Cavalry (from
French cavalerie, cf.
cheval 'horse') were
soldiers or
warriors who fought mounted on
horseback. Cavalry were historically the second
oldest (after infantry) and most mobile of the combat arms. A
soldier in the cavalry is known by a number of designations such as
cavalryman or
trooper.
The designation of
cavalry was not usually
extended to any
military force that
used other animals, such as
camels
or mules.
Infantry who moved on horseback,
but dismounted to fight on foot, were known in the 17th and early
18th centuries as
dragoons, a class of
mounted troops which later evolved into cavalry proper while
retaining their historic title.
From earliest times cavalry had the advantage of improved mobility,
making it an "instrument which multiplied the fighting value of
even the smallest forces, allowing them to outflank and avoid, to
surprise and overpower, to retreat and escape according to the
requirements of the moment." A man 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 mobility and shock value of the cavalry was greatly appreciated
and exploited in the Ancient and Middle Ages armed forces, and some
consisted mostly of the cavalry troops, particularly in nomadic
societies of Asia, notably the Mongol armies. In Europe cavalry
became increasingly
armoured cavalry
and eventually became known for the mounted
knights. During the
17th
century cavalry in Europe lost most of its armour, and by the
mid-
19th century only some regiments
retained the
cuirass.
In the period between the World Wars, many cavalry units were
converted into
motorised infantry
and
mechanised infantry units,
or reformed as tank troops. However some cavalry still served
during the Second World War, notably in the
Red
Army. 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.
Role of cavalry
In many modern armies, the term
cavalry is still often
used to refer to units that are a
combat
arm of the
armed forces which in
the past filled the traditional horse-borne land combat
light cavalry roles. These include
scouting,
skirmishing with enemy reconnaissance elements
to deny them knowledge of own disposition of troops,
forward security, offensive reconnaissance
by combat, defensive
screening of friendly
forces during retrograde movement,
retreat,
restoration of command and control, deception, battle handover and
passage of lines, relief in place, linkup,
breakout operations, and
raiding. The
shock role, traditionally filled by
heavy cavalry, is generally filled by
units with the "
armored"
designation.
History

Assyrian cavalry
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. 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 as well as
Assyrian and
Babylonian royalty.
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.
Cavalry techniques were an innovation of
equestrian nomads of the Central Asian and
Iranian steppe and
pastoralist tribes such as
the
Persian Parthians and
Sarmatians.
The photograph above right 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, 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.
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. Excepting a few ineffective trials of
scythed chariots, the use of
chariots in battle was obsolete in civilized nations by the time of
the Persian defeat at the hands of
Alexander the Great, but chariots
remained in use for ceremonial purposes such as carrying the
victorious general in a
Roman triumph,
for chariot racing. The southern British met
Julius Caesar with chariots in
55 and 54 BC, but a century
later, in the
Roman conquest
of Britain chariots were obsolete even in Britannia.
Ancient Greece and Macedonia
Cavalry played a relatively minor role in
Ancient Greece, with conflicts decided by
massed armored infantry. However,
Thessaly
was widely known for producing competent cavalrymen, and later
experiences in wars both with and against the
Persian 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.
The
Macedonian kingdom in the north, on the
other hand, developed a strong cavalry force that culminated in the
hetairoi (
Companion
cavalry) of
Philip II and
Alexander the Great. In addition to these heavy cavalry, the
Macedonian combined arms army also employed lighter horsemen 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. They wore leather armour or chainmail and hat.
They were medium cavalry, rather than heavy cavalry. They were good
scouts, skirmishers, and chasers.
The
effectiveness of this combined-arms system was most dramatically
demonstrated in Alexander's conquest of Persia
, Bactria, and northwestern India
.
Roman Republic and Early Empire

Tombstone of a Roman auxiliary trooper
from Cologne, Germany.
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. 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. 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.
Julius Caesar himself was known for
his admiration in his escort of Germanic mixed cavalry, giving rise
to
Cohorte Equitates. Early
Emperors maintained an
ala of
Bataviand cavalry as their bodyguards until the unit
was dismissed by
Galba.
