were considered particularly skilled as both lancers and archers from horseback. In the 9th century the use of Mamluks, slaves raised to be soldiers for various Muslim rulers, became increasingly common. Mobile tactics, advanced breeding of horses, and detailed training manuals made Mamluk cavalry a highly efficient fighting force. The use of armies consisting mostly of cavalry continued among the Turkish people who founded the Ottoman Empire. Their need for large mounted forces led to an establishment of the sipahi, cavalry soldiers who were granted lands in exchange for providing military service in times of war.

Mounted Muslim warriors conquered North Africa and the Iberian Peninsula during the 7th and 8th centuries AD following the Hijrah, of Muhammad in 622 AD. By 630 AD, their influence expanded across the Middle East and into western North Africa. By 711 AD, the light cavalry of Muslim warriors had reached Spain, and controlled most of the Iberian peninsula by 720. Their mounts were of various oriental types, including the North African Barb. A few Arabian horses may have come with the Ummayads who settled in the Guadalquivir valley. Another strain of horse that came with Islamic invaders was the Turkoman horse. Muslim invaders travelled north from present-day Spain into France, where they were defeated by the Frankish ruler Charles Martel at the Battle of Tours in 732 AD.

Europe

Antiquity

Further information: Hippeis, Companion cavalry, Auxilia, Roman cavalry, Celtic warfare, Ancient warfare, Ancient Macedonian army, and Hellenistic armies

Middle Ages

Main article: Horses in the Middle Ages
A re-imagination of Louis III and Carloman's 879 victory over the Vikings; Jean Fouquet, Grandes Chroniques de France

During the European Middle Ages, there were three primary types of war horses: the destrier, the courser, and the rouncey, which differed in size and usage. A generic word used to describe medieval war horses was charger, which appears interchangeable with the other terms. The medieval war horse was of moderate size, rarely exceeding 15.2 hands (62 inches, 157 cm). Heavy horses were logistically difficult to maintain and less adaptable to varied terrains. The destrier of the early Middle Ages was moderately larger than the courser or rouncey, in part to accommodate heavier armoured knights. However, destriers were not as large as draught horses, averaging between 14.2 hands (58 inches, 147 cm) and 15 hands (60 inches, 152 cm). On the European continent, the need to carry more armour against mounted enemies such as the Lombards and Frisians led to the Franks developing heavier, bigger horses. As the amount of armour and equipment increased in the later Middle Ages, the height of the horses increased; some late medieval horse skeletons were of horses over 1.5 metres (15 hands).

Stallions were often used as destriers due to their natural aggression. However, there may have been some use of mares by European warriors, and mares, who were quieter and less likely to call out and betray their position to the enemy, were the preferred war horse of the Moors, who invaded various parts of Southern Europe from 700 AD through the 15th century. Geldings were used in war by the Teutonic Knights, and known as "monk horses" (German: Mönchpferde or Mönchhengste). One advantage was if captured by the enemy, they could not be used to improve local bloodstock, thus maintaining the Knights' superiority in horseflesh.

Uses

The heavy cavalry charge, while it could be effective, was not a common occurrence. Battles were rarely fought on land suitable for heavy cavalry. While mounted riders remained effective for initial attacks, by the end of the 14th century, it was common for knights to dismount to fight, while their horses were sent to the rear, kept ready for pursuit. Pitched battles were avoided if possible, with most offensive warfare in the early Middle Ages taking the form of sieges, and in the later Middle Ages as mounted raids called chevauchées, with lightly armed warriors on swift horses.

Jousting is a sport that evolved out of heavy cavalry practice.

The war horse was also seen in hastiludes – martial war games such as the joust, which began in the 11th century both as sport and to provide training for battle. Specialised destriers were bred for the purpose, although the expense of keeping, training, and outfitting them kept the majority of the population from owning one. While some historians suggest that the tournament had become a theatrical event by the 15th and 16th centuries, others argue that jousting continued to help cavalry train for battle until the Thirty Years' War.

