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Cavalry

Historically, cavalry (from the French word cavalerie, itself derived from "cheval" meaning "horse") are soldiers or warriors who fight mounted on horseback. Cavalry were the most mobile of the combat arms, operating as light cavalry in the roles of reconnaissance, screening, and skirmishing in many armies, or as heavy cavalry for decisive shock attacks in other armies. An individual soldier in the cavalry is known by a number of designations depending on era and tactics, such as cavalryman, horseman, trooper, cataphract, knight, drabant, hussar, uhlan, mamluk, cuirassier, lancer, dragoon, or horse archer. The designation of cavalry was not usually given to any military forces that used other animals for mounts, such as camels or elephants. Infantry who moved on horseback, but dismounted to fight on foot, were known in the early 17th to the early 18th century as dragoons, a class of mounted infantry which in most armies later evolved into standard cavalry while retaining their historic designation.

Cavalry had the advantage of improved mobility, and a soldier fighting from horseback also had the advantages of greater height, speed, and inertial mass over an opponent on foot. Another element of horse mounted warfare is the psychological impact a mounted soldier can inflict on an opponent.

The speed, mobility, and shock value of cavalry was greatly appreciated and exploited in armed forces in the Ancient and Middle Ages; some forces were mostly cavalry, particularly in nomadic societies of Asia, notably the Huns of Attila and the later Mongol armies.[1] In Europe, cavalry became increasingly armoured (heavy), and eventually evolving into the mounted knights of the medieval period. During the 17th century, cavalry in Europe discarded most of its armor, which was ineffective against the muskets and cannons that were coming into common use, and by the mid-18th century armor had mainly fallen into obsolescence, although some regiments retained a small thickened cuirass that offered protection against lances, sabres, and bayonets; including some protection against a shot from distance.

In the interwar period, while some cavalry still served during World War II (notably in the Red Army, the Mongolian People's Army, the Royal Italian Army, the Romanian Army, the Polish Land Forces, and light reconnaissance units within the Waffen SS) many cavalry units were converted into motorized infantry and mechanized infantry units, or reformed as tank troops. The cavalry tank or cruiser tank was one designed with a speed and purpose beyond that of infantry tanks and would subsequently develop into the main battle tank.

Most cavalry units that are horse-mounted in modern armies serve in purely ceremonial roles, or as mounted infantry in difficult terrain such as mountains or heavily forested areas. Modern usage of the term generally refers to units performing the role of reconnaissance, surveillance, and target acquisition (analogous to historical light cavalry) or main battle tank units (analogous to historical heavy cavalry).

Role

Historically, cavalry was divided into light cavalry and heavy cavalry. The differences were their roles in combat, the size of their mounts, and how much armor was worn by the mount and rider.

Heavy cavalry, such as Byzantine cataphracts and knights of the Early Middle Ages in Europe, were used as shock troops, charging the main body of the enemy at the height of a battle; in many cases their actions decided the outcome of the battle, hence the later term battle cavalry.[2] Light cavalry, such as horse archers, hussars, and Cossack cavalry, were assigned all the numerous roles that were ill-suited to more narrowly-focused heavy forces. This includes scouting, deterring enemy scouts, foraging, raiding, skirmishing, pursuit of retreating enemy forces, screening of retreating friendly forces, linking separated friendly forces, and countering enemy light forces in all these same roles.

Light and heavy cavalry roles continued through early modern warfare, but armor was reduced, with light cavalry mostly unarmored. Yet many cavalry units still retained cuirasses and helmets for their protective value against sword and bayonet strikes, and the morale boost these provide to the wearers, despite these giving little protection from firearms. By this time the main difference between light and heavy cavalry was their training; the former was regarded as best suited for harassment and reconnaissance, while the latter was considered best for close-order charges. By the start of the 20th century, as total battlefield firepower increased, all cavalry tended to become dragoons in practice, riding mounted between battles, but dismounting to act as infantry during any battle, even if many retained their unit names that reflected their older cavalry roles.

With the development of armored warfare, the heavy cavalry role of decisive shock troops had been taken over by armored units employing medium and heavy tanks, and later main battle tanks.[3] Despite horse-born cavalry becoming obsolete, the term cavalry is still used, referring in modern times to units continuing to fulfill the traditional light cavalry roles, employing fast armored cars, light tanks, and infantry fighting vehicles instead of horses, while air cavalry employs helicopters.

Early history

Origins

Before the Iron Age, the role of cavalry on the battlefield was largely performed by light chariots. The chariot originated with the Sintashta-Petrovka culture in Central Asia and spread by nomadic or semi-nomadic Indo-Iranians.[4] The chariot was quickly adopted by settled peoples both as a military technology and an object of ceremonial status, especially by the pharaohs of the New Kingdom of Egypt from 1550 BC as well as the Assyrian army and Babylonian royalty.[5]

The power of mobility given by mounted units was recognized early on, but was offset by the difficulty of raising large forces and by the inability of horses (then mostly small) to carry heavy armor. Nonetheless, there are indications that, from the 15th century BC onwards, horseback riding was practiced amongst the military elites of the great states of the ancient Near East, most notably those in Egypt, Assyria, the Hittite Empire, and Mycenaean Greece.[6]

Cavalry techniques, and the rise of true cavalry, were an innovation of equestrian nomads of the Central Asian and Iranian steppe and pastoralist tribes such as the Iranic Parthians and Sarmatians.

 
Parthian horseman, now on display at the Palazzo Madama, Turin

The photograph above left shows Assyrian cavalry from reliefs of 865–860 BC. At this time, the men had no spurs, saddles, saddle cloths, or stirrups. Fighting from the back of a horse was much more difficult than mere riding. The cavalry acted in pairs; the reins of the mounted archer were controlled by his neighbour's hand. Even at this early time, cavalry used swords, shields, spears, and bows. The sculpture implies two types of cavalry, but this might be a simplification by the artist. Later images of Assyrian cavalry show saddle cloths as primitive saddles, allowing each archer to control his own horse.[7]

As early as 490 BC a breed of large horses was bred in the Nisaean plain in Media to carry men with increasing amounts of armour (Herodotus 7,40 & 9,20), but large horses were still very exceptional at this time. By the fourth century BC the Chinese during the Warring States period (403–221 BC) began to use cavalry against rival states,[8] and by 331 BC when Alexander the Great defeated the Persians the use of chariots in battle was obsolete in most nations; despite a few ineffective attempts to revive scythed chariots. The last recorded use of chariots as a shock force in continental Europe was during the Battle of Telamon in 225 BC.[9] However, chariots remained in use for ceremonial purposes such as carrying the victorious general in a Roman triumph, or for racing.

Outside of mainland Europe, the southern Britons met Julius Caesar with chariots in 55 and 54 BC, but by the time of the Roman conquest of Britain a century later chariots were obsolete, even in Britannia. The last mention of chariot use in Britain was by the Caledonians at the Mons Graupius, in 84 AD.

Ancient Greece: city-states, Thebes, Thessaly and Macedonia

 
Warrior's departure; an Athenian amphora dated 550–540 BC

During the classical Greek period cavalry were usually limited to those citizens who could afford expensive war-horses. Three types of cavalry became common: light cavalry, whose riders, armed with javelins, could harass and skirmish; heavy cavalry, whose troopers, using lances, had the ability to close in on their opponents; and finally those whose equipment allowed them to fight either on horseback or foot. The role of horsemen did however remain secondary to that of the hoplites or heavy infantry who comprised the main strength of the citizen levies of the various city states.[10]

Cavalry played a relatively minor role in ancient Greek city-states, with conflicts decided by massed armored infantry. However, Thebes produced Pelopidas, their first great cavalry commander, whose tactics and skills were absorbed by Philip II of Macedon when Philip was a guest-hostage in Thebes. Thessaly was widely known for producing competent cavalrymen,[11] and later experiences in wars both with and against the Persians taught the Greeks the value of cavalry in skirmishing and pursuit. The Athenian author and soldier Xenophon in particular advocated the creation of a small but well-trained cavalry force; to that end, he wrote several manuals on horsemanship and cavalry operations.[12]

The Macedonian Kingdom in the north, on the other hand, developed a strong cavalry force that culminated in the hetairoi (Companion cavalry)[13] of Philip II of Macedon and Alexander the Great. In addition to these heavy cavalry, the Macedonian army also employed lighter horsemen[14] called prodromoi for scouting and screening, as well as the Macedonian pike phalanx and various kinds of light infantry. There were also the Ippiko (or "Horserider"), Greek "heavy" cavalry, armed with kontos (or cavalry lance), and sword. These wore leather armour or mail plus a helmet. They were medium rather than heavy cavalry, meaning that they were better suited to be scouts, skirmishers, and pursuers rather than front line fighters. The effectiveness of this combination of cavalry and infantry helped to break enemy lines and was most dramatically demonstrated in Alexander's conquests of Persia, Bactria, and northwestern India.[15]

Roman Republic and Early Empire

 
Tombstone of a Roman auxiliary trooper from Cologne, Germany. Second half of the first century AD

The cavalry in the early Roman Republic remained the preserve of the wealthy landed class known as the equites—men who could afford the expense of maintaining a horse in addition to arms and armor heavier than those of the common legions. Horses were provided by the Republic and could be withdrawn if neglected or misused, together with the status of being a cavalryman.[16]

As the class grew to be more of a social elite instead of a functional property-based military grouping, the Romans began to employ Italian socii for filling the ranks of their cavalry.[17] The weakness of Roman cavalry was demonstrated by Hannibal Barca during the Second Punic War where he used his superior mounted forces to win several battles. The most notable of these was the Battle of Cannae, where he inflicted a catastrophic defeat on the Romans. At about the same time the Romans began to recruit foreign auxiliary cavalry from among Gauls, Iberians, and Numidians, the last being highly valued as mounted skirmishers and scouts (see Numidian cavalry). Julius Caesar had a high opinion of his escort of Germanic mixed cavalry, giving rise to the Cohortes Equitatae. Early emperors maintained an ala of Batavian cavalry as their personal bodyguards until the unit was dismissed by Galba after the Batavian Rebellion.[18]

For the most part, Roman cavalry during the early Republic functioned as an adjunct to the legionary infantry and formed only one-fifth of the standing force comprising a consular army. Except in times of major mobilisation about 1,800 horsemen were maintained, with three hundred attached to each legion.[19] The relatively low ratio of horsemen to infantry does not mean that the utility of cavalry should be underestimated, as its strategic role in scouting, skirmishing, and outpost duties was crucial to the Romans' capability to conduct operations over long distances in hostile or unfamiliar territory. On some occasions Roman cavalry also proved its ability to strike a decisive tactical blow against a weakened or unprepared enemy, such as the final charge at the Battle of Aquilonia.[20]

After defeats such as the Battle of Carrhae, the Romans learned the importance of large cavalry formations from the Parthians.[21] At the same time heavy spears and shields modelled on those favoured by the horsemen of the Greek city-states were adopted to replace the lighter weaponry of early Rome.[22] These improvements in tactics and equipment reflected those of a thousand years earlier when the first Iranians to reach the Iranian Plateau forced the Assyrians to undertake similar reform. Nonetheless, the Romans would continue to rely mainly on their heavy infantry supported by auxiliary cavalry.

Late Roman Empire and the Migration Period

 
Reenactor as a Roman auxiliary cavalryman

In the army of the late Roman Empire, cavalry played an increasingly important role. The Spatha, the classical sword throughout most of the 1st millennium was adopted as the standard model for the Empire's cavalry forces. By the 6th century these had evolved into lengthy straight weapons influenced by Persian and other eastern patterns.[23]

The most widespread employment of heavy cavalry at this time was found in the forces of the Iranian empires, the Parthians and their Persian Sasanian successors. Both, but especially the former, were famed for the cataphract (fully armored cavalry armed with lances) even though the majority of their forces consisted of lighter horse archers. The West first encountered this eastern heavy cavalry during the Hellenistic period with further intensive contacts during the eight centuries of the Roman–Persian Wars. At first the Parthians' mobility greatly confounded the Romans, whose armoured close-order infantry proved unable to match the speed of the Parthians. However, later the Romans would successfully adapt such heavy armor and cavalry tactics by creating their own units of cataphracts and clibanarii.[24]

The decline of the Roman infrastructure made it more difficult to field large infantry forces, and during the 4th and 5th centuries cavalry began to take a more dominant role on the European battlefield, also in part made possible by the appearance of new, larger breeds of horses. The replacement of the Roman saddle by variants on the Scythian model, with pommel and cantle,[25] was also a significant factor as was the adoption of stirrups and the concomitant increase in stability of the rider's seat. Armored cataphracts began to be deployed in eastern Europe and the Near East, following the precedents established by Persian forces, as the main striking force of the armies in contrast to the earlier roles of cavalry as scouts, raiders, and outflankers.[26]

The late-Roman cavalry tradition of organized units in a standing army differed fundamentally from the nobility of the Germanic invaders—individual warriors who could afford to provide their own horses and equipment. While there was no direct linkage with these predecessors the early medieval knight also developed as a member of a social and martial elite, able to meet the considerable expenses required by his role from grants of land and other incomes.[27]

Asia

 
Chinese caltrop jar

Central Asia

Xiongnu, Tujue, Avars, Kipchaks, Khitans, Mongols, Don Cossacks and the various Turkic peoples are also examples of the horse-mounted groups that managed to gain substantial successes in military conflicts with settled agrarian and urban societies, due to their strategic and tactical mobility. As European states began to assume the character of bureaucratic nation-states supporting professional standing armies, recruitment of these mounted warriors was undertaken in order to fill the strategic roles of scouts and raiders.

 
Mongols at war 14th century

The best known instance of the continued employment of mounted tribal auxiliaries were the Cossack cavalry regiments of the Russian Empire. In Eastern Europe, and out onto the steppes, cavalry remained important much longer and dominated the scene of warfare until the early 17th century and even beyond, as the strategic mobility of cavalry was crucial for the semi-nomadic pastoralist lives that many steppe cultures led. Tibetans also had a tradition of cavalry warfare, in several military engagements with the Chinese Tang dynasty (618–907 AD).

Khanates of Central Asia

East Asia

China

 
 
An Eastern Han glazed ceramic statue of a horse with bridle and halter headgear, from Sichuan, late 2nd century to early 3rd century AD

Further east, the military history of China, specifically northern China, held a long tradition of intense military exchange between Han Chinese infantry forces of the settled dynastic empires and the mounted nomads or "barbarians" of the north. The naval history of China was centered more to the south, where mountains, rivers, and large lakes necessitated the employment of a large and well-kept navy.

In 307 BC, King Wuling of Zhao, the ruler of the former state of Jin, ordered his commanders and troops to adopt the trousers of the nomads as well as practice the nomads' form of mounted archery to hone their new cavalry skills.[8]

 
A bas-relief of a soldier and horse with saddle and stirrups, from the tomb of Chinese Emperor Taizong of Tang (r 626–649), c 650

The adoption of massed cavalry in China also broke the tradition of the chariot-riding Chinese aristocracy in battle, which had been in use since the ancient Shang dynasty (c. 1600–1050 BC).[28] By this time large Chinese infantry-based armies of 100,000 to 200,000 troops were now buttressed with several hundred thousand mounted cavalry in support or as an effective striking force.[29] The handheld pistol-and-trigger crossbow was invented in China in the fourth century BC;[30] it was written by the Song dynasty scholars Zeng Gongliang, Ding Du, and Yang Weide in their book Wujing Zongyao (1044 AD) that massed missile fire by crossbowmen was the most effective defense against enemy cavalry charges.[31]

 
The Qianlong Emperor in ceremonial armor on horseback, painted by Giuseppe Castiglione, dated 1739 or 1758

On many occasions the Chinese studied nomadic cavalry tactics and applied the lessons in creating their own potent cavalry forces, while in others they simply recruited the tribal horsemen wholesale into their armies; and in yet other cases nomadic empires proved eager to enlist Chinese infantry and engineering, as in the case of the Mongol Empire and its sinicized part, the Yuan dynasty (1279–1368). The Chinese recognized early on during the Han dynasty (202 BC – 220 AD) that they were at a disadvantage in lacking the number of horses the northern nomadic peoples mustered in their armies. Emperor Wu of Han (r 141–87 BC) went to war with the Dayuan for this reason, since the Dayuan were hoarding a massive amount of tall, strong, Central Asian bred horses in the HellenizedGreek region of Fergana (established slightly earlier by Alexander the Great). Although experiencing some defeats early on in the campaign, Emperor Wu's war from 104 BC to 102 BC succeeded in gathering the prized tribute of horses from Fergana.

Cavalry tactics in China were enhanced by the invention of the saddle-attached stirrup by at least the 4th century, as the oldest reliable depiction of a rider with paired stirrups was found in a Jin dynasty tomb of the year 322 AD.[32][33][34] The Chinese invention of the horse collar by the 5th century was also a great improvement from the breast harness, allowing the horse to haul greater weight without heavy burden on its skeletal structure.[35][36]

Korea

The horse warfare of Korea was first started during the ancient Korean kingdom Gojoseon. Since at least the 3rd century BC, there was influence of northern nomadic peoples and Yemaek peoples on Korean warfare. By roughly the first century BC, the ancient kingdom of Buyeo also had mounted warriors.[37] The cavalry of Goguryeo, one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea, were called Gaemamusa (개마무사, 鎧馬武士), and were renowned as a fearsome heavy cavalry force. King Gwanggaeto the Great often led expeditions into the Baekje, Gaya confederacy, Buyeo, Later Yan and against Japanese invaders with his cavalry.[38]

In the 12th century, Jurchen tribes began to violate the Goryeo–Jurchen borders, and eventually invaded Goryeo Korea. After experiencing the invasion by the Jurchen, Korean general Yun Gwan realized that Goryeo lacked efficient cavalry units. He reorganized the Goryeo military into a professional army that would contain decent and well-trained cavalry units. In 1107, the Jurchen were ultimately defeated, and surrendered to Yun Gwan. To mark the victory, General Yun built nine fortresses to the northeast of the Goryeo–Jurchen borders (동북 9성, 東北 九城).

 
A mounted samurai with bow and arrows, wearing a horned helmet. Circa 1878

Japan

 
In the Battle of Ichi-no-Tani, Japanese cavalry moving down a mountain-side

The ancient Japanese of the Kofun period also adopted cavalry and equine culture by the 5th century AD. The emergence of the samurai aristocracy led to the development of armoured horse archers, themselves to develop into charging lancer cavalry as gunpowder weapons rendered bows obsolete. Japanese cavalry was largely made up of landowners who would be upon a horse to better survey the troops they were called upon to bring to an engagement, rather than traditional mounted warfare seen in other cultures with massed cavalry units.

An example is Yabusame (流鏑馬), a type of mounted archery in traditional Japanese archery. An archer on a running horse shoots three special "turnip-headed" arrows successively at three wooden targets.

This style of archery has its origins at the beginning of the Kamakura period. Minamoto no Yoritomo became alarmed at the lack of archery skills his samurai had. He organized yabusame as a form of practice. Currently, the best places to see yabusame performed are at the Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gū in Kamakura and Shimogamo Shrine in Kyoto (during Aoi Matsuri in early May). It is also performed in Samukawa and on the beach at Zushi, as well as other locations.

Kasagake or Kasakake (笠懸, かさがけ lit. "hat shooting") is a type of Japanese mounted archery. In contrast to yabusame, the types of targets are various and the archer shoots without stopping the horse. While yabusame has been played as a part of formal ceremonies, kasagake has developed as a game or practice of martial arts, focusing on technical elements of horse archery.

South Asia

Indian subcontinent

In the Indian subcontinent, cavalry played a major role from the Gupta dynasty (320–600) period onwards. India has also the oldest evidence for the introduction of toe-stirrups.[39]

Indian literature contains numerous references to the mounted warriors of the Central Asian horse nomads, notably the Sakas, Kambojas, Yavanas, Pahlavas and Paradas. Numerous Puranic texts refer to a conflict in ancient India (16th century BC)[40] in which the horsemen of five nations, called the "Five Hordes" (pañca.ganan) or Kṣatriya hordes (Kṣatriya ganah), attacked and captured the state of Ayudhya by dethroning its Vedic King Bahu[41]

 
Manuscript illustration of the Battle of Kurukshetra

The Mahabharata, Ramayana, numerous Puranas and some foreign sources attest that the Kamboja cavalry frequently played role in ancient wars. V. R. Ramachandra Dikshitar writes: "Both the Puranas and the epics agree that the horses of the Sindhu and Kamboja regions were of the finest breed, and that the services of the Kambojas as cavalry troopers were utilised in ancient wars".[42] J.A.O.S. writes: "Most famous horses are said to come either from Sindhu or Kamboja; of the latter (i.e. the Kamboja), the Indian epic Mahabharata speaks among the finest horsemen".[43]

 
Coin of Chandragupta II or Vikramaditya, one of the most powerful emperors of the Gupta empire during times referred to as the Golden Age of India
 
Rajput warrior on horseback

The Mahabharata speaks of the esteemed cavalry of the Kambojas, Sakas, Yavanas and Tusharas, all of whom had participated in the Kurukshetra war under the supreme command of Kamboja ruler Sudakshin Kamboj.[44]

Mahabharata and Vishnudharmottara Purana pay especial attention to the Kambojas, Yavansa, Gandharas etc. being ashva.yuddha.kushalah (expert cavalrymen).[45] In the Mahabharata war, the Kamboja cavalry along with that of the Sakas, Yavanas is reported to have been enlisted by the Kuru king Duryodhana of Hastinapura.[46]

Herodotus (c. 484c. 425 BC) attests that the Gandarian mercenaries (i.e. Gandharans/Kambojans of Gandari Strapy of Achaemenids) from the 20th strapy of the Achaemenids were recruited in the army of emperor Xerxes I (486–465 BC), which he led against the Hellas.[47] Similarly, the men of the Mountain Land from north of Kabul-River equivalent to medieval Kohistan (Pakistan), figure in the army of Darius III against Alexander at Arbela, providing a cavalry force and 15 elephants.[48] This obviously refers to Kamboja cavalry south of Hindukush.