For the most part, Roman cavalry during the Republic functioned as
an adjunct to the legionary infantry and formed only one-fifth of
the showing force. This does not mean that its utility could be
underestimated, though, 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. In some occasions it 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.
After defeats such as the
Battle of
Carrhae, the Romans learned the importance of large cavalry
formations from the
Parthians. They
would begin to substantially increase both the numbers and the
training standards of the cavalry in their employ, just as nearly a
thousand years earlier the first Iranians to reach the
Iranian Plateau introduced the
Assyrians to a similar reform. Nonetheless,
they would continue to rely mainly on their heavy infantry
supported by auxiliary cavalry.

Reenactor showing Roman military
equestrian.
Late Roman Empire and the Migration Period
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.
The most
widespread employment of heavy cavalry at this time was found in
the forces of the Parthians and their
Iranian
Sassanid
successors. Both, but especially the latter, 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.
The decline of the Roman infrastructure made it more difficult to
field large infantry forces, and during the fourth and fifth
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, 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
Persia forces, as the main striking
force of the armies in contrast to the earlier roles of cavalry as
scouts, raiders, and outflankers.
The late Roman cavalry tradition and the mounted nobility of the
Germanic invaders both contributed to the development of mediaeval
knightly cavalry.
Arabs
Early organized Arab cavalry under the
Rashidun caliphate was a
light cavalry armed with
lance and
sword, its main role
was to attack the enemy flanks and rear. Armor was relatively
light. The Muslims' light cavalry during the later years of Islamic
conquest of Levant became the most powerful section of army. The
best use of this lightly armed fast moving cavalry was revealed at
the
Battle of
Yarmouk (636 A.D.) in which
Khalid ibn Walid, knowing the importance
and ability of his cavalry, used them to turn the tables at every
critical instance of the battle with their ability to engage and
disengage and 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
Mutaharrik
tulai'a( متحرك طليعة ), 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.
The
Battle of
Talas
in 751 CE 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, a
code of conduct that included values like courage and generosity
but also doctrine of cavalry tactics, horsemanship, archery and
treatment of wounds.
Asia
Central Asia
The
Indian
literature contains numerous references to the
cavalry forces of the Central Asian
horse nomads like the Sakas, Kambojas, Yavanas, Pahlavas and Paradas
.
Numerous
Puranic texts refer to an ancient
invasion of India (16th c. BC) by the cavalry forces of five
nations, called five hordes (
pañca.ganan) or
Kśatriya hordes (
Kśatriya ganah), which
had captured the throne of Ayudhya by dethroning its
Vedic king Bahu

Hungarian horse archer.
The
Mahabharata,
Ramayana, numerous Puranas and some foreign sources
numerously attest that Kamboja cavalry was frequently requisitioned
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 requisitioned in ancient wars
" . 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" .
Mahabharata (950 c BC) 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.Mahabharata and
Vishnudharmotari Purana especially styles the Kambojas, Yavansa,
Gandharas etc as "Ashva.yuddha.kushalah" (expert cavalrymen).
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
.
Herodotus (484 c BC – 425 c BC) ) attests
that the
Gandarian mercenaries (i.e.
Gandharans/Kambojans of Gandari Strapy of
Achaemenids) from the twentieth strapy of the
Achaemenid were recruited in the
army of emperor
Xerxes I (486-465
BC), which he led against the
Hellas.
Similarly,
the men of the Mountain Land from north of Kabol
-River
equivalent to medieval Kohistan (Pakistan),
figure in the army of Darius III against
Alexander at Arbela with a cavalry and fifteen elephants.
This obviously refers to Kamboja cavalry south of Hindukush.