Transition

The decline of the armoured knight was probably linked to changing structures of armies and various economic factors, and not obsolescence due to new technologies. However, some historians attribute the demise of the knight to the invention of gunpowder, or to the English longbow. Some link the decline to both technologies. Others argue these technologies actually contributed to the development of knights: plate armour was first developed to resist early medieval crossbow bolts, and the full harness worn by the early 15th century developed to resist longbow arrows. From the 14th century onwards, most plate was made from hardened steel, which resisted early musket ammunition. In addition, stronger designs did not make plate heavier; a full harness of musket-proof plate from the 17th century weighed 70 pounds (32 kg), significantly less than 16th century tournament armour.

The move to predominately infantry-based battles from 1300 to 1550 was linked to both improved infantry tactics and changes in weaponry. By the 16th century, the concept of a combined-arms professional army had spread throughout Europe. Professional armies emphasized training, and were paid via contracts, a change from the ransom and pillaging which reimbursed knights in the past. When coupled with the rising costs involved in outfitting and maintaining armour and horses, the traditional knightly classes began to abandon their profession. Light horses, or prickers, were still used for scouting and reconnaissance; they also provided a defensive screen for marching armies. Large teams of draught horses or oxen pulled the heavy early cannon. Other horses pulled wagons and carried supplies for the armies.

Early modern period

During the early modern period the shift continued from heavy cavalry and the armoured knight to unarmoured light cavalry, including Hussars and Chasseurs à cheval. Light cavalry facilitated better communication, using fast, agile horses to move quickly across battlefields. The ratio of footmen to horsemen also increased over the period as infantry weapons improved and footmen became more mobile and versatile, particularly once the musket bayonet replaced the more cumbersome pike. During the Elizabethan era, mounted units included cuirassiers, heavily armoured and equipped with lances; light cavalry, who wore mail and bore light lances and pistols; and "petronels", who carried an early carbine. As heavy cavalry use declined armour was increasingly abandoned and dragoons, whose horses were rarely used in combat, became more common: mounted infantry provided reconnaissance, escort and security. However, many generals still used the heavy mounted charge, from the late 17th century and early 18th century, where sword-wielding wedge-formation shock troops penetrated enemy lines, to the early 19th century, where armoured heavy cuirassiers were employed.

Chasseurs of the Guard (light cavalry) to the left and cuirassier (Heavy cavalry) to the right, at the battle of Friedland.

Light cavalry continued to play a major role, particularly after the Seven Years' War when Hussars started to play a larger part in battles. Though some leaders preferred tall horses for their mounted troops this was as much for prestige as for increased shock ability and many troops used more typical horses, averaging 15 hands. Cavalry tactics altered with fewer mounted charges, more reliance on drilled maneuvers at the trot, and use of firearms once within range. Ever-more elaborate movements, such as wheeling and caracole, were developed to facilitate the use of firearms from horseback. These tactics were not greatly successful in battle since pikemen protected by musketeers could deny cavalry room to manoeuvre. However the advanced equestrianism required survives into the modern world as dressage. While restricted, cavalry was not rendered obsolete. As infantry formations developed in tactics and skills, artillery became essential to break formations; in turn, cavalry was required to both combat enemy artillery, which was susceptible to cavalry while deploying, and to charge enemy infantry formations broken by artillery fire. Thus, successful warfare depended in a balance of the three arms: cavalry, artillery and infantry.

As regimental structures developed many units selected horses of uniform type and some, such as the Royal Scots Greys, even specified colour. Trumpeters often rode distinctive horses so they stood out. Regional armies developed type preferences, such as British hunters, Hanoverians in central Europe, and steppe ponies of the Cossacks, but once in the field, the lack of supplies typical of wartime meant that horses of all types were used. Since horses were such a vital component of most armies in early modern Europe, many instituted state stud farms to breed horses for the military. However, in wartime, supply rarely matched the demand, resulting in some cavalry troops fighting on foot.