The Kambojas were famous for their horses, as well as cavalrymen (asva-yuddha-Kushalah).[49] On account of their supreme position in horse (Ashva) culture, they were also popularly known as Ashvakas, i.e. the "horsemen"[50] and their land was known as "Home of Horses".[51] They are the Assakenoi and Aspasioi of the Classical writings, and the Ashvakayanas and Ashvayanas in Pāṇini's Ashtadhyayi. The Assakenoi had faced Alexander with 30,000 infantry, 20,000 cavalry and 30 war elephants.[52] Scholars have identified the Assakenoi and Aspasioi clans of Kunar and Swat valleys as a section of the Kambojas.[53] These hardy tribes had offered stubborn resistance to Alexander (c. 326 BC) during latter's campaign of the Kabul, Kunar and Swat valleys and had even extracted the praise of the Alexander's historians. These highlanders, designated as "parvatiya Ayudhajivinah" in Pāṇini's Astadhyayi,[54] were rebellious, fiercely independent and freedom-loving cavalrymen who never easily yielded to any overlord.[55]

The Sanskrit drama Mudra-rakashas by Visakha Dutta and the Jaina work Parishishtaparvan refer to Chandragupta's (c. 320 BCc. 298 BC) alliance with Himalayan king Parvataka. The Himalayan alliance gave Chandragupta a formidable composite army made up of the cavalry forces of the Shakas, Yavanas, Kambojas, Kiratas, Parasikas and Bahlikas as attested by Mudra-Rakashas (Mudra-Rakshasa 2).[56] These hordes had helped Chandragupta Maurya defeat the ruler of Magadha and placed Chandragupta on the throne, thus laying the foundations of Mauryan dynasty in Northern India.

The cavalry of Hunas and the Kambojas is also attested in the Raghu Vamsa epic poem of Sanskrit poet Kalidasa.[57] Raghu of Kalidasa is believed to be Chandragupta II (Vikaramaditya) (375–413/15 AD), of the well-known Gupta dynasty.

As late as the mediaeval era, the Kamboja cavalry had also formed part of the Gurjara-Pratihara armed forces from the eighth to the 10th centuries AD. They had come to Bengal with the Pratiharas when the latter conquered part of the province.[58][59][60][61][62]

Ancient Kambojas organised military sanghas and shrenis (corporations) to manage their political and military affairs, as Arthashastra of Kautiliya as well as the Mahabharata record. They are described as Ayuddha-jivi or Shastr-opajivis (nations-in-arms), which also means that the Kamboja cavalry offered its military services to other nations as well. There are numerous references to Kambojas having been requisitioned as cavalry troopers in ancient wars by outside nations.

Mughal Empire

 
Akbar leads the Mughal Army during a campaign

The Mughal armies (lashkar) were primarily a cavalry force. The elite corps were the ahadi who provided direct service to the Emperor and acted as guard cavalry. Supplementary cavalry or dakhilis were recruited, equipped and paid by the central state. This was in contrast to the tabinan horsemen who were the followers of individual noblemen. Their training and equipment varied widely but they made up the backbone of the Mughal cavalry. Finally there were tribal irregulars led by and loyal to tributary chiefs. These included Hindus, Afghans and Turks summoned for military service when their autonomous leaders were called on by the Imperial government.[63]

European Middle Ages

 
Horse-mounted Normans charging in the Bayeux Tapestry, 11th century

As the quality and availability of heavy infantry declined in Europe with the fall of the Roman Empire, heavy cavalry became more effective. Infantry that lack the cohesion and discipline of tight formations are more susceptible to being broken and scattered by shock combat—the main role of heavy cavalry, which rose to become the dominant force on the European battlefield.[64]

As heavy cavalry increased in importance, it became the main focus of military development. The arms and armour for heavy cavalry increased, the high-backed saddle developed, and stirrups and spurs were added, increasing the advantage of heavy cavalry even more.[65]

This shift in military importance was reflected in society as well; knights took centre stage both on and off the battlefield. These are considered the "ultimate" in heavy cavalry: well-equipped with the best weapons, state-of-the-art armour from head to foot, leading with the lance in battle in a full-gallop, close-formation "knightly charge" that might prove irresistible, winning the battle almost as soon as it began.

 
A 13th-century depiction of a riding horse. Note resemblance to the modern Paso Fino
 
A Hussite war wagon: it enabled peasants to defeat knights

But knights remained the minority of total available combat forces; the expense of arms, armour, and horses was only affordable to a select few. While mounted men-at-arms focused on a narrow combat role of shock combat, medieval armies relied on a large variety of foot troops to fulfill all the rest (skirmishing, flank guards, scouting, holding ground, etc.). Medieval chroniclers tended to pay undue attention to the knights at the expense of the common soldiers, which led early students of military history to suppose that heavy cavalry was the only force that mattered on medieval European battlefields. But well-trained and disciplined infantry could defeat knights.

Massed English longbowmen triumphed over French cavalry at Crécy, Poitiers and Agincourt, while at Gisors (1188), Bannockburn (1314), and Laupen (1339),[66] foot-soldiers proved they could resist cavalry charges as long as they held their formation. Once the Swiss developed their pike squares for offensive as well as defensive use, infantry started to become the principal arm. This aggressive new doctrine gave the Swiss victory over a range of adversaries, and their enemies found that the only reliable way to defeat them was by the use of an even more comprehensive combined arms doctrine, as evidenced in the Battle of Marignano. The introduction of missile weapons that required less skill than the longbow, such as the crossbow and hand cannon, also helped remove the focus somewhat from cavalry elites to masses of cheap infantry equipped with easy-to-learn weapons. These missile weapons were very successfully used in the Hussite Wars, in combination with Wagenburg tactics.

This gradual rise in the dominance of infantry led to the adoption of dismounted tactics. From the earliest times knights and mounted men-at-arms had frequently dismounted to handle enemies they could not overcome on horseback, such as in the Battle of the Dyle (891) and the Battle of Bremule (1119), but after the 1350s this trend became more marked with the dismounted men-at-arms fighting as super-heavy infantry with two-handed swords and poleaxes.[citation needed] In any case, warfare in the Middle Ages tended to be dominated by raids and sieges rather than pitched battles, and mounted men-at-arms rarely had any choice other than dismounting when faced with the prospect of assaulting a fortified position.

Greater Middle East

Arabs

 
Arab camelry

The Islamic Prophet Muhammad made use of cavalry in many of his military campaigns including the Expedition of Dhu Qarad,[67] and the expedition of Zaid ibn Haritha in al-Is which took place in September, 627 AD, fifth month of 6 AH of the Islamic calendar.[68]

Early organized Arab mounted forces under the Rashidun caliphate comprised a light cavalry armed with lance and sword. Its main role was to attack the enemy flanks and rear. These relatively lightly armored horsemen formed the most effective element of the Muslim armies during the later stages of the Islamic conquest of the Levant. The best use of this lightly armed fast moving cavalry was revealed at the Battle of Yarmouk (636 AD) in which Khalid ibn Walid, knowing the skills of his horsemen, used them to turn the tables at every critical instance of the battle with their ability to engage, disengage, then turn back and attack again from the flank or rear. A strong cavalry regiment was formed by Khalid ibn Walid which included the veterans of the campaign of Iraq and Syria. Early Muslim historians have given it the name Tali'a mutaharrikah(طليعة متحركة), or the Mobile guard. This was used as an advance guard and a strong striking force to route the opposing armies with its greater mobility that give it an upper hand when maneuvering against any Byzantine army. With this mobile striking force, the conquest of Syria was made easy.[69]

The Battle of Talas in 751 AD was a conflict between the Arab Abbasid Caliphate and the Chinese Tang dynasty over the control of Central Asia. Chinese infantry were routed by Arab cavalry near the bank of the River Talas.

Later Mamluks were trained as cavalry soldiers. Mamluks were to follow the dictates of al-furusiyya,[70] a code of conduct that included values like courage and generosity but also doctrine of cavalry tactics, horsemanship, archery and treatment of wounds.

Maghreb

 
A Moroccan with his Arabian horse along the Barbary coast

The Islamic Berber states of North Africa employed elite horse mounted cavalry armed with spears and following the model of the original Arab occupiers of the region. Horse-harness and weapons were manufactured locally and the six-monthly stipends for horsemen were double those of their infantry counterparts. During the 8th century Islamic conquest of Iberia large numbers of horses and riders were shipped from North Africa, to specialise in raiding and the provision of support for the massed Berber footmen of the main armies.[71]

Maghrebi traditions of mounted warfare eventually influenced a number of sub-Saharan African polities in the medieval era. The Esos of Ikoyi, military aristocrats of the Yoruba peoples, were a notable manifestation of this phenomenon.[72]

 
Kanem-Bu warriors armed with spears in the retinue of a mounted war chief. The Earth and Its Inhabitants, 1892

Al-Andalus

Iran

Qizilbash, were a class of Safavid militant warriors in Iran during the 15th to 18th centuries, who often fought as elite cavalry.[73][74][75][76]

Ottoman Empire

During its period of greatest expansion, from the 14th to 17th centuries, cavalry formed the powerful core of the Ottoman armies. Registers dated 1475 record 22,000 Sipahi feudal cavalry levied in Europe, 17,000 Sipahis recruited from Anatolia, and 3,000 Kapikulu (regular body-guard cavalry).[77] During the 18th century however the Ottoman mounted troops evolved into light cavalry serving in the thinly populated regions of the Middle East and North Africa.[78] Such frontier horsemen were largely raised by local governors and were separate from the main field armies of the Ottoman Empire. At the beginning of the 19th century modernised Nizam-I Credit ("New Army") regiments appeared, including full-time cavalry units officered from the horse guards of the Sultan.[79]

Renaissance Europe

 
Knighted cavalry and noblemen, painting by Jan van Eyck (c. 1390–1441)

Ironically, the rise of infantry in the early 16th century coincided with the "golden age" of heavy cavalry; a French or Spanish army at the beginning of the century could have up to half its numbers made up of various kinds of light and heavy cavalry, whereas in earlier medieval and later 17th-century armies the proportion of cavalry was seldom more than a quarter.

Knighthood largely lost its military functions and became more closely tied to social and economic prestige in an increasingly capitalistic Western society. With the rise of drilled and trained infantry, the mounted men-at-arms, now sometimes called gendarmes and often part of the standing army themselves, adopted the same role as in the Hellenistic age, that of delivering a decisive blow once the battle was already engaged, either by charging the enemy in the flank or attacking their commander-in-chief.

 
Husarz (Polish Hussar) by Józef Brandt

From the 1550s onwards, the use of gunpowder weapons solidified infantry's dominance of the battlefield and began to allow true mass armies to develop. This is closely related to the increase in the size of armies throughout the early modern period; heavily armored cavalrymen were expensive to raise and maintain and it took years to train a skilled horseman or a horse, while arquebusiers and later musketeers could be trained and kept in the field at much lower cost, and were much easier to recruit.

The Spanish tercio and later formations relegated cavalry to a supporting role. The pistol was specifically developed to try to bring cavalry back into the conflict, together with manoeuvres such as the caracole. The caracole was not particularly successful, however, and the charge (whether with lance, sword, or pistol) remained as the primary mode of employment for many types of European cavalry, although by this time it was delivered in much deeper formations and with greater discipline than before. The demi-lancers and the heavily armored sword-and-pistol reiters were among the types of cavalry whose heyday was in the 16th and 17th centuries. During this period the Polish Winged hussars were a dominating heavy cavalry force in Eastern Europe that initially achieved great success against Swedes, Russians, Turks and other, until repeatably beaten by either combined arms tactics, increase in firepower or beaten in melee with the Drabant cavalry of the Swedish Empire. From their last engagement in 1702 (at the Battle of Kliszów) until 1776, the obsolete Winged hussars were demoted and largely assigned to ceremonial roles. The Polish Winged hussars military prowess peaked at the Siege of Vienna in 1683, when hussar banners participated in the largest cavalry charge in history and successfully repelled the Ottoman attack.

18th-century Europe and Napoleonic Wars

 
Cavalry charge at Eylau, painted by Jean-Antoine-Siméon Fort

Cavalry retained an important role in this age of regularization and standardization across European armies. They remained the primary choice for confronting enemy cavalry. Attacking an unbroken infantry force head-on usually resulted in failure, but extended linear infantry formations were vulnerable to flank or rear attacks. Cavalry was important at Blenheim (1704), Rossbach (1757), Marengo (1800), Eylau and Friedland (1807), remaining significant throughout the Napoleonic Wars.

Even with the increasing prominence of infantry, cavalry still had an irreplaceable role in armies, due to their greater mobility. Their non-battle duties often included patrolling the fringes of army encampments, with standing orders to intercept suspected shirkers and deserters as well as[81]: 257, 266  serving as outpost pickets in advance of the main body. During battle, lighter cavalry such as hussars and uhlans might skirmish with other cavalry, attack light infantry, or charge and either capture enemy artillery or render them useless by plugging the touchholes with iron spikes. Heavier cavalry such as cuirassiers, dragoons, and carabiniers usually charged towards infantry formations or opposing cavalry in order to rout them. Both light and heavy cavalry pursued retreating enemies, the point where most battle casualties occurred.[81]: 266 

 
British infantry formed into anti-cavalry squares at the Battle of Quatre Bras

The greatest cavalry charge of modern history was at the 1807 Battle of Eylau, when the entire 11,000-strong French cavalry reserve, led by Joachim Murat, launched a huge charge on and through the Russian infantry lines. Cavalry's dominating and menacing presence on the battlefield was countered by the use of infantry squares. The most notable examples are at the Battle of Quatre Bras and later at the Battle of Waterloo, the latter which the repeated charges by up to 9,000 French cavalrymen ordered by Michel Ney failed to break the British-Allied army, who had formed into squares.[82]

Massed infantry, especially those formed in squares were deadly to cavalry, but offered an excellent target for artillery. Once a bombardment had disordered the infantry formation, cavalry were able to rout and pursue the scattered foot soldiers. It was not until individual firearms gained accuracy and improved rates of fire that cavalry was diminished in this role as well. Even then light cavalry remained an indispensable tool for scouting, screening the army's movements, and harassing the enemy's supply lines until military aircraft supplanted them in this role in the early stages of World War I.

19th century

 
The charge of the Venezuelan First Division's cavalry at the Battle of Carabobo

Europe

By the beginning of the 19th century, European cavalry fell into four main categories:

 
"The Thin Red Line" at the Battle of Balaclava, where the 93rd Regiment held off Russian Cavalry

There were cavalry variations for individual nations as well: France had the chasseurs à cheval; Prussia had the Jäger zu Pferde;[83] Bavaria,[84] Saxony and Austria[85] had the Chevaulegers; and Russia had Cossacks. Britain, from the mid-18th century, had Light Dragoons as light cavalry and Dragoons, Dragoon Guards and Household Cavalry as heavy cavalry. Only after the end of the Napoleonic wars were the Household Cavalry equipped with cuirasses, and some other regiments were converted to lancers. In the United States Army prior to 1862 the cavalry were almost always dragoons. The Imperial Japanese Army had its cavalry uniformed as hussars, but they fought as dragoons.

In the Crimean War, the Charge of the Light Brigade and the Thin Red Line at the Battle of Balaclava showed the vulnerability of cavalry, when deployed without effective support.[86]

Franco-Prussian War

 
Monument to the Spanish Regiment of light cavalry of Alcántara

During the Franco-Prussian War, at the Battle of Mars-la-Tour in 1870, a Prussian cavalry brigade decisively smashed the centre of the French battle line, after skilfully concealing their approach. This event became known as Von Bredow's Death Ride after the brigade commander Adalbert von Bredow; it would be used in the following decades to argue that massed cavalry charges still had a place on the modern battlefield.[87]

Imperial expansion

Cavalry found a new role in colonial campaigns (irregular warfare), where modern weapons were lacking and the slow moving infantry-artillery train or fixed fortifications were often ineffective against indigenous insurgents (unless the latter offered a fight on an equal footing, as at Tel-el-Kebir, Omdurman, etc.). Cavalry "flying columns" proved effective, or at least cost-effective, in many campaigns—although an astute native commander (like Samori in western Africa, Shamil in the Caucasus, or any of the better Boer commanders) could turn the tables and use the greater mobility of their cavalry to offset their relative lack of firepower compared with European forces.

In 1903 the British Indian Army maintained forty regiments of cavalry, numbering about 25,000 Indian sowars (cavalrymen), with British and Indian officers.[88]

Among the more famous regiments in the lineages of the modern Indian and Pakistani armies are:

 
The charge of the 21st Lancers at Omdurman
 
19th Lancers near Mametz during the Battle of the Somme, 15 July 1916

Several of these formations are still active, though they now are armoured formations, for example the Guides Cavalry of Pakistan.[89]

 
Algerian spahis of the French Army 1886

The French Army maintained substantial cavalry forces in Algeria and Morocco from 1830 until the end of the Second World War. Much of the Mediterranean coastal terrain was suitable for mounted action and there was a long established culture of horsemanship amongst the Arab and Berber inhabitants. The French forces included Spahis, Chasseurs d' Afrique, Foreign Legion cavalry and mounted Goumiers.[90] Both Spain and Italy raised cavalry regiments from amongst the indigenous horsemen of their North African territories (see regulares, Italian Spahis[91] and savari respectively).

Imperial Germany employed mounted formations in South West Africa as part of the Schutztruppen (colonial army) garrisoning the territory.[92]

United States

In the early American Civil War the regular United States Army mounted rifle, dragoon, and two existing cavalry regiments were reorganized and renamed cavalry regiments, of which there were six.[93] Over a hundred other federal and state cavalry regiments were organized, but the infantry played a much larger role in many battles due to its larger numbers, lower cost per rifle fielded, and much easier recruitment. However, cavalry saw a role as part of screening forces and in foraging and scouting. The later phases of the war saw the Federal army developing a truly effective cavalry force fighting as scouts, raiders, and, with repeating rifles, as mounted infantry. The distinguished 1st Virginia Cavalry ranks as one of the most effectual and successful cavalry units on the Confederate side. Noted cavalry commanders included Confederate general J.E.B. Stuart, Nathan Bedford Forrest, and John Singleton Mosby (a.k.a. "The Grey Ghost") and on the Union side, Philip Sheridan and George Armstrong Custer.[94] Post Civil War, as the volunteer armies disbanded, the regular army cavalry regiments increased in number from six to ten, among them Custer's U.S. 7th Cavalry Regiment of Little Bighorn fame, and the African-American U.S. 9th Cavalry Regiment and U.S. 10th Cavalry Regiment. The black units, along with others (both cavalry and infantry), collectively became known as the Buffalo Soldiers. According to Robert M. Utley:

the frontier army was a conventional military force trying to control, by conventional military methods, a people that did not behave like conventional enemies and, indeed, quite often were not enemies at all. This is the most difficult of all military assignments, whether in Africa, Asia, or the American West.[95]

These regiments, which rarely took the field as complete organizations, served throughout the American Indian Wars through the close of the frontier in the 1890s. Volunteer cavalry regiments like the Rough Riders consisted of horsemen such as cowboys, ranchers and other outdoorsmen, that served as a cavalry in the United States Military.[96]

Developments 1900-1914

 
Italian cavalry officers practice their horsemanship in 1904 outside Rome

At the beginning of the 20th century all armies still maintained substantial cavalry forces, although there was contention over whether their role should revert to that of mounted infantry (the historic dragoon function).

Britain

Following the experience of the South African War of 1899–1902 (where mounted Boer citizen commandos fighting on foot from cover proved more effective than regular cavalry) the British Army withdrew lances for all but ceremonial purposes and placed a new emphasis on training for dismounted action in 1903.

Russia

In 1882 the Imperial Russian Army converted all its line hussar and lancer regiments to dragoons, with an emphasis on mounted infantry training. In 1910 these regiments reverted to their historic roles, designations and uniforms.[97]

Germany

By 1909 official regulations dictating the role of the Imperial German cavalry had been revised to indicate an increasing realization of the realities of modern warfare. The massive cavalry charge in three waves which had previously marked the end of annual maneuvers was discontinued and a new emphasis was placed in training on scouting, raiding and pursuit; rather than main battle involvement.[98] The perceived importance of cavalry was however still evident, with thirteen new regiments of mounted rifles (Jäger zu Pferde) being raised shortly before the outbreak of war in 1914.[99]

France

In spite of significant experience in mounted warfare in Morocco during 1908–14, the French cavalry remained a highly conservative institution.[100] The traditional tactical distinctions between heavy, medium, and light cavalry branches were retained.[101] French cuirassiers wore breastplates and plumed helmets unchanged from the Napoleonic period, during the early months of World War I.[102] Dragoons were similarly equipped, though they did not wear cuirasses and did carry lances.[103] Light cavalry were described as being "a blaze of colour". French cavalry of all branches were well mounted and were trained to change position and charge at full gallop.[104] One weakness in training was that French cavalrymen seldom dismounted on the march and their horses suffered heavily from raw backs in August 1914.[105]

First World War

Opening stages

 
Austro-Hungarian cavalry, 1898
 
German cavalryman in September 1914, German South-West Africa
 
Dead German cavalry horses after the Battle of Halen - where the Belgian cavalry, fighting dismounted, decimated their still mounted German counterparts

Europe 1914

In August 1914 all combatant armies still retained substantial numbers of cavalry and the mobile nature of the opening battles on both Eastern and Western Fronts provided a number of instances of traditional cavalry actions, though on a smaller and more scattered scale than those of previous wars. The 110 regiments of Imperial German cavalry, while as colourful and traditional as any in peacetime appearance,[106] had adopted a practice of falling back on infantry support when any substantial opposition was encountered.[107] These cautious tactics aroused derision amongst their more conservative French and Russian opponents[108] but proved appropriate to the new nature of warfare. A single attempt by the German army, on 12 August 1914, to use six regiments of massed cavalry to cut off the Belgian field army from Antwerp foundered when they were driven back in disorder by rifle fire.[109] The two German cavalry brigades involved lost 492 men and 843 horses in repeated charges against dismounted Belgian lancers and infantry.[110] One of the last recorded charges by French cavalry took place on the night of 9/10 September 1914 when a squadron of the 16th Dragoons overran a German airfield at Soissons, while suffering heavy losses.[111] Once the front lines stabilised on the Western Front with the start of Trench Warfare, a combination of barbed wire, uneven muddy terrain, machine guns and rapid fire rifles proved deadly to horse mounted troops and by early 1915 most cavalry units were no longer seeing front line action.