The Kambojas were famous for their horses, as well as cavalry-men
(
asva-yuddha-Kushalah). On account of their supreme
position in horse (Ashva) culture, they were also popularly known
as
Ashvakas, i.e. the "horsemen" and their
land was known as "Home of Horses". They are the
Assakenoi and
Aspasioi of
the
Classical writings, and the
Ashvakayanas and
Ashvayanas in
Panini's
Ashtadhyayi. The Assakenoi had faced
Alexander with 30,000 infantry,
20,000 cavalry and 30 war elephants. Scholars have identified the
Assakenoi and Aspasioi clans of
Kunar and
Swat valleys as a section of the
Kambojas. These hardy tribes had offered stubborn
resistance to Alexander (326 c 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 Panini's Astadhyayi, were
rebellious, fiercely independent and freedom-loving cavalrymen who
never easily yielded to any overlord.
The
Sanskrit drama Mudra-rakashas by
Visakha Dutta and the Jaina work
Parisishtaparvan refer to Chandragupta's (320 C BC – 298 c 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). These hordes had helped
Chandragupta Maurya defeat the
ruler of
Magadha and placed Vhandragupta 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 play of
Sanskrit Poet
Kalidasa. Raghu of Kalidasa
is believed to be
Chandragupta II
(
Vikaramaditya) (375–413/15 AD), of the well-known
Gupta Dynasty.
As late as mediaeval era, the Kamboja cavalry had also formed part
of the Gurjara-Pratihara armed forces in 8th/10th centuries AD.
They had
come to Bengal
with the
Pratiharas when the latter conquered part
of the province.
Ancient Kambojas were constituted into military
Sanghas
and Srenis (Corporations) to manage their political and military
affairs, as
Arthashastra of
Kautiliya as well as the
Mahabharata amply attest for us. They are
attested to be living as
Ayuddha-jivi or
Shastr-opajivis (Nation-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.
Xiongnu or
Hun,
Tujue,
Avars,
Kipchaks,
Mongols,
Cossacks and the various
Turkic peoples are also examples of the
horse-mounted peoples 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.
The best
known instance of the continued employment of mounted tribal
auxiliaries were the Cossack cavalry regiments of Tsarist
Russia
. In eastern Europe, Russia, and out onto the
steppes, cavalry remained important much
longer and dominated the scene of warfare until the early 1600s 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 early on with the Chinese
Tang Dynasty (618–907 AD), including
Emperor
Taizong's campaign against Tufan in 638.
East Asia
Further east, the
military
history of China, specifically
northern
China, held a long tradition of intense military exchange
between Chinese infantry forces of the settled dynastic empires and
the mounted "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 ancient Chinese ruler of the former
State of Jin territory, ordered his military
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. Soon
afterwards the cavalry tactics employed by the
State of Zhao forced their enemies in the other
Warring States to adopt the same
techniques in order to mount any effective attack against their
swift movements on the battlefield.
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 BC-1050 BC). 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. The handheld pistol-and-trigger
crossbow was invented in China in the 4th
century BC; 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 of crossbowmen was the most
effective defense against enemy cavalry charges.
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 have 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 if lacking the amount of horses
the northern nomadic peoples mustered in their armies.
Emperor Wu of Han (r.
141 BC-87 BC) went to
war with the Dayuan for this exact reason,
since the Dayuan were hording a massive amount of tall, strong,
Central Asian bred horses in the Hellenized-Greek region of
Fergana
(established a bit 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. 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.
The cavalry of
Korea was first
introduced 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 1st century BC, the ancient kingdom of
Buyeo also had mounted warriors. With
contacts, military intercession, and sailed ventures to Korea,
cavalry of
Goguryeo were called
Gaemamusa (개마무사, 鎧馬武士) and were similar to tanks in the
age of the
Three Kingdoms of
Korea.
King
Gwanggaeto the Great often led expeditions into
Baekje,
Gaya
confederacy,
Buyeo and against
Japanese invaders with his cavalry.
The
ancient Japanese of the
Kofun period also adopted
cavalry and
equine culture by the 5th century AD.
South Asia
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.