19th century

See also: Horses in the Napoleonic Wars
"Napoleon I with his Generals" by Ludwig Elsholtz. This painting shows light cavalry horses which come into use as officer's mounts in 18th- and 19th-century Europe.

In the 19th century distinctions between heavy and light cavalry became less significant; by the end of the Peninsular War, heavy cavalry were performing the scouting and outpost duties previously undertaken by light cavalry, and by the end of the 19th century the roles had effectively merged. Most armies at the time preferred cavalry horses to stand 15.2 hands (62 inches, 157 cm) and weigh 990 to 1,100 pounds (450 to 500 kg), although cuirassiers frequently had heavier horses. Lighter horses were used for scouting and raiding. Cavalry horses were generally obtained at 5 years of age and were in service from 10 to 12 years, barring loss. However losses of 30–40% were common during a campaign due to conditions of the march as well as enemy action. Mares and geldings were preferred over less-easily managed stallions.

During the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars the cavalry's main offensive role was as shock troops. In defence cavalry were used to attack and harass the enemy's infantry flanks as they advanced. Cavalry were frequently used prior to an infantry assault, to force an infantry line to break and reform into formations vulnerable to infantry or artillery. Infantry frequently followed behind in order to secure any ground won or the cavalry could be used to break up enemy lines following a successful infantry action.

Mounted charges were carefully managed. A charge's maximum speed was 20 km/h; moving faster resulted in a break in formation and fatigued horses. Charges occurred across clear rising ground, and were effective against infantry both on the march and when deployed in a line or column. A foot battalion formed in line was vulnerable to cavalry, and could be broken or destroyed by a well-formed charge. Traditional cavalry functions altered by the end of the 19th century. Many cavalry units transferred in title and role to "mounted rifles": troops trained to fight on foot, but retaining mounts for rapid deployment, as well as for patrols, scouting, communications, and defensive screening. These troops differed from mounted infantry, who used horses for transport but did not perform the old cavalry roles of reconnaissance and support.

Sub-Saharan Africa

Kanem-Bu warriors armed with spears. The Earth and Its Inhabitants, 1892.

Horses were used for warfare in the central Sudan since the 9th century, where they were considered "the most precious commodity following the slave." The first conclusive evidence of horses playing a major role in the warfare of West Africa dates to the 11th century when the region was controlled by the Almoravids, a Muslim Berber dynasty. During the 13th and 14th centuries, cavalry became an important factor in the area. This coincided with the introduction of larger breeds of horse and the widespread adoption of saddles and stirrups. Increased mobility played a part in the formation of new power centers, such as the Oyo Empire in what today is Nigeria. The authority of many African Islamic states such as the Bornu Empire also rested in large part on their ability to subject neighboring peoples with cavalry. Despite harsh climate conditions, endemic diseases such as trypanosomiasis, the African horse sickness, and unsuitable terrain that limited the effectiveness of horses in many parts of Africa, horses were continuously imported and were, in some areas, a vital instrument of war. The introduction of horses also intensified existing conflicts, such as those between the Herero and Nama people in Namibia during the 19th century.

The African slave trade was closely tied to the imports of war horses, and as the prevalence of slaving decreased, fewer horses were needed for raiding. This significantly decreased the amount of mounted warfare seen in West Africa. By the time of the Scramble for Africa and the introduction of modern firearms in the 1880s, the use of horses in African warfare had lost most of its effectiveness. Nonetheless, in South Africa during the Second Boer War (1899–1902), cavalry and other mounted troops were the major combat force for the British, since the horse-mounted Boers moved too quickly for infantry to engage. The Boers presented a mobile and innovative approach to warfare, drawing on strategies that had first appeared in the American Civil War. The terrain was not well-suited to the British horses, resulting in the loss of over 300,000 animals. As the campaign wore on, losses were replaced by more durable African Basuto ponies, and Waler horses from Australia.