On the Eastern Front a more fluid form of warfare arose from flat open terrain favorable to mounted warfare. On the outbreak of war in 1914 the bulk of the Russian cavalry was deployed at full strength in frontier garrisons and, during the period that the main armies were mobilizing, scouting and raiding into East Prussia and Austrian Galicia was undertaken by mounted troops trained to fight with sabre and lance in the traditional style.[112] On 21 August 1914 the 4th Austro-Hungarian Kavalleriedivison fought a major mounted engagement at Jaroslavic with the Russian 10th Cavalry Division,[113] in what was arguably the final historic battle to involve thousands of horsemen on both sides.[114] While this was the last massed cavalry encounter on the Eastern Front, the absence of good roads limited the use of mechanized transport and even the technologically advanced Imperial German Army continued to deploy up to twenty-four horse-mounted divisions in the East, as late as 1917.[115]

Europe 1915–18

 
A British cavalry trooper in marching order (1914–1918)

For the remainder of the War on the Western Front cavalry had virtually no role to play. The British and French armies dismounted many of their cavalry regiments and used them in infantry and other roles: the Life Guards for example spent the last months of the War as a machine gun corps; and the Australian Light Horse served as light infantry during the Gallipoli campaign. In September 1914 cavalry comprised 9.28% of the total manpower of the British Expeditionary Force in France—by July 1918 this proportion had fallen to 1.65%.[116] As early as the first winter of the war most French cavalry regiments had dismounted a squadron each, for service in the trenches.[117] The French cavalry numbered 102,000 in May 1915 but had been reduced to 63,000 by October 1918.[118] The German Army dismounted nearly all their cavalry in the West, maintaining only one mounted division on that front by January 1917.

 
German dragoons, armed with lances, after the capture of Warsaw, August 1915

Italy entered the war in 1915 with thirty regiments of line cavalry, lancers and light horse. While employed effectively against their Austro-Hungarian counterparts during the initial offensives across the Isonzo River, the Italian mounted forces ceased to have a significant role as the front shifted into mountainous terrain. By 1916 most cavalry machine-gun sections and two complete cavalry divisions had been dismounted and seconded to the infantry.[119]

Some cavalry were retained as mounted troops in reserve behind the lines, in anticipation of a penetration of the opposing trenches that it seemed would never come. Tanks, introduced on the Western Front by the British in September 1916 during the Battle of the Somme, had the capacity to achieve such breakthroughs but did not have the reliable range to exploit them. In their first major use at the Battle of Cambrai (1917), the plan was for a cavalry division to follow behind the tanks, however they were not able to cross a canal because a tank had broken the only bridge.[120] On a few other occasions, throughout the war, cavalry were readied in significant numbers for involvement in major offensives; such as in the Battle of Caporetto and the Battle of Moreuil Wood. However it was not until the German Army had been forced to retreat in the Hundred Days Offensive of 1918, that limited numbers of cavalry were again able to operate with any effectiveness in their intended role. There was a successful charge by the British 7th Dragoon Guards on the last day of the war.[121]

In the wider spaces of the Eastern Front a more fluid form of warfare continued and there was still a use for mounted troops. Some wide-ranging actions were fought, again mostly in the early months of the war.[122] However, even here the value of cavalry was overrated and the maintenance of large mounted formations at the front by the Russian Army put a major strain on the railway system, to little strategic advantage.[123] In February 1917 the Russian regular cavalry (exclusive of Cossacks) was reduced by nearly a third from its peak number of 200,000, as two squadrons of each regiment were dismounted and incorporated into additional infantry battalions.[124] Their Austro-Hungarian opponents, plagued by a shortage of trained infantry, had been obliged to progressively convert most horse cavalry regiments to dismounted rifle units starting in late 1914.[125]

Middle East

In the Middle East, during the Sinai and Palestine Campaign mounted forces (British, Indian, Ottoman, Australian, Arab and New Zealand) retained an important strategic role both as mounted infantry and cavalry.

In Egypt the mounted infantry formations like the New Zealand Mounted Rifles Brigade and Australian Light Horse of ANZAC Mounted Division, operating as mounted infantry, drove German and Ottoman forces back from Romani to Magdhaba and Rafa and out of the Egyptian Sinai Peninsula in 1916.

After a stalemate on the Gaza—Beersheba line between March and October 1917, Beersheba was captured by the Australian Mounted Division's 4th Light Horse Brigade. Their mounted charge succeeded after a coordinated attack by the British Infantry and Yeomanry cavalry and the Australian and New Zealand Light Horse and Mounted Rifles brigades. A series of coordinated attacks by these Egyptian Expeditionary Force infantry and mounted troops were also successful at the Battle of Mughar Ridge, during which the British infantry divisions and the Desert Mounted Corps drove two Ottoman armies back to the Jaffa—Jerusalem line. The infantry with mainly dismounted cavalry and mounted infantry fought in the Judean Hills to eventually almost encircle Jerusalem which was occupied shortly after.

During a pause in operations necessitated by the German spring offensive in 1918 on the Western Front joint infantry and mounted infantry attacks towards Amman and Es Salt resulted in retreats back to the Jordan Valley which continued to be occupied by mounted divisions during the summer of 1918.

The Australian Mounted Division was armed with swords and in September, after the successful breaching of the Ottoman line on the Mediterranean coast by the British Empire infantry XXI Corps was followed by cavalry attacks by the 4th Cavalry Division, 5th Cavalry Division and Australian Mounted Divisions which almost encircled two Ottoman armies in the Judean Hills forcing their retreat. Meanwhile, Chaytor's Force of infantry and mounted infantry in ANZAC Mounted Division held the Jordan Valley, covering the right flank to later advance eastwards to capture Es Salt and Amman and half of a third Ottoman army. A subsequent pursuit by the 4th Cavalry Division and the Australian Mounted Division followed by the 5th Cavalry Division to Damascus. Armoured cars and 5th Cavalry Division lancers were continuing the pursuit of Ottoman units north of Aleppo when the Armistice of Mudros was signed by the Ottoman Empire.[126]

Post–World War I

A combination of military conservatism in almost all armies and post-war financial constraints prevented the lessons of 1914–1918 being acted on immediately. There was a general reduction in the number of cavalry regiments in the British, French, Italian[127] and other Western armies but it was still argued with conviction (for example in the 1922 edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica) that mounted troops had a major role to play in future warfare.[128] The 1920s saw an interim period during which cavalry remained as a proud and conspicuous element of all major armies, though much less so than prior to 1914.

Cavalry was extensively used in the Russian Civil War and the Soviet-Polish War.[129] The last major cavalry battle was the Battle of Komarów in 1920, between Poland and the Russian Bolsheviks. Colonial warfare in Morocco, Syria, the Middle East and the North West Frontier of India provided some opportunities for mounted action against enemies lacking advanced weaponry.

 
Lithuanian lancers training in the 1930s

The post-war German Army (Reichsheer) was permitted a large proportion of cavalry (18 regiments or 16.4% of total manpower) under the conditions of the Treaty of Versailles.[130]

The British Army mechanised all cavalry regiments between 1929 and 1941, redefining their role from horse to armoured vehicles to form the Royal Armoured Corps together with the Royal Tank Regiment. The U.S. Cavalry abandoned its sabres in 1934[131] and commenced the conversion of its horsed regiments to mechanized cavalry, starting with the First Regiment of Cavalry in January 1933.[132]

During the Turkish War of Independence Turkish cavalry under General Fahrettin Altay was instrumental in Kemalist victory over the invading Greek Army in 1922, during the Battle of Dumlupınar. V. Cavalry division was able to slip behind the Greek army, cutting off all communication and supply lines as well as all retreat venues, forcing the surrender of the remaining Greek army which may have been the last time in history cavalry played a definitive role in the outcome of a battle.

 
Turkish cavalry during mopping‐up operation 1922

During the 1930s the French Army experimented with integrating mounted and mechanised cavalry units into larger formations.[133] Dragoon regiments were converted to motorised infantry (trucks and motor cycles), and cuirassiers to armoured units; while light cavalry (Chasseurs a' Cheval, Hussars and Spahis) remained as mounted sabre squadrons.[134] The theory was that mixed forces comprising these diverse units could utilise the strengths of each according to circumstances. In practice mounted troops proved unable to keep up with fast moving mechanised units over any distance.

The thirty-nine cavalry regiments of the British Indian Army were reduced to twenty-one as the result of a series of amalgamations immediately following World War I. The new establishment remained unchanged until 1936 when three regiments were redesignated as permanent training units, each with six, still mounted, regiments linked to them. In 1938 the process of mechanization began with the conversion of a full cavalry brigade (two Indian regiments and one British) to armoured car and tank units. By the end of 1940 all of the Indian cavalry had been mechanized, initially and in the majority of cases, to motorized infantry transported in 15cwt trucks.[135] The last horsed regiment of the British Indian Army (other than the Viceroy's Bodyguard and some Indian States Forces regiments) was the 19th King George's Own Lancers which had its final mounted parade at Rawalpindi on 28 October 1939. This unit still exists in the Pakistan Army as an armored regiment.

World War II

While most armies still maintained cavalry units at the outbreak of World War II in 1939, significant mounted action was largely restricted to the Polish, Balkan, and Soviet campaigns. Rather than charge their mounts into battle, cavalry units were either used as mounted infantry (using horses to move into position and then dismounting for combat) or as reconnaissance units (especially in areas not suited to tracked or wheeled vehicles).

Polish

 
Polish uhlan with wz. 35 anti-tank rifle. Military instruction published in Warsaw in 1938

A popular myth is that Polish cavalry armed with lances charged German tanks during the September 1939 campaign. This arose from misreporting of a single clash on 1 September near Krojanty, when two squadrons of the Polish 18th Lancers armed with sabres scattered German infantry before being caught in the open by German armoured cars.[136] Two examples illustrate how the myth developed. First, because motorised vehicles were in short supply, the Poles used horses to pull anti-tank weapons into position.[137] Second, there were a few incidents when Polish cavalry was trapped by German tanks, and attempted to fight free. However, this did not mean that the Polish army chose to attack tanks with horse cavalry.[138] Later, on the Eastern Front, the Red Army did deploy cavalry units effectively against the Germans.[139]

 
A German cavalry patrol in May 1940, during the Battle of France

A more correct term would be "mounted infantry" instead of "cavalry", as horses were primarily used as a means of transportation, for which they were very suitable in view of the very poor road conditions in pre-war Poland. Another myth describes Polish cavalry as being armed with both sabres and lances; lances were used for peacetime ceremonial purposes only and the primary weapon of the Polish cavalryman in 1939 was a rifle. Individual equipment did include a sabre, probably because of well-established tradition, and in the case of a melee combat this secondary weapon would probably be more effective than a rifle and bayonet. Moreover, the Polish cavalry brigade order of battle in 1939 included, apart from the mounted soldiers themselves, light and heavy machine guns (wheeled), the Anti-tank rifle, model 35, anti-aircraft weapons, anti tank artillery such as the Bofors 37 mm, also light and scout tanks, etc. The last cavalry vs. cavalry mutual charge in Europe took place in Poland during the Battle of Krasnobród, when Polish and German cavalry units clashed with each other.

The last classical cavalry charge of the war took place on March 1, 1945, during the Battle of Schoenfeld by the 1st "Warsaw" Independent Cavalry Brigade. Infantry and tanks had been employed to little effect against the German position, both of which floundered in the open wetlands only to be dominated by infantry and antitank fire from the German fortifications on the forward slope of Hill 157, overlooking the wetlands. The Germans had not taken cavalry into consideration when fortifying their position which, combined with the "Warsaw"s swift assault, overran the German anti-tank guns and consolidated into an attack into the village itself, now supported by infantry and tanks.

Greek

The Italian invasion of Greece in October 1940 saw mounted cavalry used effectively by the Greek defenders along the mountainous frontier with Albania. Three Greek cavalry regiments (two mounted and one partially mechanized) played an important role in the Italian defeat in this difficult terrain.[140]

Soviet

The contribution of Soviet cavalry to the development of modern military operational doctrine and its importance in defeating Nazi Germany has been eclipsed by the higher profile of tanks and airplanes.[141] Soviet cavalry contributed significantly to the defeat of the Axis armies.[141] They were able to provide the most mobile troops available in the early stages, when trucks and other equipment were low in quality; as well as providing cover for retreating forces. Considering their relatively limited numbers, the Soviet cavalry played a significant role in giving Germany its first real defeats in the early stages of the war. The continuing potential of mounted troops was demonstrated during the Battle of Moscow, against Guderian and the powerful central German 9th Army. Pavel Belov was given by Stavka a mobile group including the elite 9th tank brigade, ski battalions, Katyusha rocket launcher battalion among others, the unit additionally received new weapons. This newly created group became the first to carry the Soviet counter-offensive in late November, when the general offensive began on December 5. These mobile units often played major roles in both defensive and offensive operations.

Cavalry were amongst the first Soviet units to complete the encirclement in the Battle of Stalingrad, thus sealing the fate of the German 6th Army. Mounted Soviet forces also played a role in the encirclement of Berlin, with some Cossack cavalry units reaching the Reichstag in April 1945. Throughout the war they performed important tasks such as the capture of bridgeheads which is considered one of the hardest jobs in battle, often doing so with inferior numbers. For instance the 8th Guards Cavalry Regiment of the 2nd Guards Cavalry Division (Soviet Union), 1st Guards Cavalry Corps often fought outnumbered against elite German units.

By the final stages of the war only the Soviet Union was still fielding mounted units in substantial numbers, some in combined mechanized and horse units. The main advantage of this tactical approach was in enabling mounted infantry to keep pace with advancing tanks. Other factors favoring the retention of mounted forces included the high quality of Russian Cossacks, which provided about half of all mounted Soviet cavalry throughout the war. They excelled in warfare manoeuvers, since the lack of roads limited the effectiveness of wheeled vehicles in many parts of the Eastern Front. Another consideration was that sufficient logistic capacity was often not available to support very large motorized forces, whereas cavalry was relatively easy to maintain when detached from the main army and acting on its own initiative. The main usage of the Soviet cavalry involved infiltration through front lines with subsequent deep raids, which disorganized German supply lines. Another role was the pursuit of retreating enemy forces during major front-line operations and breakthroughs.

Hungarian

During World War 2 the Royal Hungarian Army's hussars were typically only used to undertake reconnaissance tasks against Soviet forces, and then only in detachments of section or squadron strength.

The last documented hussar attack was conducted by Lieutenant Colonel Kálmán Mikecz on August 16, 1941, at Nikolaev. The hussars arriving as reinforcements, were employed to break through Russian positions ahead of German troops. The hussars equipped with swords and submachine guns broke through the Russian lines in a single attack.

Eyewitness account of the last hussar attack: "… We were again in a tough fight with the desperately defensive enemy who dug himself along a high railway embankment. We've been attacked four times already, and we've been kicked back all four times. The battalion commander swore, but the company commanders were helpless. Then, instead of the artillery support we asked for countless times, a Hungarian hussar regiment appeared on the scene. We laughed. What the hell do they want here with their graceful, elegant horses? We froze at once: these Hungarians went crazy. Cavalry Squadron approached after a cavalry squdron. The command word rang. The bronze-brown, slender riders almost grew to their saddle. Their shining colonel of golden parolis jerked his sword. Four or five armored cars cut out of the wings, and the regiment slashed across the wide plain with flashing swords in the afternoon sun. Seydlitz attacked like this once before. Forgetting all caution, we climbed out of our covers. It was all like a great equestrian movie. The first shots rumbled, then became less frequent. With astonished eyes, in disbelief, we watched as the Soviet regiment, which had so far repulsed our attacks with desperate determination, now turned around and left its positions in panic. And the triumphant Hungarians chased the Russian in front of them and shredded them with their glittering sabers. The hussar sword, it seems, was a bit much for the nerves of Russians. Now, for once, the ancient weapon has triumphed over modern equipment .... " - Erich Kern, a German officer, wrote his memoir in 1948.[142]

Italian

The last mounted sabre charge by Italian cavalry occurred on August 24, 1942, at Isbuscenski (Russia), when a squadron of the Savoia Cavalry Regiment charged the 812th Siberian Infantry Regiment. The remainder of the regiment, together with the Novara Lancers made a dismounted attack in an action that ended with the retreat of the Russians after heavy losses on both sides.[143] The final Italian cavalry action occurred on October 17, 1942, in Poloj (now Croatia) by a squadron of the Alexandria Cavalry Regiment against a large group of Yugoslav partisans.

Other Axis

Romanian, Hungarian and Italian cavalry were dispersed or disbanded following the retreat of the Axis forces from Russia.[144] Germany still maintained some mounted (mixed with bicycles) SS and Cossack units until the last days of the War.

Finnish

Finland used mounted troops against Russian forces effectively in forested terrain during the Continuation War.[145] The last Finnish cavalry unit was not disbanded until 1947.

United States

The U.S. Army's last horse cavalry actions were fought during World War II: a) by the 26th Cavalry Regiment—a small mounted regiment of Philippine Scouts which fought the Japanese during the retreat down the Bataan peninsula, until it was effectively destroyed by January 1942; and b) on captured German horses by the mounted reconnaissance section of the U.S. 10th Mountain Division in a spearhead pursuit of the German Army across the Po Valley in Italy in April 1945.[146] The last horsed U.S. Cavalry (the Second Cavalry Division) were dismounted in March 1944.

British Empire

All British Army cavalry regiments had been mechanised since 1 March 1942 when the Queen's Own Yorkshire Dragoons (Yeomanry) was converted to a motorised role, following mounted service against the Vichy French in Syria the previous year. The final cavalry charge by British Empire forces occurred on 21 March 1942 when a 60 strong patrol of the Burma Frontier Force encountered Japanese infantry near Toungoo airfield in central Myanmar. The Sikh sowars of the Frontier Force cavalry, led by Captain Arthur Sandeman of The Central India Horse (21st King George V's Own Horse), charged in the old style with sabres and most were killed.

Mongolia

 
Mongolian cavalry in the Khalkhin Gol (1939)

In the early stages of World War II, mounted units of the Mongolian People's Army were involved in the Battle of Khalkhin Gol against invading Japanese forces. Soviet forces under the command of Georgy Zhukov, together with Mongolian forces, defeated the Japanese Sixth army and effectively ended the Soviet–Japanese Border Wars. After the Soviet–Japanese Neutrality Pact of 1941, Mongolia remained neutral throughout most of the war, but its geographical situation meant that the country served as a buffer between Japanese forces and the Soviet Union. In addition to keeping around 10% of the population under arms, Mongolia provided half a million trained horses for use by the Soviet Army. In 1945 a partially mounted Soviet-Mongolian Cavalry Mechanized Group played a supporting role on the western flank of the Soviet invasion of Manchuria. The last active service seen by cavalry units of the Mongolian Army occurred in 1946–1948, during border clashes between Mongolia and the Republic of China.

Post–World War II to the present day

 
U.S. Special Forces and Combat Controllers on horseback with the Northern Alliance of Afghanistan, which frequently used horses as military transport

While most modern "cavalry" units have some historic connection with formerly mounted troops this is not always the case. The modern Irish Defence Forces (DF) includes a "Cavalry Corps" equipped with armoured cars and Scorpion tracked combat reconnaissance vehicles. The DF has never included horse cavalry since its establishment in 1922 (other than a small mounted escort of Blue Hussars drawn from the Artillery Corps when required for ceremonial occasions). However, the mystique of the cavalry is such that the name has been introduced for what was always a mechanised force.

Some engagements in late 20th and early 21st century guerrilla wars involved mounted troops, particularly against partisan or guerrilla fighters in areas with poor transport infrastructure. Such units were not used as cavalry but rather as mounted infantry. Examples occurred in Afghanistan, Portuguese Africa and Rhodesia. The French Army used existing mounted squadrons of Spahis to a limited extent for patrol work during the Algerian War (1954–62). The Swiss Army maintained a mounted dragoon regiment for combat purposes until 1973. The Portuguese Army used horse mounted cavalry with some success in the wars of independence in Angola and Mozambique in the 1960s and 1970s.[147] During the 1964–79 Rhodesian Bush War the Rhodesian Army created an elite mounted infantry unit called Grey's Scouts to fight unconventional actions against the rebel forces of Robert Mugabe and Joshua Nkomo. The horse mounted infantry of the Scouts were effective and reportedly feared by their opponents in the rebel African forces. In the 1978 to present Afghan Civil War period there have been several instances of horse mounted combat.

Central and South American armies maintained mounted cavalry for longer than those of Asia, Europe, or North America. The Mexican Army included a number of horse mounted cavalry regiments as late as the mid-1990s and the Chilean Army had five such regiments in 1983 as mounted mountain troops.[148]

The Soviet Army retained horse cavalry divisions until 1955. At the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, there was still an independent horse mounted cavalry squadron in Kyrgyzstan.[149]

Operational horse cavalry

Today the Indian Army's 61st Cavalry is reported to be the largest existing horse-mounted cavalry unit still having operational potential.[150] It was raised in 1951 from the amalgamated state cavalry squadrons of Gwalior, Jodhpur, and Mysore. While primarily utilised for ceremonial purposes, the regiment can be deployed for internal security or police roles if required.[151] The 61st Cavalry and the President's Body Guard parade in full dress uniform in New Delhi each year in what is probably the largest assembly of traditional cavalry still to be seen in the world. Both the Indian and the Pakistani armies maintain armoured regiments with the titles of Lancers or Horse, dating back to the 19th century.

As of 2007, the Chinese People's Liberation Army employed two battalions of horse-mounted border guards in Xinjiang for border patrol purposes. PLA mounted units last saw action during border clashes with Vietnam in the 1970s and 1980s, after which most cavalry units were disbanded as part of major military downsizing in the 1980s.[152] In the wake of the 2008 Sichuan earthquake, there were calls[from whom?] to rebuild the army horse inventory for disaster relief in difficult terrain. Subsequent Chinese media reports[152][153][154] confirm that the PLA maintains operational horse cavalry at squadron strength in Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia for scouting, logistical, and border security purposes.