European Middle Ages
Although Roman cavalry had no stirrups, their horned saddle allowed
the combination of a firm seat with substantial flexibility. But
the introduction of the wraparound
saddle
during the Middle Ages provided greater efficiency in mounted shock
combat and the invention of
stirrup enabled
a broader array of attacks to be delivered from the back of a
horse. As a greater weight of man and armor could be supported in
the saddle, the probability of being dismounted in combat was
significantly reduced.
In particular, a charge with the lance couched under the armpit
would no longer turn into
pole
vaulting; this eventually led to an enormous increase in the
impact of the charge. Last but not least, the introduction of
spurs allowed better control of the mount
during the "knightly charge" in full gallop. In western Europe
there emerged what is considered the "ultimate"
heavy cavalry, the
knight. The knights and other similarly equipped
mounted men-at-arms charged in close formation, exchanging
flexibility for a massive, irresistible first charge.

A Hussite war wagon: it enabled
peasants to defeat knights
The mounted men-at-arms quickly became an important force in
Western European tactics, although it is worth noting that Medieval
military doctrine actually employed them as part of a combined-arms
force along with various kinds of foot troops. Still, Medieval
chroniclers tended to pay undue attention to the knights at the
expense of the rank and file, and this has led early students of
military history to suppose that this heavy cavalry was the only
force that mattered on Medieval European battlefields—a view with
hardly any grounding in reality.
Massed
English longbowmen triumphed over French cavalry at Crécy, Poitiers and Agincourt
, while at Gisors
(1188), Bannockburn
(1314), and Laupen
(1339), foot-soldiers proved their invulnerability
to cavalry charges as long as they held their formation.
However,
the rise of infantry as the principal arm had to wait for the
Swiss
to develop
their pike squares into an offensive arm
instead of a defensive one; this new aggressive doctrine brought
the Swiss to 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 were simpler to use, such as
the
crossbow and the
hand cannons, 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 1350s this trend became more
marked with the dismounted men-at-arms fighting as super-heavy
infantry with two-handed swords and poleaxes. 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.
Renaissance Europe
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 50
percent of its numbers filled with various kinds of light and heavy
cavalry, whereas in medieval and 17th century armies the proportion
of cavalry seldom rose beyond twenty-five percent. 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 by either charging the enemy in the
flank or attacking their commander-in-chief.
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 replace a skilled horseman or a trained horse, while
arquebusiers and later
musketeers could be trained and kept in the field
at a much lower expense in addition to being much easier to
replace. The Spanish
tercio and later
formations relegated cavalry to a supporting role. The
pistol was specifically developed to try and 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
sword, pistol, or lance)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 that experienced their heyday in the
16th and 17th centuries.
These centuries also witnessed the
high-water mark of the Polish winged
hussars, a force of heavy cavalry that achieved great success
against Swedes
, Russians
, and Turks
alike.
Eighteenth Century Europe and Napoleonic Warfare

Gardes Du Corps of the Kingdom of
Hannover (Germany) in 1838.
Cavalry retained an important role in this age of regularization
and standardization across European armies. First and foremost they
remained the primary choice for confronting enemy cavalry.
Attacking an unbroken infantry force head-on usually resulted in
failure, but the extended linear formations were vulnerable to
flank or rear attacks.
Cavalry was important at Blenheim
(1704), Rossbach
(1757), Eylau and Friedland
(1807), remaining a significant factor throughout
the Napoleonic Wars. Massed
infantry was deadly to cavalry but also offered an excellent target
for
artillery. Once the bombardment had
disordered the infantry formation, cavalry were able to
rout and pursue the scattered footmen. 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.
Eylau knew the greatest cavalry
charge of the modern history, when the entire French cavalry
reserve, lead by Maréchal
Murat, launched a
huge charge on and through the Russian infantry lines. The French
horsemen also proved that cavalry could be a decisive element
during the
Peninsula War in
Spain.