The Americas

See also: Conquistador, American Indian Wars, Cavalry (United States), and Cavalry in the American Civil War
Native Americans quickly adopted the horse and were highly effective light cavalry. Comanche-Osage fight. George Catlin, 1834

The horse had been extinct in the Western Hemisphere for approximately 10,000 years prior to the arrival of Spanish Conquistadors in the early 16th century. Consequently, the Indigenous peoples of the Americas had no warfare technologies that could overcome the considerable advantage provided by European horses and gunpowder weapons. In particular this resulted in the conquest of the Aztec and Inca empires. The speed and increased impact of cavalry contributed to a number of early victories by European fighters in open terrain, though their success was limited in more mountainous regions. The Incas' well-maintained roads in the Andes enabled quick mounted raids, such as those undertaken by the Spanish while resisting the siege of Cuzco in 1536–37.

Indigenous populations of South America soon learned to use horses. In Chile, the Mapuche began using cavalry in the Arauco War in 1586. They drove the Spanish out of Araucanía at the beginning of the 17th century. Later, the Mapuche conducted mounted raids known as Malónes, first on Spanish, then on Chilean and Argentine settlements until well into the 19th century. In North America, Native Americans also quickly learned to use horses. In particular, the people of the Great Plains, such as the Comanche and the Cheyenne, became renowned horseback fighters. By the 19th century, they presented a formidable force against the United States Army.

Confederate general Robert E. Lee and Traveller. Cavalry played a significant role in the American Civil War.

During the American Revolutionary War (1775–1783), the Continental Army made relatively little use of cavalry, primarily relying on infantry and a few dragoon regiments. The United States Congress eventually authorized regiments specifically designated as cavalry in 1855. The newly formed American cavalry adopted tactics based on experiences fighting over vast distances during the Mexican War (1846–1848) and against indigenous peoples on the western frontier, abandoning some European traditions.

During the American Civil War (1861–1865), cavalry held the most important and respected role it would ever hold in the American military. Field artillery in the American Civil War was also highly mobile. Both horses and mules pulled the guns, though only horses were used on the battlefield. At the beginning of the war, most of the experienced cavalry officers were from the South and thus joined the Confederacy, leading to the Confederate Army's initial battlefield superiority. The tide turned at the 1863 Battle of Brandy Station, part of the Gettysburg campaign, where the Union cavalry, in the largest cavalry battle ever fought on the American continent, ended the dominance of the South. By 1865, Union cavalry were decisive in achieving victory. So important were horses to individual soldiers that the surrender terms at Appomattox allowed every Confederate cavalryman to take his horse home with him. This was because, unlike their Union counterparts, Confederate cavalrymen provided their own horses for service instead of drawing them from the government.

20th century

Although cavalry was used extensively throughout the world during the 19th century, horses became less important in warfare at the beginning of the 20th century. Light cavalry was still seen on the battlefield, but formal mounted cavalry began to be phased out for combat during and immediately after World War I, although units that included horses still had military uses well into World War II.

World War I

Australian Imperial Force light horsemen, 1914
Main article: Horses in World War I

World War I saw great changes in the use of cavalry. The mode of warfare changed, and the use of trench warfare, barbed wire and machine guns rendered traditional cavalry almost obsolete. Tanks, introduced in 1917, began to take over the role of shock combat.

Early in the War, cavalry skirmishes were common, and horse-mounted troops widely used for reconnaissance. On the Western Front cavalry were an effective flanking force during the "Race to the Sea" in 1914, but were less useful once trench warfare was established. There a few examples of successful shock combat, and cavalry divisions also provided important mobile firepower. Cavalry played a greater role on the Eastern Front, where trench warfare was less common. On the Eastern Front, and also against the Ottomans, the "cavalry was literally indispensable." British Empire cavalry proved adaptable, since they were trained to fight both on foot and while mounted, while other European cavalry relied primarily on shock action.