The Chilean Army still maintains a mixed armoured cavalry regiment, with elements of it acting as mounted mountain exploration troops, based in the city of Angol, being part of the III Mountain Division[155][circular reference], and another independent exploration cavalry detachment in the town of Chaitén. The rugged mountain terrain calls for the use of special horses suited for that use.

The Argentine Army has two mounted cavalry units: the Regiment of Horse Grenadiers, which performs mostly ceremonial duties but at the same time is responsible for the president's security (in this case, acting as infantry), and the 4th Mountain Cavalry Regiment (which comprises both horse and light armoured squadrons), stationed in San Martín de los Andes, where it has an exploration role as part the 6th Mountain Brigade. Most armoured cavalry units of the Army are considered successors to the old cavalry regiments from the Independence Wars, and keep their traditional names, such as Hussars, Cuirassiers, Lancers, etc., and uniforms. Equestrian training remains an important part of their tradition, especially among officers.

Ceremonial horse cavalry and armored cavalry retaining traditional titles

 
Italian Army regiment "Lancieri di Montebello" (8th) on public duties in Rome 2019

Cavalry or mounted gendarmerie units continue to be maintained for purely or primarily ceremonial purposes by the Algerian, Argentine, Bolivian, Brazilian, British, Bulgarian, Canadian, Chilean, Colombian, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, Hungarian, Indian, Italian, Jordanian, Malaysian, Moroccan, Nepalese, Nigerian, North Korean, Omani, Pakistani, Panamanian, Paraguayan, Peruvian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Senegalese, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Tunisian, Turkmenistan, United States, Uruguayan and Venezuelan armed forces.

A number of armoured regiments in the British Army retain the historic designations of Hussars, Dragoons, Light Dragoons, Dragoon Guards, Lancers and Yeomanry. Only the Household Cavalry (consisting of the Life Guards' mounted squadron, The Blues and Royals' mounted squadron, the State Trumpeters of The Household Cavalry and the Household Cavalry Mounted Band) are maintained for mounted (and dismounted) ceremonial duties in London.

The French Army still has regiments with the historic designations of Cuirassiers, Hussars, Chasseurs, Dragoons and Spahis. Only the cavalry of the Republican Guard and a ceremonial fanfare detachment of trumpeters for the cavalry/armoured branch[156] as a whole are now mounted.

In the Canadian Army, a number of regular and reserve units have cavalry roots, including The Royal Canadian Hussars (Montreal), the Governor General's Horse Guards, Lord Strathcona's Horse, The British Columbia Dragoons, The Royal Canadian Dragoons, and the South Alberta Light Horse. Of these, only Lord Strathcona's Horse and the Governor General's Horse Guards maintain an official ceremonial horse-mounted cavalry troop or squadron.[157]

The modern Pakistan army maintains about 40 armoured regiments with the historic titles of Lancers, Cavalry or Horse. Six of these date back to the 19th century, although only the President's Body Guard remains horse-mounted.

In 2002, the Army of the Russian Federation reintroduced a ceremonial mounted squadron wearing historic uniforms.

Both the Australian and New Zealand armies follow the British practice of maintaining traditional titles (Light Horse or Mounted Rifles) for modern mechanised units. However, neither country retains a horse-mounted unit.

Several armored units of the modern United States Army retain the designation of "armored cavalry". The United States also has "air cavalry" units equipped with helicopters. The Horse Cavalry Detachment of the U.S. Army's 1st Cavalry Division, made up of active duty soldiers, still functions as an active unit, trained to approximate the weapons, tools, equipment and techniques used by the United States Cavalry in the 1880s.[158][159]

Non-combat support roles

The First Troop Philadelphia City Cavalry is a volunteer unit within the Pennsylvania Army National Guard which serves as a combat force when in federal service but acts in a mounted disaster relief role when in state service.[160] In addition, the Parsons' Mounted Cavalry is a Reserve Officer Training Corps unit which forms part of the Corps of Cadets at Texas A&M University. Valley Forge Military Academy and College also has a Mounted Company, known as D-Troop .

Some individual U.S. states maintain cavalry units as a part of their respective state defense forces. The Maryland Defense Force includes a cavalry unit, Cavalry Troop A, which serves primarily as a ceremonial unit.[161] The unit training includes a saber qualification course based upon the 1926 U.S. Army course.[162] Cavalry Troop A also assists other Maryland agencies as a rural search and rescue asset.[162] In Massachusetts, The National Lancers trace their lineage to a volunteer cavalry militia unit established in 1836 and are currently organized as an official part of the Massachusetts Organized Militia.[163] The National Lancers maintain three units, Troops A, B, and C, which serve in a ceremonial role and assist in search and rescue missions.[163] In July 2004, the National Lancers were ordered into active state service to guard Camp Curtis Guild during the 2004 Democratic National Convention.[163] The Governor's Horse Guard of Connecticut maintains two companies which are trained in urban crowd control.[162] In 2020, the California State Guard stood up the 26th Mounted Operations Detachment, a search-and-rescue cavalry unit.[164]

Social status

From the beginning of civilization to the 20th century, ownership of heavy cavalry horses has been a mark of wealth amongst settled peoples. A cavalry horse involves considerable expense in breeding, training, feeding, and equipment, and has very little productive use except as a mode of transport.

For this reason, and because of their often decisive military role, the cavalry has typically been associated with high social status. This was most clearly seen in the feudal system, where a lord was expected to enter combat armored and on horseback and bring with him an entourage of lightly armed peasants on foot. If landlords and peasant levies came into conflict, the poorly trained footmen would be ill-equipped to defeat armored knights.

In later national armies, service as an officer in the cavalry was generally a badge of high social status. For instance prior to 1914 most officers of British cavalry regiments came from a socially privileged background and the considerable expenses associated with their role generally required private means, even after it became possible for officers of the line infantry regiments to live on their pay. Options open to poorer cavalry officers in the various European armies included service with less fashionable (though often highly professional) frontier or colonial units. These included the British Indian cavalry, the Russian Cossacks or the French Chasseurs d'Afrique.

During the 19th and early 20th centuries most monarchies maintained a mounted cavalry element in their royal or imperial guards. These ranged from small units providing ceremonial escorts and palace guards, through to large formations intended for active service. The mounted escort of the Spanish Royal Household provided an example of the former and the twelve cavalry regiments of the Prussian Imperial Guard an example of the latter. In either case the officers of such units were likely to be drawn from the aristocracies of their respective societies.

On film

Some sense of the noise and power of a cavalry charge can be gained from the 1970 film Waterloo, which featured some 2,000 cavalrymen,[165] some of them Cossacks. It included detailed displays of the horsemanship required to manage animal and weapons in large numbers at the gallop (unlike the real battle of Waterloo, where deep mud significantly slowed the horses).[166] The Gary Cooper movie They Came to Cordura contains a scene of a cavalry regiment deploying from march to battle line formation. A smaller-scale cavalry charge can be seen in The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003); although the finished scene has substantial computer-generated imagery, raw footage and reactions of the riders are shown in the Extended Version DVD Appendices.

Other films that show cavalry actions include:

Examples

 
A cavalryman of Hakkapeliitta, the Finnish cavalry of Thirty Years' War, featured on a 1940 Finnish stamp

Types

Units

Notable horse cavalrymen

Gallery

See also

Notes

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  2. ^ p. 490, Lynn
  3. ^ "eARMOR The Principles of the Employment of Armor". www.benning.army.mil. Retrieved 2021-04-11.
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  5. ^ Terrence Wise, p. 18, "Ancient Armies of the Middle East", Osprey Publishing Ltd 1981 ISBN 0-85045-384-4
  6. ^ Kelder, Jorrit. "Horseback riding and Cavalry in Mycenaean Greece".
  7. ^ Terrence Wise, plate H, "Ancient Armies of the Middle East", Osprey Publishing Ltd 1981 ISBN 0-85045-384-4
  8. ^ a b Ebrey and others, Pre-Modern East Asia, pp. 29–30.
  9. ^ Warry, John (1980). Warfare in the Classical World. p. 164. ISBN 0-86101-034-5.
  10. ^ Warry, John (1980). Warfare in the Classical World. p. 37. ISBN 0-86101-034-5.
  11. ^ Sekunda, Nick (1984). The Army of Alexander the Great. p. 18. ISBN 0-85045-539-1.
  12. ^ Warry, John (1980). Warfare in the Classical World. p. 54. ISBN 0-86101-034-5.
  13. ^ Sekunda, Nick (1984). The Army of Alexander the Great. p. 17. ISBN 0-85045-539-1.
  14. ^ Sekunda, Nicholas (20 November 2012). Macedonian Armies after Alexander 323-168 BC. p. 42. ISBN 978-1-84908-714-8.
  15. ^ Sekunda, Nick (1984). The Army of Alexander the Great. pp. 14–22. ISBN 0-85045-539-1.
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  17. ^ Sekunda, Nick (17 July 1995). Early Roman Armies. p. 33. ISBN 1-85532-513-6.
  18. ^ Rankov, Dr Boris (27 January 1994). The Praetorian Guard. p. 12. ISBN 1-85532-361-3.
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  20. ^ Sekunda, Nick (17 July 1995). Early Roman Armies. pp. 37–38. ISBN 1-85532-513-6.
  21. ^ Negin, Nick (20 November 2018). Roman heavy Cavalry (1) Cataphractarii & Clibanarii, 1st Century BC-5th Century AD. p. 6. ISBN 978-1-4728-3004-3.
  22. ^ Sekunda, Nick (1996). Republican Roman Army 200-104 BC. p. 38. ISBN 1-85532-598-5.
  23. ^ Negin, Andry (24 November 2020). Roman Heavy Cavalry (2). p. 26. ISBN 978-1-4728-3950-3.
  24. ^ . Historynet.com. 12 June 2006. Archived from the original on 29 May 2006. Retrieved November 25, 2012.
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  26. ^ Negin, Andry (20 November 2018). Roman Heavy Cavalry (1). pp. 28–30. ISBN 978-1-4728-3004-3.
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  30. ^ Ebrey, The Cambridge Illustrated History of China, 41.
  31. ^ Peers, 130. we can right anything
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  40. ^ pp. 182–183, Pargiter.
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    Chankyamatipragrahittaishcha Chandergupta Parvateshvara
    balairudidhibhiriva parchalitsalilaih samantaad uprudham Kusumpurama
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References

  • Ebrey, Walthall, Palais (2006). East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and Political History. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  • Ebrey, Patricia Buckley (1999). The Cambridge Illustrated History of China. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-43519-6.
  • Falls, Cyril; G. MacMunn (1930). Military Operations Egypt & Palestine from the outbreak of war with Germany to June 1917. Official History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence. Vol. 1. London: HM Stationery Office. OCLC 610273484.
  • Falls, Cyril; A. F. Becke (maps) (1930). Military Operations Egypt & Palestine from June 1917 to the End of the War. Official History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence. Vol. 2 Part I. London: HM Stationery Office. OCLC 644354483.
  • Falls, Cyril; A. F. Becke (maps) (1930). Military Operations Egypt & Palestine from June 1917 to the End of the War. Official History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence. Vol. 2 Part II. London: HM Stationery Office. OCLC 256950972.
  • Lynn, John Albert, Giant of the Grand Siècle: The French Army, 1610–1715, Cambridge University Press, 1997
  • Menon, Shanti (April 1995). . Discover. Archived from the original on 2007-10-13.
  • Muir, William (1883). Annals of the Early Caliphate: From Original Sources. London: Smith, Elder & co.
  • Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilization in China. Vol. 4, Physics and Physical Technology, Part 2, Mechanical Engineering. Taipei: Caves Books, Ltd.
  • Pargiter, Frederick Eden, Dr., Chronology based on: Ancient Indian Historical Tradition, Oxford University Press, H. Milford, 1924, Reprint 1997
  • Peers, C. J. (2006). Soldiers of the Dragon: Chinese Armies 1500 BC–AD 1840. Oxford: Osprey Publishing.
  • Rodger, N. A. M. (1999). The Safeguard of the Sea: A Naval History of Britain 660–1649. W. W. Norton & Co Ltd. ISBN 0-393-04579-X.

External links

  • Napoleonic Cavalry
  • Cavalry in Mass (U.S. report on Russian cavalry organization and operations in World War II)
  • Gesellschaft der Freunde der Kavallerie (German)
  • The Horse and Mule in the British Army during WW1
  • Historic films showing cavalry during World War I at europeanfilmgateway.eu