19th century
By the 19th century, European cavalry fell into four main
categories:
There
were cavalry variations for individual nations as well: France
had the
chasseurs à cheval; Germany
had the Jäger zu Pferd; Bavaria
had the Chevaulegers; and Russia
had
Cossacks. Britain had no
cuirassiers (other than the
Household Cavalry), but had Dragoon Guards
regiments which were classed as heavy cavalry. In the
United States Army, the cavalry were
almost always dragoons. The
Imperial Japanese Army had its
cavalry dressed as
hussars, but fought as
dragoons.
In the early
American Civil War
the regular United States Army mounted rifle and dragoon regiments
were reorganized and renamed cavalry regiments, of which there were
six. 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.
Post Civil War, as the volunteer armies disbanded, the regular army
cavalry regiments increased in number from six to ten, among them
the
U.S. 7th Cavalry Regiment of Little
Bighorn
fame, and the African-American U.S. 9th Cavalry Regiment and
U.S. 10th Cavalry Regiment. These
units, along with others (both cavalry and
infantry), collectively became known as the
Buffalo Soldiers.These regiments,
which rarely took the field as complete organizations, served
throughout the
Indian Wars through the
close of the frontier in the 1890s.
19th-century Imperial Expansion
Cavalry found new success in Imperial operations (
irregular warfare), where modern weapons
were lacking and the slow moving infantry-artillery train or fixed
fortifications were often ineffective against native insurgents
(unless the natives 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 to European forces.
The
British Indian Army
maintained about forty regiments of cavalry, officered by British
and manned by Indian
sowars (cavalrymen). The
legendary exploits of this branch lives on in literature and early
films. Among the more famous regiments in the lineages of modern
Indian and Pakistani Armies are:
Several of these formations are still active, though they now are
armoured formations, for example Guides Cavalry in Pakistan.
The French Army maintained substantial cavalry forces in Algeria
and Morocco from 1830 until 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.
Cavalry's demise

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). Following the experience of the South
African War of 1899 - 1902 (where mounted Boer citizen commandos
fighting on foot from cover proved superior to regular cavalry) the
British Army withdrew lances for all but ceremonial purposes and
placed a new emphasis on training for dismounted action. In 1908
however the six British lancer regiments in existence resumed use
of this impressive but obsolete weapon for active service. 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.

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 Imperial German Cavalry,
while as colourful and traditional as any in peacetime appearance,
had adopted a practice of falling back on infantry support when any
substantial opposition was encountered. These cautious tactics
aroused derision amongst their more conservative French and Russian
opponents but proved appropriate to the new nature of warfare. Once
the front lines stabilised, a combination of barbed wire, machine
guns and rapid fire rifles proved deadly to horse mounted troops.
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 as a machine gun corps; and the
Australian Light Horse as
light infantry during the Gallipoli campaign. The German Army
dismounted nearly all their cavalry in the West.
Some cavalry were retained as mounted troops behind the lines in
anticipation of a penetration of the opposing trenches that it
seemed would never come.
Tanks, introduced on
the
Western Front in September 1916,
had the capacity to achieve such breakthroughs but did not have the
reliable range to exploit them. Since mounted troops were too
vulnerable and slow moving to act in effective support of the new
weapon, history recorded no significant role for cavalry in
mechanized warfare, and post war planning in the allied nations
replaced horse cavalry with mechanized cavalry.
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. However, even here the value of cavalry was
over-rated 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.
In the Middle East mounted forces (British, Indian, Turkish,
Australian, Arab and New Zealand) retained an important role,
though of the mounted infantry variety.
Post World War I
A combination of military conservatism in almost all armies and
post-war financial constraints prevented the lessons of 1914-18
being acted on immediately. There was a general reduction in the
number of cavalry regiments in the British, French, Italian and
other Western armies but it was still argued with conviction (for
example in the 1922 edition of the
Encyclopedia Britannia) that mounted
troops had a major role to play in future warfare. 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. 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.
Interestingly 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. The U.S. Cavalry abandoned its sabres in 1934 and
commenced the conversion of its horsed regiments to mechanized
cavalry, starting with the First Regiment of Cavalry in January
1933.