On both fronts, the horse was also used as a pack animal. Because railway lines could not withstand artillery bombardments, horses carried ammunition and supplies between the railheads and the rear trenches, though the horses generally were not used in the actual trench zone. This role of horses was critical, and thus horse fodder was the single largest commodity shipped to the front by some countries. Following the war, many cavalry regiments were converted to mechanised, armoured divisions, with light tanks developed to perform many of the cavalry's original roles.

World War II

Polish Cavalry during a Polish Army manoeuvre in late 1930s.
Main article: Horses in World War II

Several nations used horse units during World War II. The Polish army used mounted infantry to defend against the armies of Nazi Germany during the 1939 invasion. Both the Germans and the Soviet Union maintained cavalry units throughout the war, particularly on the Eastern Front. The British Army used horses early in the war, and the final British cavalry charge was on March 21, 1942, when the Burma Frontier Force encountered Japanese infantry in central Burma. The only American cavalry unit during World War II was the 26th Cavalry. They challenged the Japanese invaders of Luzon, holding off armoured and infantry regiments during the invasion of the Philippines, repelled a unit of tanks in Binalonan, and successfully held ground for the Allied armies' retreat to Bataan.

Throughout the war, horses and mules were an essential form of transport, especially by the British in the rough terrain of Southern Europe and the Middle East. The United States Army utilised a few cavalry and supply units during the war, but there were concerns that the Americans did not use horses often enough. In the campaigns in North Africa, generals such as George S. Patton lamented their lack, saying, "had we possessed an American cavalry division with pack artillery in Tunisia and in Sicily, not a German would have escaped."

The German and the Soviet armies used horses until the end of the war for transportation of troops and supplies. The German Army, strapped for motorised transport because its factories were needed to produce tanks and aircraft, used around 2.75 million horses – more than it had used in World War I. One German infantry division in Normandy in 1944 had 5,000 horses. The Soviets used 3.5 million horses.

Recognition

A memorial to the horses that served in the Second Boer War.

While many statues and memorials have been erected to human heroes of war, often shown with horses, a few have also been created specifically to honor horses or animals in general. One example is the Horse Memorial in Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. Both horses and mules are honored in the Animals in War Memorial in London's Hyde Park.

Horses have also at times received medals for extraordinary deeds. After the Charge of the Light Brigade during the Crimean War, a surviving horse named Drummer Boy, ridden by an officer of the 8th Hussars, was given an unofficial campaign medal by his rider that was identical to those awarded to British troops who served in the Crimea, engraved with the horse's name and an inscription of his service. A more formal award was the PDSA Dickin Medal, an animals' equivalent of the Victoria Cross, awarded by the People's Dispensary for Sick Animals charity in the United Kingdom to three horses that served in World War II.

Modern uses

U.S. Special Operations Forces, members of Task Force Dagger, and Afghanistan Commander Abdul Rashid Dostum on horseback in the Dari-a-Souf Valley, Afghanistan, in October 2001.

Today, many of the historical military uses of the horse have evolved into peacetime applications, including exhibitions, historical reenactments, work of peace officers, and competitive events. Formal combat units of mounted cavalry are mostly a thing of the past, with horseback units within the modern military used for reconnaissance, ceremonial, or crowd control purposes. With the rise of mechanised technology, horses in formal national militias were displaced by tanks and armored fighting vehicles, often still referred to as "cavalry".

Active military

Organised armed fighters on horseback are occasionally seen. The best-known current examples are the Janjaweed, militia groups seen in the Darfur region of Sudan, who became notorious for their attacks upon unarmed civilian populations in the Darfur conflict. Many nations still maintain small numbers of mounted military units for certain types of patrol and reconnaissance duties in extremely rugged terrain, including the conflict in Afghanistan.