cavalry, confused, with, calvary, redirects, here, racehorse, horse, other, uses, disambiguation, historically, cavalry, from, french, word, cavalerie, itself, derived, from, cheval, meaning, horse, soldiers, warriors, fight, mounted, horseback, were, most, mo. Not to be confused with Calvary Cavalryman redirects here For the racehorse see Cavalryman horse For other uses see Cavalry disambiguation Historically cavalry from the French word cavalerie itself derived from cheval meaning horse are soldiers or warriors who fight mounted on horseback Cavalry were the most mobile of the combat arms operating as light cavalry in the roles of reconnaissance screening and skirmishing in many armies or as heavy cavalry for decisive shock attacks in other armies An individual soldier in the cavalry is known by a number of designations depending on era and tactics such as cavalryman horseman trooper cataphract knight drabant hussar uhlan mamluk cuirassier lancer dragoon or horse archer The designation of cavalry was not usually given to any military forces that used other animals for mounts such as camels or elephants Infantry who moved on horseback but dismounted to fight on foot were known in the early 17th to the early 18th century as dragoons a class of mounted infantry which in most armies later evolved into standard cavalry while retaining their historic designation French 4th Hussars at the Battle of Friedland 1807 A trumpeter of the Representative Cavalry Squadron in the Polish Army Cavalry had the advantage of improved mobility and a soldier fighting from horseback also had the advantages of greater height speed and inertial mass over an opponent on foot Another element of horse mounted warfare is the psychological impact a mounted soldier can inflict on an opponent The speed mobility and shock value of cavalry was greatly appreciated and exploited in armed forces in the Ancient and Middle Ages some forces were mostly cavalry particularly in nomadic societies of Asia notably the Huns of Attila and the later Mongol armies 1 In Europe cavalry became increasingly armoured heavy and eventually evolving into the mounted knights of the medieval period During the 17th century cavalry in Europe discarded most of its armor which was ineffective against the muskets and cannons that were coming into common use and by the mid 18th century armor had mainly fallen into obsolescence although some regiments retained a small thickened cuirass that offered protection against lances sabres and bayonets including some protection against a shot from distance In the interwar period while some cavalry still served during World War II notably in the Red Army the Mongolian People s Army the Royal Italian Army the Romanian Army the Polish Land Forces and light reconnaissance units within the Waffen SS many cavalry units were converted into motorized infantry and mechanized infantry units or reformed as tank troops The cavalry tank or cruiser tank was one designed with a speed and purpose beyond that of infantry tanks and would subsequently develop into the main battle tank Most cavalry units that are horse mounted in modern armies serve in purely ceremonial roles or as mounted infantry in difficult terrain such as mountains or heavily forested areas Modern usage of the term generally refers to units performing the role of reconnaissance surveillance and target acquisition analogous to historical light cavalry or main battle tank units analogous to historical heavy cavalry Contents 1 Role 2 Early history 2 1 Origins 2 2 Ancient Greece city states Thebes Thessaly and Macedonia 2 3 Roman Republic and Early Empire 2 4 Late Roman Empire and the Migration Period 3 Asia 3 1 Central Asia 3 1 1 Khanates of Central Asia 3 2 East Asia 3 2 1 China 3 2 2 Korea 3 2 3 Japan 3 3 South Asia 3 3 1 Indian subcontinent 3 3 2 Mughal Empire 4 European Middle Ages 5 Greater Middle East 5 1 Arabs 5 2 Maghreb 5 3 Al Andalus 5 4 Iran 5 5 Ottoman Empire 6 Renaissance Europe 7 18th century Europe and Napoleonic Wars 8 19th century 8 1 Europe 8 1 1 Franco Prussian War 8 1 2 Imperial expansion 8 2 United States 9 Developments 1900 1914 9 1 Britain 9 2 Russia 9 3 Germany 9 4 France 10 First World War 10 1 Opening stages 10 2 Europe 1914 10 3 Europe 1915 18 10 4 Middle East 11 Post World War I 12 World War II 12 1 Polish 12 2 Greek 12 3 Soviet 12 4 Hungarian 12 5 Italian 12 6 Other Axis 12 7 Finnish 12 8 United States 12 9 British Empire 12 10 Mongolia 13 Post World War II to the present day 13 1 Operational horse cavalry 13 2 Ceremonial horse cavalry and armored cavalry retaining traditional titles 13 3 Non combat support roles 14 Social status 15 On film 16 Examples 16 1 Types 16 2 Units 17 Notable horse cavalrymen 18 Gallery 19 See also 20 Notes 21 References 22 External linksRole EditMain article Cavalry tactics A Polish winged hussar Historically cavalry was divided into light cavalry and heavy cavalry The differences were their roles in combat the size of their mounts and how much armor was worn by the mount and rider Heavy cavalry such as Byzantine cataphracts and knights of the Early Middle Ages in Europe were used as shock troops charging the main body of the enemy at the height of a battle in many cases their actions decided the outcome of the battle hence the later term battle cavalry 2 Light cavalry such as horse archers hussars and Cossack cavalry were assigned all the numerous roles that were ill suited to more narrowly focused heavy forces This includes scouting deterring enemy scouts foraging raiding skirmishing pursuit of retreating enemy forces screening of retreating friendly forces linking separated friendly forces and countering enemy light forces in all these same roles Light and heavy cavalry roles continued through early modern warfare but armor was reduced with light cavalry mostly unarmored Yet many cavalry units still retained cuirasses and helmets for their protective value against sword and bayonet strikes and the morale boost these provide to the wearers despite these giving little protection from firearms By this time the main difference between light and heavy cavalry was their training the former was regarded as best suited for harassment and reconnaissance while the latter was considered best for close order charges By the start of the 20th century as total battlefield firepower increased all cavalry tended to become dragoons in practice riding mounted between battles but dismounting to act as infantry during any battle even if many retained their unit names that reflected their older cavalry roles With the development of armored warfare the heavy cavalry role of decisive shock troops had been taken over by armored units employing medium and heavy tanks and later main battle tanks 3 Despite horse born cavalry becoming obsolete the term cavalry is still used referring in modern times to units continuing to fulfill the traditional light cavalry roles employing fast armored cars light tanks and infantry fighting vehicles instead of horses while air cavalry employs helicopters Early history EditOrigins Edit Assyrian cavalry Before the Iron Age the role of cavalry on the battlefield was largely performed by light chariots The chariot originated with the Sintashta Petrovka culture in Central Asia and spread by nomadic or semi nomadic Indo Iranians 4 The chariot was quickly adopted by settled peoples both as a military technology and an object of ceremonial status especially by the pharaohs of the New Kingdom of Egypt from 1550 BC as well as the Assyrian army and Babylonian royalty 5 The power of mobility given by mounted units was recognized early on but was offset by the difficulty of raising large forces and by the inability of horses then mostly small to carry heavy armor Nonetheless there are indications that from the 15th century BC onwards horseback riding was practiced amongst the military elites of the great states of the ancient Near East most notably those in Egypt Assyria the Hittite Empire and Mycenaean Greece 6 Cavalry techniques and the rise of true cavalry were an innovation of equestrian nomads of the Central Asian and Iranian steppe and pastoralist tribes such as the Iranic Parthians and Sarmatians Parthian horseman now on display at the Palazzo Madama Turin The photograph above left shows Assyrian cavalry from reliefs of 865 860 BC At this time the men had no spurs saddles saddle cloths or stirrups Fighting from the back of a horse was much more difficult than mere riding The cavalry acted in pairs the reins of the mounted archer were controlled by his neighbour s hand Even at this early time cavalry used swords shields spears and bows The sculpture implies two types of cavalry but this might be a simplification by the artist Later images of Assyrian cavalry show saddle cloths as primitive saddles allowing each archer to control his own horse 7 As early as 490 BC a breed of large horses was bred in the Nisaean plain in Media to carry men with increasing amounts of armour Herodotus 7 40 amp 9 20 but large horses were still very exceptional at this time By the fourth century BC the Chinese during the Warring States period 403 221 BC began to use cavalry against rival states 8 and by 331 BC when Alexander the Great defeated the Persians the use of chariots in battle was obsolete in most nations despite a few ineffective attempts to revive scythed chariots The last recorded use of chariots as a shock force in continental Europe was during the Battle of Telamon in 225 BC 9 However chariots remained in use for ceremonial purposes such as carrying the victorious general in a Roman triumph or for racing Outside of mainland Europe the southern Britons met Julius Caesar with chariots in 55 and 54 BC but by the time of the Roman conquest of Britain a century later chariots were obsolete even in Britannia The last mention of chariot use in Britain was by the Caledonians at the Mons Graupius in 84 AD Ancient Greece city states Thebes Thessaly and Macedonia Edit Warrior s departure an Athenian amphora dated 550 540 BC Main articles Hippeis and Companion cavalry During the classical Greek period cavalry were usually limited to those citizens who could afford expensive war horses Three types of cavalry became common light cavalry whose riders armed with javelins could harass and skirmish heavy cavalry whose troopers using lances had the ability to close in on their opponents and finally those whose equipment allowed them to fight either on horseback or foot The role of horsemen did however remain secondary to that of the hoplites or heavy infantry who comprised the main strength of the citizen levies of the various city states 10 Cavalry played a relatively minor role in ancient Greek city states with conflicts decided by massed armored infantry However Thebes produced Pelopidas their first great cavalry commander whose tactics and skills were absorbed by Philip II of Macedon when Philip was a guest hostage in Thebes Thessaly was widely known for producing competent cavalrymen 11 and later experiences in wars both with and against the Persians taught the Greeks the value of cavalry in skirmishing and pursuit The Athenian author and soldier Xenophon in particular advocated the creation of a small but well trained cavalry force to that end he wrote several manuals on horsemanship and cavalry operations 12 The Macedonian Kingdom in the north on the other hand developed a strong cavalry force that culminated in the hetairoi Companion cavalry 13 of Philip II of Macedon and Alexander the Great In addition to these heavy cavalry the Macedonian army also employed lighter horsemen 14 called prodromoi for scouting and screening as well as the Macedonian pike phalanx and various kinds of light infantry There were also the Ippiko or Horserider Greek heavy cavalry armed with kontos or cavalry lance and sword These wore leather armour or mail plus a helmet They were medium rather than heavy cavalry meaning that they were better suited to be scouts skirmishers and pursuers rather than front line fighters The effectiveness of this combination of cavalry and infantry helped to break enemy lines and was most dramatically demonstrated in Alexander s conquests of Persia Bactria and northwestern India 15 Roman Republic and Early Empire Edit Main article Roman cavalry Tombstone of a Roman auxiliary trooper from Cologne Germany Second half of the first century AD The cavalry in the early Roman Republic remained the preserve of the wealthy landed class known as the equites men who could afford the expense of maintaining a horse in addition to arms and armor heavier than those of the common legions Horses were provided by the Republic and could be withdrawn if neglected or misused together with the status of being a cavalryman 16 As the class grew to be more of a social elite instead of a functional property based military grouping the Romans began to employ Italian socii for filling the ranks of their cavalry 17 The weakness of Roman cavalry was demonstrated by Hannibal Barca during the Second Punic War where he used his superior mounted forces to win several battles The most notable of these was the Battle of Cannae where he inflicted a catastrophic defeat on the Romans At about the same time the Romans began to recruit foreign auxiliary cavalry from among Gauls Iberians and Numidians the last being highly valued as mounted skirmishers and scouts see Numidian cavalry Julius Caesar had a high opinion of his escort of Germanic mixed cavalry giving rise to the Cohortes Equitatae Early emperors maintained an ala of Batavian cavalry as their personal bodyguards until the unit was dismissed by Galba after the Batavian Rebellion 18 For the most part Roman cavalry during the early Republic functioned as an adjunct to the legionary infantry and formed only one fifth of the standing force comprising a consular army Except in times of major mobilisation about 1 800 horsemen were maintained with three hundred attached to each legion 19 The relatively low ratio of horsemen to infantry does not mean that the utility of cavalry should be underestimated as its strategic role in scouting skirmishing and outpost duties was crucial to the Romans capability to conduct operations over long distances in hostile or unfamiliar territory On some occasions Roman cavalry also proved its ability to strike a decisive tactical blow against a weakened or unprepared enemy such as the final charge at the Battle of Aquilonia 20 After defeats such as the Battle of Carrhae the Romans learned the importance of large cavalry formations from the Parthians 21 At the same time heavy spears and shields modelled on those favoured by the horsemen of the Greek city states were adopted to replace the lighter weaponry of early Rome 22 These improvements in tactics and equipment reflected those of a thousand years earlier when the first Iranians to reach the Iranian Plateau forced the Assyrians to undertake similar reform Nonetheless the Romans would continue to rely mainly on their heavy infantry supported by auxiliary cavalry Late Roman Empire and the Migration Period Edit Reenactor as a Roman auxiliary cavalryman In the army of the late Roman Empire cavalry played an increasingly important role The Spatha the classical sword throughout most of the 1st millennium was adopted as the standard model for the Empire s cavalry forces By the 6th century these had evolved into lengthy straight weapons influenced by Persian and other eastern patterns 23 The most widespread employment of heavy cavalry at this time was found in the forces of the Iranian empires the Parthians and their Persian Sasanian successors Both but especially the former were famed for the cataphract fully armored cavalry armed with lances even though the majority of their forces consisted of lighter horse archers The West first encountered this eastern heavy cavalry during the Hellenistic period with further intensive contacts during the eight centuries of the Roman Persian Wars At first the Parthians mobility greatly confounded the Romans whose armoured close order infantry proved unable to match the speed of the Parthians However later the Romans would successfully adapt such heavy armor and cavalry tactics by creating their own units of cataphracts and clibanarii 24 The decline of the Roman infrastructure made it more difficult to field large infantry forces and during the 4th and 5th centuries cavalry began to take a more dominant role on the European battlefield also in part made possible by the appearance of new larger breeds of horses The replacement of the Roman saddle by variants on the Scythian model with pommel and cantle 25 was also a significant factor as was the adoption of stirrups and the concomitant increase in stability of the rider s seat Armored cataphracts began to be deployed in eastern Europe and the Near East following the precedents established by Persian forces as the main striking force of the armies in contrast to the earlier roles of cavalry as scouts raiders and outflankers 26 The late Roman cavalry tradition of organized units in a standing army differed fundamentally from the nobility of the Germanic invaders individual warriors who could afford to provide their own horses and equipment While there was no direct linkage with these predecessors the early medieval knight also developed as a member of a social and martial elite able to meet the considerable expenses required by his role from grants of land and other incomes 27 Asia EditSee also Horse archer Chinese caltrop jar Central Asia Edit Main articles Mongol military tactics and organization and Mongol Empire Military setup Xiongnu Tujue Avars Kipchaks Khitans Mongols Don Cossacks and the various Turkic peoples are also examples of the horse mounted groups that managed to gain substantial successes in military conflicts with settled agrarian and urban societies due to their strategic and tactical mobility As European states began to assume the character of bureaucratic nation states supporting professional standing armies recruitment of these mounted warriors was undertaken in order to fill the strategic roles of scouts and raiders Mongols at war 14th century The best known instance of the continued employment of mounted tribal auxiliaries were the Cossack cavalry regiments of the Russian Empire In Eastern Europe and out onto the steppes cavalry remained important much longer and dominated the scene of warfare until the early 17th century and even beyond as the strategic mobility of cavalry was crucial for the semi nomadic pastoralist lives that many steppe cultures led Tibetans also had a tradition of cavalry warfare in several military engagements with the Chinese Tang dynasty 618 907 AD Khanates of Central Asia Edit Main article Mounted archery Mongol mounted archer of Genghis Khan late 12th century Tatar vanguard in Eastern Europe 13th 14th centuries East Asia Edit Further information Horses in East Asian warfare China Edit An Eastern Han glazed ceramic statue of a horse with bridle and halter headgear from Sichuan late 2nd century to early 3rd century AD Further east the military history of China specifically northern China held a long tradition of intense military exchange between Han Chinese infantry forces of the settled dynastic empires and the mounted nomads or barbarians of the north The naval history of China was centered more to the south where mountains rivers and large lakes necessitated the employment of a large and well kept navy In 307 BC King Wuling of Zhao the ruler of the former state of Jin ordered his commanders and troops to adopt the trousers of the nomads as well as practice the nomads form of mounted archery to hone their new cavalry skills 8 A bas relief of a soldier and horse with saddle and stirrups from the tomb of Chinese Emperor Taizong of Tang r 626 649 c 650 The adoption of massed cavalry in China also broke the tradition of the chariot riding Chinese aristocracy in battle which had been in use since the ancient Shang dynasty c 1600 1050 BC 28 By this time large Chinese infantry based armies of 100 000 to 200 000 troops were now buttressed with several hundred thousand mounted cavalry in support or as an effective striking force 29 The handheld pistol and trigger crossbow was invented in China in the fourth century BC 30 it was written by the Song dynasty scholars Zeng Gongliang Ding Du and Yang Weide in their book Wujing Zongyao 1044 AD that massed missile fire by crossbowmen was the most effective defense against enemy cavalry charges 31 The Qianlong Emperor in ceremonial armor on horseback painted by Giuseppe Castiglione dated 1739 or 1758 On many occasions the Chinese studied nomadic cavalry tactics and applied the lessons in creating their own potent cavalry forces while in others they simply recruited the tribal horsemen wholesale into their armies and in yet other cases nomadic empires proved eager to enlist Chinese infantry and engineering as in the case of the Mongol Empire and its sinicized part the Yuan dynasty 1279 1368 The Chinese recognized early on during the Han dynasty 202 BC 220 AD that they were at a disadvantage in lacking the number of horses the northern nomadic peoples mustered in their armies Emperor Wu of Han r 141 87 BC went to war with the Dayuan for this reason since the Dayuan were hoarding a massive amount of tall strong Central Asian bred horses in the Hellenized Greek region of Fergana established slightly earlier by Alexander the Great Although experiencing some defeats early on in the campaign Emperor Wu s war from 104 BC to 102 BC succeeded in gathering the prized tribute of horses from Fergana Cavalry tactics in China were enhanced by the invention of the saddle attached stirrup by at least the 4th century as the oldest reliable depiction of a rider with paired stirrups was found in a Jin dynasty tomb of the year 322 AD 32 33 34 The Chinese invention of the horse collar by the 5th century was also a great improvement from the breast harness allowing the horse to haul greater weight without heavy burden on its skeletal structure 35 36 Korea Edit The horse warfare of Korea was first started during the ancient Korean kingdom Gojoseon Since at least the 3rd century BC there was influence of northern nomadic peoples and Yemaek peoples on Korean warfare By roughly the first century BC the ancient kingdom of Buyeo also had mounted warriors 37 The cavalry of Goguryeo one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea were called Gaemamusa 개마무사 鎧馬武士 and were renowned as a fearsome heavy cavalry force King Gwanggaeto the Great often led expeditions into the Baekje Gaya confederacy Buyeo Later Yan and against Japanese invaders with his cavalry 38 In the 12th century Jurchen tribes began to violate the Goryeo Jurchen borders and eventually invaded Goryeo Korea After experiencing the invasion by the Jurchen Korean general Yun Gwan realized that Goryeo lacked efficient cavalry units He reorganized the Goryeo military into a professional army that would contain decent and well trained cavalry units In 1107 the Jurchen were ultimately defeated and surrendered to Yun Gwan To mark the victory General Yun built nine fortresses to the northeast of the Goryeo Jurchen borders 동북 9성 東北 九城 A mounted samurai with bow and arrows wearing a horned helmet Circa 1878 Japan Edit In the Battle of Ichi no Tani Japanese cavalry moving down a mountain side The ancient Japanese of the Kofun period also adopted cavalry and equine culture by the 5th century AD The emergence of the samurai aristocracy led to the development of armoured horse archers themselves to develop into charging lancer cavalry as gunpowder weapons rendered bows obsolete Japanese cavalry was largely made up of landowners who would be upon a horse to better survey the troops they were called upon to bring to an engagement rather than traditional mounted warfare seen in other cultures with massed cavalry units An example is Yabusame 流鏑馬 a type of mounted archery in traditional Japanese archery An archer on a running horse shoots three special turnip headed arrows successively at three wooden targets This style of archery has its origins at the beginning of the Kamakura period Minamoto no Yoritomo became alarmed at the lack of archery skills his samurai had He organized yabusame as a form of practice Currently the best places to see yabusame performed are at the Tsurugaoka Hachiman gu in Kamakura and Shimogamo Shrine in Kyoto during Aoi Matsuri in early May It is also performed in Samukawa and on the beach at Zushi as well as other locations Kasagake or Kasakake 笠懸 かさがけ lit hat shooting is a type of Japanese mounted archery In contrast to yabusame the types of targets are various and the archer shoots without stopping the horse While yabusame has been played as a part of formal ceremonies kasagake has developed as a game or practice of martial arts focusing on technical elements of horse archery South Asia Edit Indian subcontinent Edit In the Indian subcontinent cavalry played a major role from the Gupta dynasty 320 600 period onwards India has also the oldest evidence for the introduction of toe stirrups 39 Indian literature contains numerous references to the mounted warriors of the Central Asian horse nomads notably the Sakas Kambojas Yavanas Pahlavas and Paradas Numerous Puranic texts refer to a conflict in ancient India 16th century BC 40 in which the horsemen of five nations called the Five Hordes panca ganan or Kṣatriya hordes Kṣatriya ganah attacked and captured the state of Ayudhya by dethroning its Vedic King Bahu 41 Manuscript illustration of the Battle of Kurukshetra The Mahabharata Ramayana numerous Puranas and some foreign sources attest that the Kamboja cavalry frequently played role in ancient wars V R Ramachandra Dikshitar writes Both the Puranas and the epics agree that the horses of the Sindhu and Kamboja regions were of the finest breed and that the services of the Kambojas as cavalry troopers were utilised in ancient wars 42 J A O S writes Most famous horses are said to come either from Sindhu or Kamboja of the latter i e the Kamboja the Indian epic Mahabharata speaks among the finest horsemen 43 Coin of Chandragupta II or Vikramaditya one of the most powerful emperors of the Gupta empire during times referred to as the Golden Age of India Rajput warrior on horseback The Mahabharata speaks of the esteemed cavalry of the Kambojas Sakas Yavanas and Tusharas all of whom had participated in the Kurukshetra war under the supreme command of Kamboja ruler Sudakshin Kamboj 44 Mahabharata and Vishnudharmottara Purana pay especial attention to the Kambojas Yavansa Gandharas etc being ashva yuddha kushalah expert cavalrymen 45 In the Mahabharata war the Kamboja cavalry along with that of the Sakas Yavanas is reported to have been enlisted by the Kuru king Duryodhana of Hastinapura 46 Herodotus c 484 c 425 BC attests that the Gandarian mercenaries i e Gandharans Kambojans of Gandari Strapy of Achaemenids from the 20th strapy of the Achaemenids were recruited in the army of emperor Xerxes I 486 465 BC which he led against the Hellas 47 Similarly the men of the Mountain Land from north of Kabul River equivalent to medieval Kohistan Pakistan figure in the army of Darius III against Alexander at Arbela providing a cavalry force and 15 elephants 48 This obviously refers to Kamboja cavalry south of Hindukush The Kambojas were famous for their horses as well as cavalrymen asva yuddha Kushalah 49 On account of their supreme position in horse Ashva culture they were also popularly known as Ashvakas i e the horsemen 50 and their land was known as Home of Horses 51 They are the Assakenoi and Aspasioi of the Classical writings and the Ashvakayanas and Ashvayanas in Paṇini s Ashtadhyayi The Assakenoi had faced Alexander with 30 000 infantry 20 000 cavalry and 30 war elephants 52 Scholars have identified the Assakenoi and Aspasioi clans