In the
British Army, all cavalry
regiments were mechanised 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 thirty-nine regiments of the
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 mechanism
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 mechanised,
receiving light tanks, armoured cars or 15cwt trucks. The last
horsed regiment of the Indian Army (other than the Viceregal
Bodyguard and some Indian States Forces regiments) was the 19th
King George's Own Lancers which had its last mounted parade at
Rawalpindi on 28 October 1939. This unit still exists (though in
the Pakistan Army) with an armour TOE.
During the 1930s the French Army experimented with integrating
mounted and mechanised cavalry units into larger formations.
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. 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.
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.
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.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. 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. Later, on
the Eastern Front, the
Red Army did deploy
cavalry units effectively against the Germans.(See also
Polish
cavalry.)
A more correct term should 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, but 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 of 1939 included, apart from the mounted
soldiers themselves, light and heavy machine guns (wheeled),
Anti-tank rifle, model 35,
anti-aircraft weapon, artillery like
Bofors
37 mm anti tank gun or light and scout tanks, etc.
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 mechanised) played an important role in the
Italian defeat in this difficult terrain .
By the final stages of the war only the Soviet Union was still
fielding mounted units in substantial numbers, some in combined
mechanised and horse units. The advantage of this approach was that
in exploitation mounted infantry could keep pace with advancing
tanks. Other factors favouring the retention of mounted forces
included the high quality of Russian
Cossacks and other horse cavalry; and the relative
lack of roads suitable for wheeled vehicles in many parts of the
Eastern Front. Another consideration was that the logistic capacity
required to support very large motorised forces exceeded that
necessary for mounted troops.
Romanian, Hungarian and Italian cavalry had been dispersed or
disbanded following the retreat of the Axis forces from Russia.
Germany still maintained some mounted (mixed with bicycles) SS and
Cossack units until the last days of the War. 18th Indian Cavalry
Regiment (later 18 Cavalry of
Indian
Army), fought in a dismounted role, in Tobruk as part of
9th Australian Division. The
U.S. Army's last horse cavalry action was fought by the
26th Cavalry Regiment in WWII; a
small mounted regiment of
Philippine
Scouts, fought the Japanese during the retreat down the Bataan
peninsula, until it was effectively destroyed by January 1942. All
British cavalry had been mechanised since 1942 and the last horsed
U.S. Cavalry (the
Second Cavalry
Division) were dismounted in March 1944.
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 Burma
. The
Sikh sowars of the
Frontier Force cavalry, led by Captain Arthur Sandeman, charged in
the old style with sabres and most were killed.
The last substantive and successful classical cavalry charge of the
war - and the final such confirmed charge in history - was probably
that made in August 1942 by a cavalry unit of the
Italian Expeditionary
Corps in Russia (
Corpo di Spedizione Italiano in
Russia, or CSIR) on the
Eastern Front. A charge by the
3rd Dragoons
Savoia Cavalry Regiment of the Prince Amedeo
Duke of Aosta Fast (
Celere) Division was not only made,
but it was successfully made.
Post World War II to present day

Polish 66 Air Force Squadron of 25th
Aeromobile Cavalry Brigade.
The
Soviet Army retained horse cavalry
divisions until 1955, and even at the dissolution of the Soviet
Union in 1991, there was an independent horse mounted cavalry
squadron in Kyrgyzstan
.
Several
armored units of the modern United
States Army retain the designation of "cavalry".
The United States
also had "air cavalry"
units equipped with helicopters, though
that designation has fallen out of use, with the term Air Assault
coined for that mission and modern "cavalry" being retained for
ground-based mobility.
While most modern "cavalry" units have some historic connection
with formerly mounted troops this is not always the case. The
modern Irish Defence Force (IDF) includes a "Cavalry Corps"
equipped with
Panhard armoured cars and
Scorpion tracked combat reconnaissance
vehicles. The Irish Defense Force has never included horse
cavalry since its establishment in 1922 (other than a small mounted
escort 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 twentieth and early twenty first 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)
and the Swiss Army maintained a mounted dragoon regiment for combat
purposes until 1973. There were reports of Chinese mounted troops
in action during frontier clashes with Vietnam in the mid/late
1970s. The Portuguese Army used horse mounted cavalry with some
success in the wars of independence in Angola and Mozambique in the
1960s and 1970s. 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 very effective and feared by their opponents in the rebel
African forces. In the 1978 to present
Afghan Civil War there have been several
instances of horse mounted combat.