At the beginning of Operation Enduring Freedom, Operational Detachment Alpha 595 teams were covertly inserted into Afghanistan on October 19, 2001. Horses were the only suitable method of transport in the difficult mountainous terrain of Northern Afghanistan. They were the first U.S. soldiers to ride horses into battle since January 16, 1942, when the U.S. Army’s 26th Cavalry Regiment charged an advanced guard of the 14th Japanese Army as it advanced from Manila.

The only remaining operationally ready, fully horse-mounted regular regiment in the world is the Indian Army's 61st Cavalry.

Law enforcement and public safety

Mounted police in Poznań, Poland
Main articles: Mounted police and Mounted search and rescue

Mounted police have been used since the 18th century, and still are used worldwide to control traffic and crowds, patrol public parks, keep order in processionals and during ceremonies and perform general street patrol duties. Today, many cities still have mounted police units. In rural areas, horses are used by law enforcement for mounted patrols over rugged terrain, crowd control at religious shrines, and border patrol.

In rural areas, law enforcement that operates outside of incorporated cities may also have mounted units. These include specially deputised, paid or volunteer mounted search and rescue units sent into roadless areas on horseback to locate missing people. Law enforcement in protected areas may use horses in places where mechanised transport is difficult or prohibited. Horses can be an essential part of an overall team effort as they can move faster on the ground than a human on foot, can transport heavy equipment, and provide a more rested rescue worker when a subject is found.

Ceremonial and educational uses

See also: Historical reenactment and Horse symbolism
Horse Cavalry Detachment of the U.S. Army's 1st Cavalry Division demonstrating a mock cavalry charge at Fort Bliss, Texas

Many countries throughout the world maintain traditionally trained and historically uniformed cavalry units for ceremonial, exhibition, or educational purposes. One example is the Horse Cavalry Detachment of the U.S. Army's 1st Cavalry Division. This unit of active duty soldiers approximates the weapons, tools, equipment and techniques used by the United States Cavalry in the 1880s. It is seen at change of command ceremonies and other public appearances. A similar detachment is the Governor General's Horse Guards, Canada's Household Cavalry regiment, the last remaining mounted cavalry unit in the Canadian Forces. Nepal's King's Household Cavalry is a ceremonial unit with over 100 horses and is the remainder of the Nepalese cavalry that existed since the 19th century. An important ceremonial use is in military funerals, which often have a caparisoned horse as part of the procession, "to symbolize that the warrior will never ride again".

Horses are also used in many historical reenactments. Reenactors try to recreate the conditions of the battle or tournament with equipment that is as authentic as possible.

Equestrian sport

Main articles: Equestrian events at the Summer Olympics, Dressage, Show jumping, and Eventing

Modern-day Olympic equestrian events are rooted in cavalry skills and classical horsemanship. The first equestrian events at the Olympics were introduced in 1912, and through 1948, competition was restricted to active-duty officers on military horses. Only after 1952, as mechanisation of warfare reduced the number of military riders, were civilian riders allowed to compete. Dressage traces its origins to Xenophon and his works on cavalry training methods, developing further during the Renaissance in response to a need for different tactics in battles where firearms were used. The three-phase competition known as Eventing developed out of cavalry officers' needs for versatile, well-schooled horses. Though show jumping developed largely from fox hunting, the cavalry considered jumping to be good training for their horses, and leaders in the development of modern riding techniques over fences, such as Federico Caprilli, came from military ranks. Beyond the Olympic disciplines are other events with military roots. Competitions with weapons, such as mounted shooting and tent pegging, test the combat skills of mounted riders.

See also

Notes

  1. The Royal Armouries used a 15.2 hand Lithuanian Heavy Draught mare as a model for statues displaying various 15th and 16th century horse armour, as her body shape was an excellent fit.
  2. Possibly the Kamboja cavalry, from south of the Hindu Kush near medieval Kohistan
  3. Chevauchées were the preferred form of warfare for the English during the Hundred Years' War and the Scots in the Wars of Independence.
  4. Over one million horses and mules died during the American Civil War.
  5. Of a total of 20,500 troops, at least 17,000 were cavalry

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