of Kunar and Swat valleys as a section of the Kambojas 53 These hardy tribes had offered stubborn resistance to Alexander c 326 BC during latter s campaign of the Kabul Kunar and Swat valleys and had even extracted the praise of the Alexander s historians These highlanders designated as parvatiya Ayudhajivinah in Paṇini s Astadhyayi 54 were rebellious fiercely independent and freedom loving cavalrymen who never easily yielded to any overlord 55 The Sanskrit drama Mudra rakashas by Visakha Dutta and the Jaina work Parishishtaparvan refer to Chandragupta s c 320 BC c 298 BC alliance with Himalayan king Parvataka The Himalayan alliance gave Chandragupta a formidable composite army made up of the cavalry forces of the Shakas Yavanas Kambojas Kiratas Parasikas and Bahlikas as attested by Mudra Rakashas Mudra Rakshasa 2 56 These hordes had helped Chandragupta Maurya defeat the ruler of Magadha and placed Chandragupta on the throne thus laying the foundations of Mauryan dynasty in Northern India The cavalry of Hunas and the Kambojas is also attested in the Raghu Vamsa epic poem of Sanskrit poet Kalidasa 57 Raghu of Kalidasa is believed to be Chandragupta II Vikaramaditya 375 413 15 AD of the well known Gupta dynasty As late as the mediaeval era the Kamboja cavalry had also formed part of the Gurjara Pratihara armed forces from the eighth to the 10th centuries AD They had come to Bengal with the Pratiharas when the latter conquered part of the province 58 59 60 61 62 Ancient Kambojas organised military sanghas and shrenis corporations to manage their political and military affairs as Arthashastra of Kautiliya as well as the Mahabharata record They are described as Ayuddha jivi or Shastr opajivis nations in arms which also means that the Kamboja cavalry offered its military services to other nations as well There are numerous references to Kambojas having been requisitioned as cavalry troopers in ancient wars by outside nations Mughal Empire Edit Main articles Sowar Zamburak Howdah Mahout and Mounted archery Akbar leads the Mughal Army during a campaign The Mughal armies lashkar were primarily a cavalry force The elite corps were the ahadi who provided direct service to the Emperor and acted as guard cavalry Supplementary cavalry or dakhilis were recruited equipped and paid by the central state This was in contrast to the tabinan horsemen who were the followers of individual noblemen Their training and equipment varied widely but they made up the backbone of the Mughal cavalry Finally there were tribal irregulars led by and loyal to tributary chiefs These included Hindus Afghans and Turks summoned for military service when their autonomous leaders were called on by the Imperial government 63 European Middle Ages EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Cavalry news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Horses in the Middle Ages Horse mounted Normans charging in the Bayeux Tapestry 11th century As the quality and availability of heavy infantry declined in Europe with the fall of the Roman Empire heavy cavalry became more effective Infantry that lack the cohesion and discipline of tight formations are more susceptible to being broken and scattered by shock combat the main role of heavy cavalry which rose to become the dominant force on the European battlefield 64 As heavy cavalry increased in importance it became the main focus of military development The arms and armour for heavy cavalry increased the high backed saddle developed and stirrups and spurs were added increasing the advantage of heavy cavalry even more 65 This shift in military importance was reflected in society as well knights took centre stage both on and off the battlefield These are considered the ultimate in heavy cavalry well equipped with the best weapons state of the art armour from head to foot leading with the lance in battle in a full gallop close formation knightly charge that might prove irresistible winning the battle almost as soon as it began A 13th century depiction of a riding horse Note resemblance to the modern Paso Fino A Hussite war wagon it enabled peasants to defeat knights But knights remained the minority of total available combat forces the expense of arms armour and horses was only affordable to a select few While mounted men at arms focused on a narrow combat role of shock combat medieval armies relied on a large variety of foot troops to fulfill all the rest skirmishing flank guards scouting holding ground etc Medieval chroniclers tended to pay undue attention to the knights at the expense of the common soldiers which led early students of military history to suppose that heavy cavalry was the only force that mattered on medieval European battlefields But well trained and disciplined infantry could defeat knights Massed English longbowmen triumphed over French cavalry at Crecy Poitiers and Agincourt while at Gisors 1188 Bannockburn 1314 and Laupen 1339 66 foot soldiers proved they could resist cavalry charges as long as they held their formation Once the Swiss developed their pike squares for offensive as well as defensive use infantry started to become the principal arm This aggressive new doctrine gave the Swiss victory over a range of adversaries and their enemies found that the only reliable way to defeat them was by the use of an even more comprehensive combined arms doctrine as evidenced in the Battle of Marignano The introduction of missile weapons that required less skill than the longbow such as the crossbow and hand cannon also helped remove the focus somewhat from cavalry elites to masses of cheap infantry equipped with easy to learn weapons These missile weapons were very successfully used in the Hussite Wars in combination with Wagenburg tactics This gradual rise in the dominance of infantry led to the adoption of dismounted tactics From the earliest times knights and mounted men at arms had frequently dismounted to handle enemies they could not overcome on horseback such as in the Battle of the Dyle 891 and the Battle of Bremule 1119 but after the 1350s this trend became more marked with the dismounted men at arms fighting as super heavy infantry with two handed swords and poleaxes citation needed In any case warfare in the Middle Ages tended to be dominated by raids and sieges rather than pitched battles and mounted men at arms rarely had any choice other than dismounting when faced with the prospect of assaulting a fortified position Greater Middle East EditMain articles Religious war and Muslim conquests This section duplicates the scope of other sections specifically Asia Please discuss this issue on the talk page and edit it to conform with Wikipedia s Manual of Style by replacing the section with a link and a summary of the repeated material or by spinning off the repeated text into an article in its own right May 2020 Arabs Edit Main articles Mobile guard and List of battles of Muhammad Arab camelry The Islamic Prophet Muhammad made use of cavalry in many of his military campaigns including the Expedition of Dhu Qarad 67 and the expedition of Zaid ibn Haritha in al Is which took place in September 627 AD fifth month of 6 AH of the Islamic calendar 68 Early organized Arab mounted forces under the Rashidun caliphate comprised a light cavalry armed with lance and sword Its main role was to attack the enemy flanks and rear These relatively lightly armored horsemen formed the most effective element of the Muslim armies during the later stages of the Islamic conquest of the Levant The best use of this lightly armed fast moving cavalry was revealed at the Battle of Yarmouk 636 AD in which Khalid ibn Walid knowing the skills of his horsemen used them to turn the tables at every critical instance of the battle with their ability to engage disengage then turn back and attack again from the flank or rear A strong cavalry regiment was formed by Khalid ibn Walid which included the veterans of the campaign of Iraq and Syria Early Muslim historians have given it the name Tali a mutaharrikah طليعة متحركة or the Mobile guard This was used as an advance guard and a strong striking force to route the opposing armies with its greater mobility that give it an upper hand when maneuvering against any Byzantine army With this mobile striking force the conquest of Syria was made easy 69 The Battle of Talas in 751 AD was a conflict between the Arab Abbasid Caliphate and the Chinese Tang dynasty over the control of Central Asia Chinese infantry were routed by Arab cavalry near the bank of the River Talas Later Mamluks were trained as cavalry soldiers Mamluks were to follow the dictates of al furusiyya 70 a code of conduct that included values like courage and generosity but also doctrine of cavalry tactics horsemanship archery and treatment of wounds Maghreb Edit A Moroccan with his Arabian horse along the Barbary coast The Islamic Berber states of North Africa employed elite horse mounted cavalry armed with spears and following the model of the original Arab occupiers of the region Horse harness and weapons were manufactured locally and the six monthly stipends for horsemen were double those of their infantry counterparts During the 8th century Islamic conquest of Iberia large numbers of horses and riders were shipped from North Africa to specialise in raiding and the provision of support for the massed Berber footmen of the main armies 71 Maghrebi traditions of mounted warfare eventually influenced a number of sub Saharan African polities in the medieval era The Esos of Ikoyi military aristocrats of the Yoruba peoples were a notable manifestation of this phenomenon 72 Kanem Bu warriors armed with spears in the retinue of a mounted war chief The Earth and Its Inhabitants 1892 Al Andalus Edit Main article Al Andalus Iran Edit Main articles Qizilbash and Zamburak Qizilbash were a class of Safavid militant warriors in Iran during the 15th to 18th centuries who often fought as elite cavalry 73 74 75 76 Manikin of a Safavid Qizilbash showing characteristic red cap Sa dabad Palace Tehran Persian Zamburak Ottoman Empire Edit Main articles Sipahi and Akinji During its period of greatest expansion from the 14th to 17th centuries cavalry formed the powerful core of the Ottoman armies Registers dated 1475 record 22 000 Sipahi feudal cavalry levied in Europe 17 000 Sipahis recruited from Anatolia and 3 000 Kapikulu regular body guard cavalry 77 During the 18th century however the Ottoman mounted troops evolved into light cavalry serving in the thinly populated regions of the Middle East and North Africa 78 Such frontier horsemen were largely raised by local governors and were separate from the main field armies of the Ottoman Empire At the beginning of the 19th century modernised Nizam I Credit New Army regiments appeared including full time cavalry units officered from the horse guards of the Sultan 79 Ottoman Sipahi An Ottoman Mamluk cavalryman from 1810 armed with a pistol Akinci of the Balkans Ottoman Ghazi cavalrymen during the Battle of Nicopolis 80 Renaissance Europe EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Cavalry news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Knighted cavalry and noblemen painting by Jan van Eyck c 1390 1441 Ironically the rise of infantry in the early 16th century coincided with the golden age of heavy cavalry a French or Spanish army at the beginning of the century could have up to half its numbers made up of various kinds of light and heavy cavalry whereas in earlier medieval and later 17th century armies the proportion of cavalry was seldom more than a quarter Knighthood largely lost its military functions and became more closely tied to social and economic prestige in an increasingly capitalistic Western society With the rise of drilled and trained infantry the mounted men at arms now sometimes called gendarmes and often part of the standing army themselves adopted the same role as in the Hellenistic age that of delivering a decisive blow once the battle was already engaged either by charging the enemy in the flank or attacking their commander in chief Husarz Polish Hussar by Jozef Brandt From the 1550s onwards the use of gunpowder weapons solidified infantry s dominance of the battlefield and began to allow true mass armies to develop This is closely related to the increase in the size of armies throughout the early modern period heavily armored cavalrymen were expensive to raise and maintain and it took years to train a skilled horseman or a horse while arquebusiers and later musketeers could be trained and kept in the field at much lower cost and were much easier to recruit The Spanish tercio and later formations relegated cavalry to a supporting role The pistol was specifically developed to try to bring cavalry back into the conflict together with manoeuvres such as the caracole The caracole was not particularly successful however and the charge whether with lance sword or pistol remained as the primary mode of employment for many types of European cavalry although by this time it was delivered in much deeper formations and with greater discipline than before The demi lancers and the heavily armored sword and pistol reiters were among the types of cavalry whose heyday was in the 16th and 17th centuries During this period the Polish Winged hussars were a dominating heavy cavalry force in Eastern Europe that initially achieved great success against Swedes Russians Turks and other until repeatably beaten by either combined arms tactics increase in firepower or beaten in melee with the Drabant cavalry of the Swedish Empire From their last engagement in 1702 at the Battle of Kliszow until 1776 the obsolete Winged hussars were demoted and largely assigned to ceremonial roles The Polish Winged hussars military prowess peaked at the Siege of Vienna in 1683 when hussar banners participated in the largest cavalry charge in history and successfully repelled the Ottoman attack 18th century Europe and Napoleonic Wars Edit Cavalry charge at Eylau painted by Jean Antoine Simeon Fort Cavalry retained an important role in this age of regularization and standardization across European armies They remained the primary choice for confronting enemy cavalry Attacking an unbroken infantry force head on usually resulted in failure but extended linear infantry formations were vulnerable to flank or rear attacks Cavalry was important at Blenheim 1704 Rossbach 1757 Marengo 1800 Eylau and Friedland 1807 remaining significant throughout the Napoleonic Wars Even with the increasing prominence of infantry cavalry still had an irreplaceable role in armies due to their greater mobility Their non battle duties often included patrolling the fringes of army encampments with standing orders to intercept suspected shirkers and deserters as well as 81 257 266 serving as outpost pickets in advance of the main body During battle lighter cavalry such as hussars and uhlans might skirmish with other cavalry attack light infantry or charge and either capture enemy artillery or render them useless by plugging the touchholes with iron spikes Heavier cavalry such as cuirassiers dragoons and carabiniers usually charged towards infantry formations or opposing cavalry in order to rout them Both light and heavy cavalry pursued retreating enemies the point where most battle casualties occurred 81 266 British infantry formed into anti cavalry squares at the Battle of Quatre Bras The greatest cavalry charge of modern history was at the 1807 Battle of Eylau when the entire 11 000 strong French cavalry reserve led by Joachim Murat launched a huge charge on and through the Russian infantry lines Cavalry s dominating and menacing presence on the battlefield was countered by the use of infantry squares The most notable examples are at the Battle of Quatre Bras and later at the Battle of Waterloo the latter which the repeated charges by up to 9 000 French cavalrymen ordered by Michel Ney failed to break the British Allied army who had formed into squares 82 Massed infantry especially those formed in squares were deadly to cavalry but offered an excellent target for artillery Once a bombardment had disordered the infantry formation cavalry were able to rout and pursue the scattered foot soldiers It was not until individual firearms gained accuracy and improved rates of fire that cavalry was diminished in this role as well Even then light cavalry remained an indispensable tool for scouting screening the army s movements and harassing the enemy s supply lines until military aircraft supplanted them in this role in the early stages of World War I 19th century Edit The charge of the Venezuelan First Division s cavalry at the Battle of Carabobo Europe Edit By the beginning of the 19th century European cavalry fell into four main categories Cuirassiers heavy cavalry Dragoons originally mounted infantry but later regarded as medium cavalry Hussars light cavalry Lancers or Uhlans light cavalry primarily armed with lances The Thin Red Line at the Battle of Balaclava where the 93rd Regiment held off Russian Cavalry There were cavalry variations for individual nations as well France had the chasseurs a cheval Prussia had the Jager zu Pferde 83 Bavaria 84 Saxony and Austria 85 had the Chevaulegers and Russia had Cossacks Britain from the mid 18th century had Light Dragoons as light cavalry and Dragoons Dragoon Guards and Household Cavalry as heavy cavalry Only after the end of the Napoleonic wars were the Household Cavalry equipped with cuirasses and some other regiments were converted to lancers In the United States Army prior to 1862 the cavalry were almost always dragoons The Imperial Japanese Army had its cavalry uniformed as hussars but they fought as dragoons In the Crimean War the Charge of the Light Brigade and the Thin Red Line at the Battle of Balaclava showed the vulnerability of cavalry when deployed without effective support 86 Franco Prussian War Edit Monument to the Spanish Regiment of light cavalry of Alcantara During the Franco Prussian War at the Battle of Mars la Tour in 1870 a Prussian cavalry brigade decisively smashed the centre of the French battle line after skilfully concealing their approach This event became known as Von Bredow s Death Ride after the brigade commander Adalbert von Bredow it would be used in the following decades to argue that massed cavalry charges still had a place on the modern battlefield 87 Imperial expansion Edit Cavalry found a new role in colonial campaigns irregular warfare where modern weapons were lacking and the slow moving infantry artillery train or fixed fortifications were often ineffective against indigenous insurgents unless the latter offered a fight on an equal footing as at Tel el Kebir Omdurman etc Cavalry flying columns proved effective or at least cost effective in many campaigns although an astute native commander like Samori in western Africa Shamil in the Caucasus or any of the better Boer commanders could turn the tables and use the greater mobility of their cavalry to offset their relative lack of firepower compared with European forces In 1903 the British Indian Army maintained forty regiments of cavalry numbering about 25 000 Indian sowars cavalrymen with British and Indian officers 88 Among the more famous regiments in the lineages of the modern Indian and Pakistani armies are The charge of the 21st Lancers at Omdurman 19th Lancers near Mametz during the Battle of the Somme 15 July 1916 Governor General s Bodyguard now President s Bodyguard Skinner s Horse now India s 1st Horse Skinner s Horse Gardner s Lancers now India s 2nd Lancers Gardner s Horse Hodson s Horse now India s 3rd Horse Hodson s of the Bengal Lancers fame 6th Bengal Cavalry later amalgamated with 7th Hariana Lancers to form 18th King Edward s Own Cavalry now 18th Cavalry of the Indian Army Probyn s Horse now 5th Horse Pakistan Royal Deccan Horse now India s The Deccan Horse Poona Horse now India s The Poona Horse Scinde Horse now India s The Scinde Horse Queen s Own Guides Cavalry now Pakistan 11th Prince Albert Victor s Own Cavalry Frontier Force now 11th Cavalry Frontier Force Pakistan Several of these formations are still active though they now are armoured formations for example the Guides Cavalry of Pakistan 89 Algerian spahis of the French Army 1886 The French Army maintained substantial cavalry forces in Algeria and Morocco from 1830 until the end of the Second World War Much of the Mediterranean coastal terrain was suitable for mounted action and there was a long established culture of horsemanship amongst the Arab and Berber inhabitants The French forces included Spahis Chasseurs d Afrique Foreign Legion cavalry and mounted Goumiers 90 Both Spain and Italy raised cavalry regiments from amongst the indigenous horsemen of their North African territories see regulares Italian Spahis 91 and savari respectively Imperial Germany employed mounted formations in South West Africa as part of the Schutztruppen colonial army garrisoning the territory 92 United States Edit Union Cavalry capture Confederate guns at Culpepper In the early American Civil War the regular United States Army mounted rifle dragoon and two existing cavalry regiments were reorganized and renamed cavalry regiments of which there were six 93 Over a hundred other federal and state cavalry regiments were organized but the infantry played a much larger role in many battles due to its larger numbers lower cost per rifle fielded and much easier recruitment However cavalry saw a role as part of screening forces and in foraging and scouting The later phases of the war saw the Federal army developing a truly effective cavalry force fighting as scouts raiders and with repeating rifles as mounted infantry The distinguished 1st Virginia Cavalry ranks as one of the most effectual and successful cavalry units on the Confederate side Noted cavalry commanders included Confederate general J E B Stuart Nathan Bedford Forrest and John Singleton Mosby a k a The Grey Ghost and on the Union side Philip Sheridan and George Armstrong Custer 94 Post Civil War as the volunteer armies disbanded the regular army cavalry regiments increased in number from six to ten among them Custer s U S 7th Cavalry Regiment of Little Bighorn fame and the African American U S 9th Cavalry Regiment and U S 10th Cavalry Regiment The black units along with others both cavalry and infantry collectively became known as the Buffalo Soldiers According to Robert M Utley the frontier army was a conventional military force trying to control by conventional military methods a people that did not behave like conventional enemies and indeed quite often were not enemies at all This is the most difficult of all military assignments whether in Africa Asia or the American West 95 These regiments which rarely took the field as complete organizations served throughout the American Indian Wars through the close of the frontier in the 1890s Volunteer cavalry regiments like the Rough Riders consisted of horsemen such as cowboys ranchers and other outdoorsmen that served as a cavalry in the United States Military 96 Developments 1900 1914 Edit Italian cavalry officers practice their horsemanship in 1904 outside Rome At the beginning of the 20th century all armies still maintained substantial cavalry forces although there was contention over whether their role should revert to that of mounted infantry the historic dragoon function Britain Edit Following the experience of the South African War of 1899 1902 where mounted Boer citizen commandos fighting on foot from cover proved more effective than regular cavalry the British Army withdrew lances for all but ceremonial purposes and placed a new emphasis on training for dismounted action in 1903 Russia Edit In 1882 the Imperial Russian Army converted all its line hussar and lancer regiments to dragoons with an emphasis on mounted infantry training In 1910 these regiments reverted to their historic roles designations and uniforms 97 Germany Edit By 1909 official regulations dictating the role of the Imperial German cavalry had been revised to indicate an increasing realization of the realities of modern warfare The massive cavalry charge in three waves which had previously marked the end of annual maneuvers was discontinued and a new emphasis was placed in training on scouting raiding and pursuit rather than main battle involvement 98 The perceived importance of cavalry was however still evident with thirteen new regiments of mounted rifles Jager zu Pferde being raised shortly before the outbreak of war in 1914 99 France Edit In spite of significant experience in mounted warfare in Morocco during 1908 14 the French cavalry remained a highly conservative institution 100 The traditional tactical distinctions between heavy medium and light cavalry branches were retained 101 French cuirassiers wore breastplates and plumed helmets unchanged from the Napoleonic period during the early months of World War I 102 Dragoons were similarly equipped though they did not wear cuirasses and did carry lances 103 Light cavalry were described as being a blaze of colour French cavalry of all branches were well mounted and were trained to change position and charge at full gallop 104 One weakness in training was that French cavalrymen seldom dismounted on the march and their horses suffered heavily from raw backs in August 1914 105 First World War EditSee also Horses in World War I Opening stages Edit Austro Hungarian cavalry 1898 German cavalryman in September 1914 German South West Africa Dead German cavalry horses after the Battle of Halen where the Belgian cavalry fighting dismounted decimated their still mounted German counterparts Europe 1914 Edit In August 1914 all combatant armies still retained substantial numbers of cavalry and the mobile nature of the opening battles on both Eastern and Western Fronts provided a number of instances of traditional cavalry actions though on a smaller and more scattered scale than those of previous wars The 110 regiments of Imperial German cavalry while as colourful and traditional as any in peacetime appearance 106 had adopted a practice of falling back on infantry support when any substantial opposition was encountered 107 These cautious tactics aroused derision amongst their more conservative French and Russian opponents 108 but proved appropriate to the new nature of warfare A single attempt by the German army on 12 August 1914 to use six regiments of massed cavalry to cut off the Belgian field army from Antwerp foundered when they were driven back in disorder by rifle fire 109 The two German cavalry brigades involved lost 492 men and 843 horses in repeated charges against dismounted Belgian lancers and infantry 110 One of the last recorded charges by French cavalry took place on the night of 9 10 September 1914 when a squadron of the 16th Dragoons overran a German airfield at Soissons while suffering heavy losses 111 Once the front lines stabilised on the Western Front with the start of Trench Warfare a combination of barbed wire uneven muddy terrain machine guns and rapid fire rifles proved deadly to horse mounted troops and by early 1915 most cavalry units were no longer seeing front line action On the Eastern Front a more fluid form of warfare arose from flat open terrain favorable to mounted warfare On the outbreak of war in 1914 the bulk of the Russian cavalry was deployed at full strength in frontier garrisons and during the period that the main armies were mobilizing scouting and raiding into East Prussia and Austrian Galicia was undertaken by mounted troops trained to fight with sabre and lance in the traditional style 112 On 21 August 1914 the 4th Austro Hungarian Kavalleriedivison fought a major mounted engagement at Jaroslavic with the Russian 10th Cavalry Division 113 in what was arguably the final historic battle to involve thousands of horsemen on both sides 114 While this was the