South and Central American armies maintained mounted cavalry longer
than those of Europe, Asia 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 (see Jane's "Armed Forces of Latin America"
by Adrian J. English).
A number of armored regiments in the British Army retain the
historic designations of Hussars, Dragoons, Dragoon Guards or
Lancers.
Only the Household Cavalry squadrons
maintained for ceremonial duties in London
are
mounted.
Cavalry or mounted gendarmerie units continue to be maintained for
purely or primarily ceremonial purposes by the United States,
British, French, Italian, Danish, Swedish, Dutch, Chilean,
Portuguese, Moroccan, Nigerian, Venezuelan, Brazilian, Peruvian,
Paraguayan, Polish, Argentine, Senegalese, Jordanian, Pakistani,
Indian, Spanish and Bulgarian armed forces. The Army of the Russian
Federation has recently reintroduced a ceremonial mounted squadron
wearing historic uniforms.
In the United States, the Horse Cavalry Detachment of the U.S.
Army's
1st Cavalry
Division is 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.
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
.
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 (trumpeters) for the
cavalry/armoured branch 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 ,
the
Governor General's Horse Guards,
Lord Strathcona's Horse, the
Royal Canadian Dragoons, and
the
South Alberta Light
Horse. Of these, only the Lord Strathcona's Horse and the
Governor General's Horse Guards maintains an official ceremonial
horse mounted cavalry troop or squadron.
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.
Today, the
Indian Army's
61st Cavalry is reported to be the only remaining
non-ceremonial horse-mounted cavalry in the world. It was raised in
1951 from the amalgamated state cavalry squadrons of Gwailior,
Jodhpur, and Mysore. The 61st Cavalry together with 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 Pakistan Armies
maintain a number of armoured regiments with the titles of
Lancers or
Horse, dating back to
the nineteenth century.
As of 2007 the Chinese
People's
Liberation Army employs two battalions of horse cavalry in
Xinjing Military District for border patrol work (see
China-Defense.com website).
In the wake of the 2008 Sichuan
earthquake
there have been calls to rebuild the army horse
inventory for disaster relief in difficult terrain.
Light and armoured cavalry
, cavalry was divided into light and
armoured cavalry and
Horse archers. The differences were mainly the
size of the mount, and how much armor was worn by the
mount and
rider, and the active
role they played in war.
Early light cavalry (like the auxiliaries of the Roman army) were
typically used to
scout and
skirmish and to cut down retreating infantry and
for defeating enemy missile troops. Armoured cavalry like the
Byzantine Cataphract were used as shock troops — they would
charge the main body of the enemy and in many cases, their actions
decided the outcome of the battle, hence the later term "battle
cavalry".
During the
Gunpowder Age, armored
cavalry began to approach obsolescence. However, many units
retained
cuirasses and helmets for their
protective value against
sword and
bayonet strikes and the morale boost these provide
to the wearers. By this time the main difference between light and
battle cavalry was their training; the former was regarded as a
tool for harassment and reconnaissance, while the latter was
considered best for close-order charges.
Since the development of armored warfare the distinction between
light and heavy armor has persisted basically along the same lines.
Armored car and
light tank have adopted the
reconnaissance role while medium and
heavy tanks are regarded as the decisive
shock troops.
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
peasants on foot. If
landlords and peasants came into conflict, the peasants 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 nineteenth and early twentieth 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 small sense of the noise and power of a cavalry charge can be
gained from the 1970 film
Waterloo, which featured some 2000
cavalrymen, 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). The
Gary Cooper movie
They Came to Cordura contains
an excellent scene of a cavalry regiment deploying from march to
battleline formation. A smaller-scale cavalry charge can be seen in
The
Lord of the Rings (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.