last massed cavalry encounter on the Eastern Front the absence of good roads limited the use of mechanized transport and even the technologically advanced Imperial German Army continued to deploy up to twenty four horse mounted divisions in the East as late as 1917 115 Europe 1915 18 Edit A British cavalry trooper in marching order 1914 1918 For the remainder of the War on the Western Front cavalry had virtually no role to play The British and French armies dismounted many of their cavalry regiments and used them in infantry and other roles the Life Guards for example spent the last months of the War as a machine gun corps and the Australian Light Horse served as light infantry during the Gallipoli campaign In September 1914 cavalry comprised 9 28 of the total manpower of the British Expeditionary Force in France by July 1918 this proportion had fallen to 1 65 116 As early as the first winter of the war most French cavalry regiments had dismounted a squadron each for service in the trenches 117 The French cavalry numbered 102 000 in May 1915 but had been reduced to 63 000 by October 1918 118 The German Army dismounted nearly all their cavalry in the West maintaining only one mounted division on that front by January 1917 German dragoons armed with lances after the capture of Warsaw August 1915 Italy entered the war in 1915 with thirty regiments of line cavalry lancers and light horse While employed effectively against their Austro Hungarian counterparts during the initial offensives across the Isonzo River the Italian mounted forces ceased to have a significant role as the front shifted into mountainous terrain By 1916 most cavalry machine gun sections and two complete cavalry divisions had been dismounted and seconded to the infantry 119 Some cavalry were retained as mounted troops in reserve behind the lines in anticipation of a penetration of the opposing trenches that it seemed would never come Tanks introduced on the Western Front by the British in September 1916 during the Battle of the Somme had the capacity to achieve such breakthroughs but did not have the reliable range to exploit them In their first major use at the Battle of Cambrai 1917 the plan was for a cavalry division to follow behind the tanks however they were not able to cross a canal because a tank had broken the only bridge 120 On a few other occasions throughout the war cavalry were readied in significant numbers for involvement in major offensives such as in the Battle of Caporetto and the Battle of Moreuil Wood However it was not until the German Army had been forced to retreat in the Hundred Days Offensive of 1918 that limited numbers of cavalry were again able to operate with any effectiveness in their intended role There was a successful charge by the British 7th Dragoon Guards on the last day of the war 121 In the wider spaces of the Eastern Front a more fluid form of warfare continued and there was still a use for mounted troops Some wide ranging actions were fought again mostly in the early months of the war 122 However even here the value of cavalry was overrated and the maintenance of large mounted formations at the front by the Russian Army put a major strain on the railway system to little strategic advantage 123 In February 1917 the Russian regular cavalry exclusive of Cossacks was reduced by nearly a third from its peak number of 200 000 as two squadrons of each regiment were dismounted and incorporated into additional infantry battalions 124 Their Austro Hungarian opponents plagued by a shortage of trained infantry had been obliged to progressively convert most horse cavalry regiments to dismounted rifle units starting in late 1914 125 Middle East Edit In the Middle East during the Sinai and Palestine Campaign mounted forces British Indian Ottoman Australian Arab and New Zealand retained an important strategic role both as mounted infantry and cavalry In Egypt the mounted infantry formations like the New Zealand Mounted Rifles Brigade and Australian Light Horse of ANZAC Mounted Division operating as mounted infantry drove German and Ottoman forces back from Romani to Magdhaba and Rafa and out of the Egyptian Sinai Peninsula in 1916 After a stalemate on the Gaza Beersheba line between March and October 1917 Beersheba was captured by the Australian Mounted Division s 4th Light Horse Brigade Their mounted charge succeeded after a coordinated attack by the British Infantry and Yeomanry cavalry and the Australian and New Zealand Light Horse and Mounted Rifles brigades A series of coordinated attacks by these Egyptian Expeditionary Force infantry and mounted troops were also successful at the Battle of Mughar Ridge during which the British infantry divisions and the Desert Mounted Corps drove two Ottoman armies back to the Jaffa Jerusalem line The infantry with mainly dismounted cavalry and mounted infantry fought in the Judean Hills to eventually almost encircle Jerusalem which was occupied shortly after During a pause in operations necessitated by the German spring offensive in 1918 on the Western Front joint infantry and mounted infantry attacks towards Amman and Es Salt resulted in retreats back to the Jordan Valley which continued to be occupied by mounted divisions during the summer of 1918 The Australian Mounted Division was armed with swords and in September after the successful breaching of the Ottoman line on the Mediterranean coast by the British Empire infantry XXI Corps was followed by cavalry attacks by the 4th Cavalry Division 5th Cavalry Division and Australian Mounted Divisions which almost encircled two Ottoman armies in the Judean Hills forcing their retreat Meanwhile Chaytor s Force of infantry and mounted infantry in ANZAC Mounted Division held the Jordan Valley covering the right flank to later advance eastwards to capture Es Salt and Amman and half of a third Ottoman army A subsequent pursuit by the 4th Cavalry Division and the Australian Mounted Division followed by the 5th Cavalry Division to Damascus Armoured cars and 5th Cavalry Division lancers were continuing the pursuit of Ottoman units north of Aleppo when the Armistice of Mudros was signed by the Ottoman Empire 126 Post World War I EditA combination of military conservatism in almost all armies and post war financial constraints prevented the lessons of 1914 1918 being acted on immediately There was a general reduction in the number of cavalry regiments in the British French Italian 127 and other Western armies but it was still argued with conviction for example in the 1922 edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica that mounted troops had a major role to play in future warfare 128 The 1920s saw an interim period during which cavalry remained as a proud and conspicuous element of all major armies though much less so than prior to 1914 Cavalry was extensively used in the Russian Civil War and the Soviet Polish War 129 The last major cavalry battle was the Battle of Komarow in 1920 between Poland and the Russian Bolsheviks Colonial warfare in Morocco Syria the Middle East and the North West Frontier of India provided some opportunities for mounted action against enemies lacking advanced weaponry Lithuanian lancers training in the 1930s The post war German Army Reichsheer was permitted a large proportion of cavalry 18 regiments or 16 4 of total manpower under the conditions of the Treaty of Versailles 130 The British Army mechanised all cavalry regiments between 1929 and 1941 redefining their role from horse to armoured vehicles to form the Royal Armoured Corps together with the Royal Tank Regiment The U S Cavalry abandoned its sabres in 1934 131 and commenced the conversion of its horsed regiments to mechanized cavalry starting with the First Regiment of Cavalry in January 1933 132 During the Turkish War of Independence Turkish cavalry under General Fahrettin Altay was instrumental in Kemalist victory over the invading Greek Army in 1922 during the Battle of Dumlupinar V Cavalry division was able to slip behind the Greek army cutting off all communication and supply lines as well as all retreat venues forcing the surrender of the remaining Greek army which may have been the last time in history cavalry played a definitive role in the outcome of a battle Turkish cavalry during mopping up operation 1922 During the 1930s the French Army experimented with integrating mounted and mechanised cavalry units into larger formations 133 Dragoon regiments were converted to motorised infantry trucks and motor cycles and cuirassiers to armoured units while light cavalry Chasseurs a Cheval Hussars and Spahis remained as mounted sabre squadrons 134 The theory was that mixed forces comprising these diverse units could utilise the strengths of each according to circumstances In practice mounted troops proved unable to keep up with fast moving mechanised units over any distance The thirty nine cavalry regiments of the British Indian Army were reduced to twenty one as the result of a series of amalgamations immediately following World War I The new establishment remained unchanged until 1936 when three regiments were redesignated as permanent training units each with six still mounted regiments linked to them In 1938 the process of mechanization began with the conversion of a full cavalry brigade two Indian regiments and one British to armoured car and tank units By the end of 1940 all of the Indian cavalry had been mechanized initially and in the majority of cases to motorized infantry transported in 15cwt trucks 135 The last horsed regiment of the British Indian Army other than the Viceroy s Bodyguard and some Indian States Forces regiments was the 19th King George s Own Lancers which had its final mounted parade at Rawalpindi on 28 October 1939 This unit still exists in the Pakistan Army as an armored regiment World War II EditThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Cavalry news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Horses in World War II While most armies still maintained cavalry units at the outbreak of World War II in 1939 significant mounted action was largely restricted to the Polish Balkan and Soviet campaigns Rather than charge their mounts into battle cavalry units were either used as mounted infantry using horses to move into position and then dismounting for combat or as reconnaissance units especially in areas not suited to tracked or wheeled vehicles Polish Edit Polish uhlan with wz 35 anti tank rifle Military instruction published in Warsaw in 1938 A popular myth is that Polish cavalry armed with lances charged German tanks during the September 1939 campaign This arose from misreporting of a single clash on 1 September near Krojanty when two squadrons of the Polish 18th Lancers armed with sabres scattered German infantry before being caught in the open by German armoured cars 136 Two examples illustrate how the myth developed First because motorised vehicles were in short supply the Poles used horses to pull anti tank weapons into position 137 Second there were a few incidents when Polish cavalry was trapped by German tanks and attempted to fight free However this did not mean that the Polish army chose to attack tanks with horse cavalry 138 Later on the Eastern Front the Red Army did deploy cavalry units effectively against the Germans 139 A German cavalry patrol in May 1940 during the Battle of France A more correct term would be mounted infantry instead of cavalry as horses were primarily used as a means of transportation for which they were very suitable in view of the very poor road conditions in pre war Poland Another myth describes Polish cavalry as being armed with both sabres and lances lances were used for peacetime ceremonial purposes only and the primary weapon of the Polish cavalryman in 1939 was a rifle Individual equipment did include a sabre probably because of well established tradition and in the case of a melee combat this secondary weapon would probably be more effective than a rifle and bayonet Moreover the Polish cavalry brigade order of battle in 1939 included apart from the mounted soldiers themselves light and heavy machine guns wheeled the Anti tank rifle model 35 anti aircraft weapons anti tank artillery such as the Bofors 37 mm also light and scout tanks etc The last cavalry vs cavalry mutual charge in Europe took place in Poland during the Battle of Krasnobrod when Polish and German cavalry units clashed with each other The last classical cavalry charge of the war took place on March 1 1945 during the Battle of Schoenfeld by the 1st Warsaw Independent Cavalry Brigade Infantry and tanks had been employed to little effect against the German position both of which floundered in the open wetlands only to be dominated by infantry and antitank fire from the German fortifications on the forward slope of Hill 157 overlooking the wetlands The Germans had not taken cavalry into consideration when fortifying their position which combined with the Warsaw s swift assault overran the German anti tank guns and consolidated into an attack into the village itself now supported by infantry and tanks Greek Edit The Italian invasion of Greece in October 1940 saw mounted cavalry used effectively by the Greek defenders along the mountainous frontier with Albania Three Greek cavalry regiments two mounted and one partially mechanized played an important role in the Italian defeat in this difficult terrain 140 Soviet Edit Main article Cavalry corps Soviet Union The contribution of Soviet cavalry to the development of modern military operational doctrine and its importance in defeating Nazi Germany has been eclipsed by the higher profile of tanks and airplanes 141 Soviet cavalry contributed significantly to the defeat of the Axis armies 141 They were able to provide the most mobile troops available in the early stages when trucks and other equipment were low in quality as well as providing cover for retreating forces Considering their relatively limited numbers the Soviet cavalry played a significant role in giving Germany its first real defeats in the early stages of the war The continuing potential of mounted troops was demonstrated during the Battle of Moscow against Guderian and the powerful central German 9th Army Pavel Belov was given by Stavka a mobile group including the elite 9th tank brigade ski battalions Katyusha rocket launcher battalion among others the unit additionally received new weapons This newly created group became the first to carry the Soviet counter offensive in late November when the general offensive began on December 5 These mobile units often played major roles in both defensive and offensive operations Cavalry were amongst the first Soviet units to complete the encirclement in the Battle of Stalingrad thus sealing the fate of the German 6th Army Mounted Soviet forces also played a role in the encirclement of Berlin with some Cossack cavalry units reaching the Reichstag in April 1945 Throughout the war they performed important tasks such as the capture of bridgeheads which is considered one of the hardest jobs in battle often doing so with inferior numbers For instance the 8th Guards Cavalry Regiment of the 2nd Guards Cavalry Division Soviet Union 1st Guards Cavalry Corps often fought outnumbered against elite German units By the final stages of the war only the Soviet Union was still fielding mounted units in substantial numbers some in combined mechanized and horse units The main advantage of this tactical approach was in enabling mounted infantry to keep pace with advancing tanks Other factors favoring the retention of mounted forces included the high quality of Russian Cossacks which provided about half of all mounted Soviet cavalry throughout the war They excelled in warfare manoeuvers since the lack of roads limited the effectiveness of wheeled vehicles in many parts of the Eastern Front Another consideration was that sufficient logistic capacity was often not available to support very large motorized forces whereas cavalry was relatively easy to maintain when detached from the main army and acting on its own initiative The main usage of the Soviet cavalry involved infiltration through front lines with subsequent deep raids which disorganized German supply lines Another role was the pursuit of retreating enemy forces during major front line operations and breakthroughs Hungarian Edit During World War 2 the Royal Hungarian Army s hussars were typically only used to undertake reconnaissance tasks against Soviet forces and then only in detachments of section or squadron strength The last documented hussar attack was conducted by Lieutenant Colonel Kalman Mikecz on August 16 1941 at Nikolaev The hussars arriving as reinforcements were employed to break through Russian positions ahead of German troops The hussars equipped with swords and submachine guns broke through the Russian lines in a single attack Eyewitness account of the last hussar attack We were again in a tough fight with the desperately defensive enemy who dug himself along a high railway embankment We ve been attacked four times already and we ve been kicked back all four times The battalion commander swore but the company commanders were helpless Then instead of the artillery support we asked for countless times a Hungarian hussar regiment appeared on the scene We laughed What the hell do they want here with their graceful elegant horses We froze at once these Hungarians went crazy Cavalry Squadron approached after a cavalry squdron The command word rang The bronze brown slender riders almost grew to their saddle Their shining colonel of golden parolis jerked his sword Four or five armored cars cut out of the wings and the regiment slashed across the wide plain with flashing swords in the afternoon sun Seydlitz attacked like this once before Forgetting all caution we climbed out of our covers It was all like a great equestrian movie The first shots rumbled then became less frequent With astonished eyes in disbelief we watched as the Soviet regiment which had so far repulsed our attacks with desperate determination now turned around and left its positions in panic And the triumphant Hungarians chased the Russian in front of them and shredded them with their glittering sabers The hussar sword it seems was a bit much for the nerves of Russians Now for once the ancient weapon has triumphed over modern equipment Erich Kern a German officer wrote his memoir in 1948 142 Italian Edit The last mounted sabre charge by Italian cavalry occurred on August 24 1942 at Isbuscenski Russia when a squadron of the Savoia Cavalry Regiment charged the 812th Siberian Infantry Regiment The remainder of the regiment together with the Novara Lancers made a dismounted attack in an action that ended with the retreat of the Russians after heavy losses on both sides 143 The final Italian cavalry action occurred on October 17 1942 in Poloj now Croatia by a squadron of the Alexandria Cavalry Regiment against a large group of Yugoslav partisans Other Axis Edit Romanian Hungarian and Italian cavalry were dispersed or disbanded following the retreat of the Axis forces from Russia 144 Germany still maintained some mounted mixed with bicycles SS and Cossack units until the last days of the War Finnish Edit Finland used mounted troops against Russian forces effectively in forested terrain during the Continuation War 145 The last Finnish cavalry unit was not disbanded until 1947 United States Edit The U S Army s last horse cavalry actions were fought during World War II a by the 26th Cavalry Regiment a small mounted regiment of Philippine Scouts which fought the Japanese during the retreat down the Bataan peninsula until it was effectively destroyed by January 1942 and b on captured German horses by the mounted reconnaissance section of the U S 10th Mountain Division in a spearhead pursuit of the German Army across the Po Valley in Italy in April 1945 146 The last horsed U S Cavalry the Second Cavalry Division were dismounted in March 1944 British Empire Edit All British Army cavalry regiments had been mechanised since 1 March 1942 when the Queen s Own Yorkshire Dragoons Yeomanry was converted to a motorised role following mounted service against the Vichy French in Syria the previous year The final cavalry charge by British Empire forces occurred on 21 March 1942 when a 60 strong patrol of the Burma Frontier Force encountered Japanese infantry near Toungoo airfield in central Myanmar The Sikh sowars of the Frontier Force cavalry led by Captain Arthur Sandeman of The Central India Horse 21st King George V s Own Horse charged in the old style with sabres and most were killed Mongolia Edit Mongolian cavalry in the Khalkhin Gol 1939 In the early stages of World War II mounted units of the Mongolian People s Army were involved in the Battle of Khalkhin Gol against invading Japanese forces Soviet forces under the command of Georgy Zhukov together with Mongolian forces defeated the Japanese Sixth army and effectively ended the Soviet Japanese Border Wars After the Soviet Japanese Neutrality Pact of 1941 Mongolia remained neutral throughout most of the war but its geographical situation meant that the country served as a buffer between Japanese forces and the Soviet Union In addition to keeping around 10 of the population under arms Mongolia provided half a million trained horses for use by the Soviet Army In 1945 a partially mounted Soviet Mongolian Cavalry Mechanized Group played a supporting role on the western flank of the Soviet invasion of Manchuria The last active service seen by cavalry units of the Mongolian Army occurred in 1946 1948 during border clashes between Mongolia and the Republic of China Post World War II to the present day Edit U S Special Forces and Combat Controllers on horseback with the Northern Alliance of Afghanistan which frequently used horses as military transport While most modern cavalry units have some historic connection with formerly mounted troops this is not always the case The modern Irish Defence Forces DF includes a Cavalry Corps equipped with armoured cars and Scorpion tracked combat reconnaissance vehicles The DF has never included horse cavalry since its establishment in 1922 other than a small mounted escort of Blue Hussars drawn from the Artillery Corps when required for ceremonial occasions However the mystique of the cavalry is such that the name has been introduced for what was always a mechanised force Some engagements in late 20th and early 21st century guerrilla wars involved mounted troops particularly against partisan or guerrilla fighters in areas with poor transport infrastructure Such units were not used as cavalry but rather as mounted infantry Examples occurred in Afghanistan Portuguese Africa and Rhodesia The French Army used existing mounted squadrons of Spahis to a limited extent for patrol work during the Algerian War 1954 62 The Swiss Army maintained a mounted dragoon regiment for combat purposes until 1973 The Portuguese Army used horse mounted cavalry with some success in the wars of independence in Angola and Mozambique in the 1960s and 1970s 147 During the 1964 79 Rhodesian Bush War the Rhodesian Army created an elite mounted infantry unit called Grey s Scouts to fight unconventional actions against the rebel forces of Robert Mugabe and Joshua Nkomo The horse mounted infantry of the Scouts were effective and reportedly feared by their opponents in the rebel African forces In the 1978 to present Afghan Civil War period there have been several instances of horse mounted combat Central and South American armies maintained mounted cavalry for longer than those of Asia Europe or North America The Mexican Army included a number of horse mounted cavalry regiments as late as the mid 1990s and the Chilean Army had five such regiments in 1983 as mounted mountain troops 148 The Soviet Army retained horse cavalry divisions until 1955 At the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 there was still an independent horse mounted cavalry squadron in Kyrgyzstan 149 Operational horse cavalry Edit Today the Indian Army s 61st Cavalry is reported to be the largest existing horse mounted cavalry unit still having operational potential 150 It was raised in 1951 from the amalgamated state cavalry squadrons of Gwalior Jodhpur and Mysore While primarily utilised for ceremonial purposes the regiment can be deployed for internal security or police roles if required 151 The 61st Cavalry and the President s Body Guard parade in full dress uniform in New Delhi each year in what is probably the largest assembly of traditional cavalry still to be seen in the world Both the Indian and the Pakistani armies maintain armoured regiments with the titles of Lancers or Horse dating back to the 19th century As of 2007 the Chinese People s Liberation Army employed two battalions of horse mounted border guards in Xinjiang for border patrol purposes PLA mounted units last saw action during border clashes with Vietnam in the 1970s and 1980s after which most cavalry units were disbanded as part of major military downsizing in the 1980s 152 In the wake of the 2008 Sichuan earthquake there were calls from whom to rebuild the army horse inventory for disaster relief in difficult terrain Subsequent Chinese media reports 152 153 154 confirm that the PLA maintains operational horse cavalry at squadron strength in Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia for scouting logistical and border security purposes The Chilean Army still maintains a mixed armoured cavalry regiment with elements of it acting as mounted mountain exploration troops based in the city of Angol being part of the III Mountain Division 155 circular reference and another independent exploration cavalry detachment in the town of Chaiten The rugged mountain terrain calls for the use of special horses suited for that use The Argentine Army has two mounted cavalry units the Regiment of Horse Grenadiers which performs mostly ceremonial duties but at the same time is responsible for the president s security in this case acting as infantry and the 4th Mountain Cavalry Regiment which comprises both horse and light armoured squadrons stationed in San Martin de los Andes where it has an exploration role as part the 6th Mountain Brigade Most armoured cavalry units of the Army are considered successors to the old cavalry regiments from the Independence Wars and keep their traditional names such as Hussars Cuirassiers Lancers etc and uniforms Equestrian training remains an important part of their tradition especially among officers Ceremonial horse cavalry and armored cavalry retaining traditional titles Edit Italian Army regiment Lancieri di Montebello 8th on public duties in Rome 2019 Cavalry or mounted gendarmerie units continue to be maintained for purely or primarily ceremonial purposes by the Algerian Argentine Bolivian Brazilian British Bulgarian Canadian Chilean Colombian Danish Dutch Finnish French Hungarian Indian Italian Jordanian Malaysian Moroccan Nepalese Nigerian North Korean Omani Pakistani Panamanian Paraguayan Peruvian Polish Portuguese Russian Senegalese Spanish Swedish Thai Tunisian Turkmenistan United States Uruguayan and Venezuelan armed forces A number of armoured regiments in the British Army retain the historic designations of Hussars Dragoons Light Dragoons Dragoon Guards Lancers and Yeomanry Only the Household Cavalry consisting of the Life Guards mounted squadron The Blues and Royals mounted squadron the State Trumpeters of The Household Cavalry and the Household Cavalry Mounted Band are maintained for mounted and dismounted ceremonial duties in London The French Army still has regiments with the historic designations of Cuirassiers Hussars Chasseurs Dragoons and Spahis Only the cavalry of the Republican Guard and a ceremonial fanfare detachment of trumpeters for the cavalry armoured branch 156 as a whole are now mounted In the Canadian Army a number of regular and reserve units have cavalry roots including The Royal Canadian Hussars Montreal the Governor General s Horse Guards Lord Strathcona s Horse The British Columbia Dragoons The Royal Canadian Dragoons and the South Alberta Light Horse Of these only Lord Strathcona s Horse and the Governor General s Horse Guards maintain an official ceremonial horse mounted cavalry troop or squadron 157 The modern Pakistan army maintains about 40 armoured regiments with the historic titles of Lancers Cavalry or Horse Six of these date back to the 19th century although only the President s Body Guard remains horse mounted In 2002 the Army of the Russian Federation reintroduced a ceremonial mounted squadron wearing historic uniforms Both the Australian and New Zealand armies follow the British practice of maintaining traditional titles Light Horse or Mounted Rifles for modern mechanised units However neither country retains a horse mounted unit Several armored units of the modern United States Army retain the designation of armored cavalry The United States also has air cavalry units equipped with helicopters The Horse Cavalry Detachment of the U S Army s 1st Cavalry Division made up of active duty soldiers still functions as an active unit trained to approximate the weapons tools equipment and techniques used by the United States Cavalry in the 1880s 158 159 Non combat support roles Edit The First Troop Philadelphia City Cavalry is a volunteer unit within the Pennsylvania Army National Guard which serves as a combat force when in federal service but acts in a mounted disaster relief role when in state service 160 In addition the Parsons Mounted Cavalry is a Reserve Officer Training Corps unit which forms part of the Corps of Cadets at Texas A amp M University Valley Forge Military Academy and College also has a Mounted Company known as D Troop Some individual U S states maintain cavalry units as a part of their respective state defense forces The Maryland Defense Force includes a cavalry unit Cavalry Troop A which serves primarily as a ceremonial unit 161 The unit training includes a saber qualification course based upon the 1926 U S Army course 162 Cavalry Troop A also assists other Maryland agencies as a rural search and rescue asset 162 In Massachusetts The National Lancers trace their lineage to a volunteer cavalry militia unit established in 1836 and are currently organized as an official part of the Massachusetts Organized Militia 163 The National Lancers maintain three units Troops A B and C which serve in a ceremonial role and assist in search and rescue missions 163 In July 2004 the National Lancers were ordered into active state service to guard Camp Curtis Guild during the 2004 Democratic National Convention 163 The Governor s Horse Guard of Connecticut maintains two companies which are trained in urban crowd control 162 In 2020 the California State Guard stood up the 26th Mounted Operations Detachment a search and rescue cavalry unit 164 Social status EditFrom the beginning of civilization to the 20th century ownership of heavy cavalry horses has been a mark of wealth amongst settled peoples A cavalry horse involves considerable expense in breeding training feeding and equipment and has very little productive use except as a mode of transport For this reason and because of their often decisive military role the cavalry has typically been associated with high social status This was most clearly seen in the feudal system where a lord was expected to enter combat armored and on horseback and bring with him an entourage of lightly armed peasants on foot If landlords and peasant levies came into conflict the poorly trained footmen would be ill equipped to defeat armored knights In later national armies service as an officer in the cavalry was generally a badge of high social status For instance prior to 1914 most officers of British cavalry regiments came from a socially privileged background and the considerable expenses associated with their role generally required private means even after it became possible for officers of the line infantry regiments to live on their pay Options open to poorer cavalry officers in the various European armies included service with less fashionable though often highly professional frontier or colonial units These included the British Indian cavalry the Russian Cossacks or the French Chasseurs d Afrique During the 19th and early 20th centuries most monarchies maintained a mounted cavalry element in their royal or imperial guards These ranged from small units providing ceremonial escorts and palace guards through to large formations intended for active service The mounted escort of the Spanish Royal Household provided an example of the former and the twelve cavalry regiments of the Prussian Imperial Guard an example of the latter In either case the officers of such units were likely to be drawn from the aristocracies of their respective societies On film EditSome sense of the noise and power of a cavalry charge can be gained from the 1970 film Waterloo which featured some 2 000 cavalrymen 165 some of them Cossacks It included detailed displays of the horsemanship required to manage animal and weapons in large numbers at the gallop unlike the real battle of Waterloo where deep mud significantly slowed the horses 166 The Gary Cooper movie They Came to Cordura contains a scene of a cavalry regiment deploying from march to battle line formation A smaller scale cavalry charge can be seen in The Lord of the Rings The Return of the King 2003 although the finished scene has substantial computer generated imagery raw footage and reactions of the riders are shown in the Extended Version DVD Appendices Other films that show cavalry actions include The Charge of the Light Brigade about the Battle of Balaclava in the Crimean War 40 000 Horsemen about the Australian Light Horse during the Sinai and Palestine campaign of World War I The Lighthorsemen about the Battle of Beersheba 1917 War Horse about the British cavalry in Europe during World War I Hubal about the last months September 1939 April 1940 of Poland s first World War II guerrilla Major Henryk Dobrzanski Hubal The Patriot includes light cavalry usage And Quiet Flows the Don depicts Don Cossacks during World War I Kingdom of Heaven includes a cavalry charge during the Siege of KerakExamples Edit Horse mounted color guard from Marine Corps Logistics Base Barstow A cavalryman of Hakkapeliitta the Finnish cavalry of Thirty Years War featured on a 1940 Finnish stamp Types Edit Heavy cavalry Cataphracts Cuirassier Polish winged hussars Light cavalry Hobelars medieval light horse Hussar Numidian cavalry Soldado de cuera Uhlans Horse archer Shock troops Companion cavalry Lancers Mounted infantry Carabinier Dragoons Military communities Cossacks Equites Roman cavalry Kalmyks Mamluks Polish cavalry Chariot Scythed chariot Elephantry a cavalry unit containing elephant mounted troops Camel cavalry Mounted police Royal Canadian Mounted Police Dubious Moose cavalry cavalry mounted on moose European elk Units Edit 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment United States 278th Armored Cavalry Regiment United States Australian Light Horse Bayreuth Dragoons The Blues and Royals British Army who with the Life Guards form the Household Cavalry British Columbia Dragoons Canadian Army 1st Cavalry Division United States 1st The Queen s Dragoon Guards British Army Cavalry Corps Irish Army Chasseurs d Afrique French Army Chinacos Mexican irregular cavalry of the 19th century Garde Republicaine French Gendarmerie Governor General s Horse Guards Canada Guarda Nacional Republicana Portuguese National Guard Guides Cavalry Pakistan Army Hakkapeliitta Finnish cavalry of Thirty Years War Ironside King s Royal Hussars British Army Light Dragoons British Army Panserbataljonen Norwegian Army Queen s Own Yeomanry a British Army Reserve Light Cavalry Regiment Queen s Royal Hussars British Army Regulares Spanish Morocco Royal Dragoon Guards British Army Royal Lancers British Army Royal Scots Dragoon Guards Carabiniers amp Greys British Army Royal Wessex Yeomanry a British Army Reserve Armoured Regiment Royal Yeomanry a British Army Reserve Light Cavalry Regiment Savage Division North Caucasus Savari Italian North African Scottish and North Irish Yeomanry a British Army Reserve Light Cavalry Regiment Sipahi Ottoman South Alberta Light Horse Canadian Army Spahi French North African Tagmata Byzantine United States CavalryNotable horse cavalrymen EditGeorgios Stanotas commander of the Hellenic Army s Cavalry Division during World War II 167 Didier Courreges major in the French Army member of Ecole Nationale d Equitation s Cadre Noir Olympian at 2004 Summer Olympics Edwin Ramsey lieutenant colonel in the 26th Cavalry Regiment during World War II recipient of the Distinguished Service Cross led the last cavalry charge in American military history 168 General Fahrettin Altay commander of the V Cavalry Division of the Turkish 1st Army during the Turkish War of Independence which was instrumental in victory over the invading Greek Army His name is given to the new Turkish battle tank Altay Ataturk un Butun Eserleri Cilt 27 Kaynak Yayinlari 1998 ISBN 978 975 343 235 1 p 81 Gallery Edit Washington National Guard cavalry pictured in Tacoma Washington in 1907 French cuirassiers wearing breastplates and helmets parade through Paris on the way to battle August 1914 Spanish light cavalry cazadores during the Rif War 1921 Cavalry of Poland in Warsaw August 1939 Polish PZL W 3 Sokol of the 66 Air Cavalry Squadron 25th Aeromobile Cavalry Brigade The mounted President s Bodyguard of the Indian Army French Republican Guard 2008 Bastille Day military parade The President s Body Guard of the Pakistan Army 2006 Troopers of the Blues and Royals on mounted duty in Whitehall London Turkmenistan ceremonial cavalry in the Independence Day parade 2011 A Mongolian military horseman 2013 Representative Cavalry Squadron of the Polish Army on military parade in Warsaw 2006See also EditCavalry tactics Shock tactics Horses in warfare Armored reconnaissance a modern role in most militaries for cavalry titled unitsNotes Edit John Keegan pages 188 189 A History of Warfare ISBN 0 09 174527 6 p 490 Lynn eARMOR The Principles of the Employment of Armor www benning army mil Retrieved 2021 04 11 p 1 Menon Terrence Wise p 18 Ancient Armies of the Middle East Osprey Publishing Ltd 1981 ISBN 0 85045 384 4 Kelder Jorrit Horseback riding and Cavalry in Mycenaean Greece Terrence Wise plate H Ancient Armies of the Middle East Osprey Publishing Ltd 1981 ISBN 0 85045 384 4 a b Ebrey and others Pre Modern East Asia pp 29 30 Warry John 1980 Warfare in the Classical World p 164 ISBN 0 86101 034 5 Warry John 1980 Warfare in the Classical World p 37 ISBN 0 86101 034 5 Sekunda Nick 1984 The Army of Alexander the Great p 18 ISBN 0 85045 539 1 Warry John 1980 Warfare in the Classical World p 54 ISBN 0 86101 034 5 Sekunda Nick 1984 The Army of Alexander the Great p 17 ISBN 0 85045 539 1 Sekunda Nicholas 20 November 2012 Macedonian Armies after Alexander 323 168 BC p 42 ISBN 978 1 84908 714 8 Sekunda Nick 1984 The Army of Alexander the Great pp 14 22 ISBN 0 85045 539 1 Sekunda Nick 1996 Republican Roman Army 200 104 BC p 36 ISBN 1 85532 598 5 Sekunda Nick 17 July 1995 Early Roman Armies p 33 ISBN 1 85532 513 6 Rankov Dr Boris 27 January 1994 The Praetorian Guard p 12 ISBN 1 85532 361 3 Sekunda Nick 1996 Republican Roman Army 200 104 BC pp 36 37 ISBN 1 85532 598 5 Sekunda Nick 17 July 1995 Early Roman Armies pp 37 38 ISBN 1 85532 513 6 Negin Nick 20 November 2018 Roman heavy Cavalry 1 Cataphractarii amp Clibanarii 1st Century BC 5th Century AD p 6 ISBN 978 1 4728 3004 3 Sekunda Nick 1996 Republican Roman Army 200 104 BC p 38 ISBN 1 85532 598 5 Negin Andry 24 November 2020 Roman Heavy Cavalry 2 p 26 ISBN 978 1 4728 3950 3 Roman Persian Wars Historynet com 12 June 2006 Archived from the original on 29 May 2006 Retrieved November 25 2012 The raised rear part of a saddle Negin Andry 20 November 2018 Roman Heavy Cavalry 1 pp 28 30 ISBN 978 1 4728 3004 3 Newark Peter 1987 Sabre amp Lance An Illustrated History of Cavalry pp 23 24 ISBN 0 7137 1813 7 Ebrey 29 Ebrey 30 Ebrey The Cambridge Illustrated History of China 41 Peers 130 we can right anything Dien Albert THE STIRRUP AND ITS EFFECT ON CHINESE MILITARY HISTORY The stirrup history of Chinese science UNESCO Courier October 1988 Archived from the original on 13 October 2007 The invention and influences of stirrup Archived from the original on December 3 2008 Needham Volume 4 Part 2 322 Needham Volume 4 Part 2 305 Ebrey 120 Lee Peter H amp Wm Theodore De Bary Sources of Korean Tradition pp 24 26 Columbia University Press 1997 Invention of the Stirrup ThoughtCo Retrieved 2017 03 11 pp 182 183 Pargiter Harivamsa 14 1 19 Vayu Purana 88 127 43 Brahma Purana 8 35 51 Brahamanda Purana 3 63 123 141 Shiva Purana 7 61 23 Vishnu Purana 5 3 15 21 Padama Purana 6 21 16 33 etc War in Ancient India 1944 p 178 V R Ramachandra Dikshtar Military art and science Journal of American Oriental society 1889 p 257 American Oriental Society The Social and Military Position of the Ruling Caste in Ancient India As 1972 p 201 Edward Washburn Hopkins Caste Mahabharata 10 18 13 cf Ancient Indian Civilization 1985 p 120 Grigoriĭ Maksimovich Bongard Levin History Cf also A History of Zoroastrianism 1991 p 129 Mary Boyce Frantz Grenet MBH 1 185 13 Felicitation Volume Presented to Professor Sripad Krishna Belvalkar 1957 p 260 Dr Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan Shripad Krishna Belvalkar Ashva yuddha kushalah Mahabharata 7 7 14 See also Vishnudharmottara Purana Part II Chapter 118 Post Gupta Polity 500 700 AD A Study of the Growth of Feudal Elements and Rural Administration 1972 p 136 Ganesh Prasad Sinha Wisdom in the Puranas 1969 p 64 professor Sen Sarma etc Some Kṣatriya Tribes of Ancient India 1924 p 238 Dr B C Law Kshatriyas The Battle of Kurukshetra 1987 p 389 Maggi Lidchi Grassi Kurukshetra India Herodotus Book VII 65 70 86 187 History of Persian Empire p 232 Dr A M Olmstead Arrian s Anabasis III 8 3 6 Political History of Ancient India 1996 p 216 Dr Raychaudhury Ashva yuddha kushalah Mahabharata 7 7 14 Kumbhakonam Edition See also Vishnudharmottara Purana Part II Chapter 118 Post Gupta Polity 500 700 AD A Study of the Growth of Feudal Elements and Rural Administration 1972 p 136 Ganesh Prasad Sinha Wisdom in the Puranas 1969 p 64 prof Sen Sarma etc Kashmir Polity C 600 1200 AD 1986 p 237 V N Drabu Political Science Hindu Polity A Constitutional History of India in Hindu Times 1943 p 145 Dr K P Jayaswal i e Kambojo assa nam ayata nam See Samangalavilasini Vol I p 124 See also Historie du Bouddhisme Indien p 110 E Lamotte Political History of Ancient India 1996 p 133 fn 6 pp 216 20 Dr H C Raychaudhury Dr B N Mukerjee Some Kṣatriya Tribes of Ancient India 1924 p 238 Dr B C Kshatriyas Studies in Indian History and Civilization 1962 p 351 Dr Buddha Prakash India Age of the Nandas and Mauryas 1967 p 49 Dr K A Nilakanta Sastri Par ailleurs le Kamboja est regulierement mentionne comme la patrie des chevaux Asvanam ayatanam et cette reputation bien etablie gagne peut etre aux eleveurs de chevaux du Bajaur et du Swat l appellation d Aspasioi du v p aspa et d assakenoi du skt asva cheval See Historie du Bouddhisme Indien p 110 E Lamotte See also Hindu Polity A Constitutional History of India in Hindu Times 1978 p 140 Dr K P Jayswal Political History of Ancient India 1996 p 133 fn 6 pp 216 20 Also Commentary op cit p 576 fn 22 Dr H C Raychaudhury Dr B N Mukerjee History of Indian Buddhism From the Origins to the Saka Era 1988 p 100 History East and West 1950 pp 28 157 58 Istituto italiano per il Medio ed Estremo Oriente Editor Prof Giuseppe Tucci Co editors Prof Mario Bussagli Prof Lionello Lanciotti Panjab Past and Present pp 9 10 Dr Buddha Parkash Raja Porus 1990 Publication Bureau Punjabi University Patiala History of Panjab Vol I Editors Dr Fauja Singh Dr L M Josh Publication Bureau Panjabi University Patiala History of Porus 1967 p 89 Dr Buddha Prakash Ancient Kamboja People and country 1981 pp 271 72 278 Dr J L Kamboj These Kamboj People 1979 pp 119 192 Kambojas Through the Ages 2005 pp 129 218 19 S Kirpal Singh etc Ashtadhyayi 4 3 91 India as Known to Paṇini 1953 pp 424 436 39 455 457 Dr V S Aggarwala See History of Punjab Vol I 1997 p 225 Dr Buddha Prakash Raja Porus 1990 p 9 Publication Bureau Punjabi University Patiala In Sanskrit asti tava Shaka Yavana Kirata Kamboja Parasika Bahlika parbhutibhih Chankyamatipragrahittaishcha Chandergupta Parvateshvara balairudidhibhiriva parchalitsalilaih samantaad uprudham Kusumpurama Mudra Rakshasa 2 Kalidasa 1960 p 141 Raghunath Damodar Karmarkar Indian Historical Quarterly XV 4 December 1939 p 511 Dr H C Ray History of Ancient Bengal 1971 pp 182 83 Dr R C Majumdar Indian Historical Quarterly 1963 p 625 Dynastic History of Magadha 1977 p 208 Epigraphia Indiaca XVIII p 304ff Nicolle Dr David 1993 Mughul India 1504 1761 pp 10 11 ISBN 1 85532 344 3 Macdowall Simon 13 November 1995 Late Roman Cavalryman 236 565AD p 28 ISBN 1 85532 567 5 Negin Andrey 24 November 2020 Roman Heavy Cavalry 2 pp 46 48 ISBN 978 1 4728 3950 3 Koch H W 1978 Medieval Warfare p 189 ISBN 0 86124 008 1 Mubarakpuri The Sealed Nectar p 231 online Hawarey Mosab 2010 The Journey of Prophecy Days of Peace and War Arabic Islamic Book Trust ISBN 9789957051648 p 239 Muir tradition of al furusiyya is defined by principles of horsemanship chivalry and the mutual dependence of the rider and the horse Nicole Dr David 25 January 2001 The Moors The Islamic West 7th 15th centuries AD p 17 ISBN 1 85532 964 6 Johnson Samuel 1921 The History of the Yorubas from the earliest times to the beginning of the British protectorate p 73 75 Frances Pritchett part2 19 columbia edu Retrieved 17 January 2014 Muhammad Latif The History of the Panjab Calcutta 1891 p 200 Cornell Vincent J 2007 Voices of Islam Praeger perspectives Greenwood Publishing Group p 225 vol 1 ISBN 978 0275987329 OCLC 230345942 Parker Charles H 2010 Global Interactions in the Early Modern Age 1400 1800 Cambridge University Press p 53 ISBN 978 1139491419 Nicolle David The Janissaries p 9 ISBN 1 85532 413 X Nicolle David 9 March 1998 Armies of the Ottoman Empire 1775 1820 p 8 ISBN 1 85532 697 3 Nicolle David 9 March 1998 Armies of the Ottoman Empire 1775 1820 p 37 ISBN 1 85532 697 3 Lokman 1588 Battle of Nicopolis 1396 Hunername Archived from the original on 2013 05 29 a b White Matthew 2012 The Great Big Book of Horrible Things W W Norton p 363 ISBN 9780393081923 BBC History The Battle of Waterloo Archived from the original on 2015 03 26 Retrieved 2019 12 20 Herr Ulrich 2006 The German Cavalry from 1871 to 1914 p 594 ISBN 3 902526 07 6 Herr Ulrich 2006 The German Cavalry from 1871 to 1914 p 376 ISBN 3 902526 07 6 Knotel Richard 1980 Uniforms of the World A Compendium of Army Navy and Air Force Uniforms 1700 1937 pp 24 182 amp 230 ISBN 0 684 16304 7 Arnold Guy 2002 Historical Dictionary of the Crimean War Scarecrow Press Inc pp 40 41 ISBN 0 8108 4276 9 Howard Michael Howard Michael Eliot 2001 The Franco Prussian War The German Invasion of France 1870 1871 Routledge p 157 ISBN 0 415 26671 8 Chandler David 1996 The Oxford History of the British Army p 379 ISBN 0 19 285333 3 The Guides Cavalry 10th Queen Victoria s Own Frontier Force L Armee d Afrique 1830 1962 General R Hure Paris Limogues 1977 Plates I amp IV Under Italian Libya s Burning Sun The National Geographic Magazine August 1925 Woolley Charles 2009 Uniforms of the German Colonial Troops p 94 ISBN 978 0 7643 3357 6 Gervase Phillips Writing Horses into American Civil War History War in History 20 2 2013 160 181 Starr Stephen Z The Union Cavalry in the Civil War 3 vols LSU Press 1979 81 Robert M Utley The Contribution of the Frontier to the American Military Tradition The Harmon Memorial Lectures in Military History 1959 1987 DIANE Publishing pp 525 34 ISBN 9781428915602 Paul Mathingham Hutton T R takes charge American History 33 n3 August 1998 30 11 Mollo Boris 1979 Uniforms of the Imperial Russian Army p 48 ISBN 0 7137 0920 0 Buttar Prit 17 June 2014 Collusion of Empires p 39 ISBN 978 1 78200 648 0 Keegan John 1998 The First World War p 20 ISBN 0 09 180178 8 David Woodward p 47 Armies of the World 1854 1914 SBN 399 12252 4 p 570 Volume 5 Encyclopaedia Britannica eleventh edition Louis Delperier pp 60 70 Les Cuirassiers 1845 1918 Argout Editions Paris 1981 Jouineau Andre 2008 The French Army 1914 pp 24 25 ISBN 978 2 35250 104 6 Terraine John October 2002 Mons Retreat to Victory p 57 ISBN 1 84022 243 3 Keegan John 1998 The First World War p 102 ISBN 0 09 180178 8 Herr Ulrich 2006 The German Cavalry from 1871 to 1914 pp 15 16 ISBN 3 902526 07 6 Terraine John October 2002 Mons Retreat to Victory p 50 ISBN 1 84022 243 3 Terraine John 1984 The First World War 1914 18 p 14 ISBN 0 333 37913 6 Pawly R 2009 The Belgian Army in World War I pp 10 11 ISBN 978 1 84603 448 0 Robinson Joe Hendriks Francis Robinson Janet 14 March 2015 The Last Great Cavalry Charge The Battle of the Silver Helmets Halen 12 August 1914 ISBN 978 1 78155 183 7 Mirouze Laurent 2007 The French Army in the First World War to battle 1914 p 253 ISBN 978 3 902526 09 0 Vladimir A Emmanuel p 10 The Russian Imperial Cavalry in 1914 ISBN 978 0 9889532 1 5 Buttar Prit 17 June 2014 Collusion of Empires p 209 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War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Vol 1 and 2 Parts I and II London HM Stationery Office OCLC 610273484 Rodolfo Puletti page 55 I Lancieri di Milano 1859 1985 Serie De Bello Milan 1985 Mounted Troops pages 1 006 1 012 Vol XXXI Encyclopaedia Britannica London amp New York 1922 Sumner Ian 2014 Armies of the Russo Polish War 1919 21 pp 6 17 amp 12 13 ISBN 978 2 35250 179 4 Fowler Dr Jeffrey T 25 November 2001 Axis Cavalry in World War II p 3 ISBN 1 84176 323 3 Randy Steffen page 77 The Horse Soldier World War I the Peacetime Army World War II Volume IV University of Oklahoma Press 1979 Randy Steffen page 131 The Horse Soldier World War I the Peacetime Army World War II Volume IV University of Oklahoma Press 1979 Sumner Ian 2010 The French Army 1939 45 I pp 13 14 ISBN 978 2 35250 179 4 Jouineau Andre 2010 Officers and Soldiers of the French Army 1940 pp 36 42 ISBN 978 1 85532 666 8 Chandler David 1996 The Oxford History of the British Army p 382 ISBN 0 19 285333 3 Zaloga S J 1983 The Polish Army 1939 45 London Osprey ISBN 0 85045 417 4 Time Staff April 22 1940 The New Pictures Time Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved 2008 07 17 Davies God s Playground Volume II pp 324 325 Davies God s Playground Volume II p 325 The Armed Forces of World War II 1914 1945 Andrew Mollo ISBN 0 85613 296 9 a b John S Harrel Vitez Mikecz Kalman Jeffrey T Fowler p 45 Axis Cavalry in World War II ISBN 1 84176 323 3 Jeffrey T Fowler pages 35 38 Axis Cavalry in World War II ISBN 1 84176 323 3 P Kilkki H Pohjanpaa Suomen Ratsuvaen Historia II Ratsuvaki Suomen Sodissa 1939 1944 Personal memoirs of Colonel Ernest Neal Cory Jr Esquire Abbott Peter 1986 Modern African Wars 2 Angola and Mozambique p 24 ISBN 0 85045 843 9 English Adrian J May 1985 Armed Forces of Latin America Their Histories Development Present Strength and Military Potential Jane s Information Group ISBN 978 0710603210 Carey Schofield Inside the Soviet Army Headline 1991 pp 133 134 India Polo Magazine Archived July 3 2009 at the Wayback Machine Henry Dallal Horse Warriors India s 61st Cavalry ISBN 0 9544083 1 4 a b Global Times 20 November 2009 and Xinhua News Agency 22 August 2011 PLA border defense troop carries out horse riding training on plateau in Xinjiang China Military eng chinamil com cn Retrieved 2021 01 05 PLA Cavalry Use the Beidou satellite system to good effect People s Daily Online Retrieved 2021 01 05 es Regimiento de Caballeria n º 3 Husares Cyr Darnoc De Saint mande pp 33 36 Gazette des Uniformes December 2002 The Honours Flags and Heritage Structure of the Canadian Forces First Team Horse Cavalry Detachment Archived July 9 2012 at the Wayback Machine Hubbell Gary 21st Century Horse Soldiers Western Horseman December 2006 pp 45 50 About First Troop Philadelphia City Cavalry First Troop Philadelphia City Cavalry Official Website Retrieved 22 October 2014 Cavalry Troop A Maryland Defense Force Official Website Archived from the original on 17 February 2015 Retrieved 5 October 2014 a b c Roberts Lt Colonel MD Ron An Overview of the Employment of Cavalry in History With an Emphasis on the State Defense Force of the United States in the 21st Century PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2014 10 06 Retrieved 5 October 2014 a b c Our History National Lancers Official Website Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 5 October 2014 Brofer Jennifer 14 June 2021 Mounted unit rides into annual training exercise Defense Visual Information Distribution Service Retrieved 27 June 2021 Corrigan Major J G H Waterloo review Channel 4 archived from the original on 27 March 2009 Waterloo Film review by Major J G H Corrigan Accessed 2008 02 07 A Loyal and Zealous Soldier ENAS PISTOS KAI FILOTIMOS STRATIWTHS Christos Notaridis ISBN 978 960 522 335 9 Edwin Price Ramsey Home Page www edwinpriceramsey com Archived from the original on August 15 2006 References EditEbrey Walthall Palais 2006 East Asia A Cultural Social and Political History Boston Houghton Mifflin Company a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Ebrey Patricia Buckley 1999 The Cambridge Illustrated History of China Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 43519 6 Falls Cyril G MacMunn 1930 Military Operations Egypt amp Palestine from the outbreak of war with Germany to June 1917 Official History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Vol 1 London HM Stationery Office OCLC 610273484 Falls Cyril A F Becke maps 1930 Military Operations Egypt amp Palestine from June 1917 to the End of the War Official History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Vol 2 Part I London HM Stationery Office OCLC 644354483 Falls Cyril A F Becke maps 1930 Military Operations Egypt amp Palestine from June 1917 to the End of the War Official History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Vol 2 Part II London HM Stationery Office OCLC 256950972 Lynn John Albert Giant of the Grand Siecle The French Army 1610 1715 Cambridge University Press 1997 Menon Shanti April 1995 Chariot racers of the Steppes Discover Archived from the original on 2007 10 13 Muir William 1883 Annals of the Early Caliphate From Original Sources London Smith Elder amp co Needham Joseph 1986 Science and Civilization in China Vol 4 Physics and Physical Technology Part 2 Mechanical Engineering Taipei Caves Books Ltd Pargiter Frederick Eden Dr Chronology based on Ancient Indian Historical Tradition Oxford University Press H Milford 1924 Reprint 1997 Peers C J 2006 Soldiers of the Dragon Chinese Armies 1500 BC AD 1840 Oxford Osprey Publishing Rodger N A M 1999 The Safeguard of the Sea A Naval History of Britain 660 1649 W W Norton amp Co Ltd ISBN 0 393 04579 X External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cavalry CavalryScouts org Napoleonic Cavalry Cavalry tactics from Francis J Lippitt s A Treatise on the Tactical Use of the Three Arms Infantry Artillery and Cavalry 1865 Cavalry in Mass U S report on Russian cavalry organization and operations in World War II Society of the Military Horse Gesellschaft der Freunde der Kavallerie German The Horse and Mule in the British Army during WW1 Historic films showing cavalry during World War I at europeanfilmgateway eu Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cavalry amp oldid 1136173542, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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