Some cavalry forces
Some contemporary horse cavalry officers
See also
Notes
- p.4, Rodger
- p.1, Menon
- http://www.historynet.com/mhq/blromespersianmirage/
- The raised rear part of a saddle
- p.239, Muir
- tradition of al-furusiyya is defined by principles of
horsemanship, chivalry, and the mutual dependence of the rider and
the horse
- p. 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 Dikshitar
- 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.
- p.182, Pargiter
- 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:
Vishnudharmotra Purana, Part II, Chapter 118; Post Gupta Polity (AD
500–700): 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: Vishnudharmotra Purana, Part II, Chapter 118; Post Gupta
Polity (AD 500–700): 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 A.D. 1986, p 237, V. N. Drabu - Political Science.
- Hindu Polity: A Constitutional History of India in Hundu 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 régulièrement mentionné comme
la "patrie des chevaux" (Asvanam ayatanam), et cette
reputation bien etablie gagné 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
Contitutional 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 Poros, 1990, Publication Buareau,
Punjabi University, Patiala; History of Panjab, Vol I, (Editors):
Dr Fauja Singh, Dr L. M. Josh, Publication Bureau, Panjabi
University, Patiala; History of Poros, 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 Panini, 1953, pp 424,
436–39, 455–457, Dr V. S. Aggarwala.
- See: History of Punjab, Vol I, 1997, p 225, Dr Buddha Prakash;
Raja Poros, 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).
- Kālidāsa, 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.
- This needs a re-write — the chronology is all over the
place.
- Ebrey, 29-30.
- Ebrey, 30.
- Ebrey, 29.
- 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
- "The invention and influences of stirrup"
- Needham, Volume 4, Part 2, 322.
- Needham, Volume 4, Part 2, 305.
- Ebrey, 120.
- THE GUIDES CAVALRY (10th QUEEN VICTORIA'S OWN
FRONTIER FORCE)
- L'Armee d'Afrique 1830-1962, General R. Hure, Paris-Limogues
1977
- First World War - Willmott, H.P., Dorling Kindersley,
2003
- 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
- Carey Schofield, Inside the Soviet Army, Headline, 1991,
p.133-134
- First Team! Horse Cavalry Detachment
- Hubbell, Gary. "21st Century Horse Soldiers." Western
Horseman, December 2006, pp. 45-50
- http://www.strathconas.ca/bmenu_history.php
- The Honours, Flags, and Heritage Structure of the Canadian
Forces
- India Polo Magazine
- p.490, Lynn
- Waterloo Film review by Major J G H
Corrigan. Accessed 2008-02-07.
References
- Ebrey, Walthall, Palais (2006). East Asia: A Cultural,
Social, and Political History. Boston: Houghton Mifflin
Company.
- Ebrey, Patricia Buckley (1999). The Cambridge Illustrated
History of China. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN
0-521-43519-6 (hardback); ISBN 0-521-66991-X (paperback).
- Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilization in China:
Volume 4, Physics and Physical Technology, Part 2, Mechanical
Engineering. Taipei: Caves Books, Ltd.
- Peers, C.J. (2006). Soldiers of the Dragon: Chinese Armies
1500 BC-AD 1840. Oxford: Osprey Publishing.
- Menon, Shanti, Chariot racers of the Steppes,
Discover, April, 1995
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1511/is_n4_v16/ai_16720826
- Rodger, N. A. M.,
The Safeguard of the Sea: A Naval History of Britain
660-1649, W W Norton & Co Ltd., 1999 ISBN 039304579X
- Muir, William, Annals of the Early Caliphate: From Original
Sources, Smith, Elder & co., London, 1883
- Pargiter, Frederick Eden, Dr., Chronology based on: Ancient
Indian Historical Tradition, Oxford University Press, H. Milford,
1924, Reprint 1997
- Lynn, John Albert, Giant of the Grand Siècle: The French
Army, 1610-1715, Cambridge University Press, 1997
External links