Dictionary Definition
cavalry
Noun
1 troops trained to fight on horseback; "500
horse led the attack" [syn: horse
cavalry, horse]
2 a highly mobile army unit
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From cheval < caballus.Noun
- The military arm of service that fights while riding horses.
- Branch of military transported by fast light vehicles, the mechanized cavalry.
- An individual unit of the cavalry arm of service.
- Rescuers, related to phrase the cavalry has arrived.
- We'll be the cavalry and arrive at the last moment to save them.
Translations
military service that fights with riding horses
an individual unit of cavalry
- German: Kavallerie
- Russian: кавалерист
Extensive Definition
distinguish Calvary seealso
Horses in
warfare Cavalry (from French
cavalerie) were soldiers
or warriors who fought
mounted on horseback
in combat. The
designation 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 in the
seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries known 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, 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.
In many modern armies, the term cavalry is often
used for units that fill the traditional horse-borne light
cavalry roles of scouting, screening, skirmishing and raiding.
The shock role,
traditionally filled by heavy
cavalry, is generally filled by units with the "armored" designation.
History
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 BCE, but a century later, in the Roman conquest of Britain chariots were obsolete even in Britannia.Ancient Greece and Macedon
Cavalry have 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 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.
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 as 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
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.
Although it was not until the Late
Imperial Period that Roman cavalry would play a major role in
armed conflict.
After the Battle of
Carrhae, the Romans learnt the importance of large cavalry
formations from the Parthians
and began 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.
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 which had originated among the Germanic peoples, 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 http://www.historynet.com/mhq/blromespersianmirage/.
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 Persian
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
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 joint cavalry forces of these five nations, called five hordes (pañca.ganan) or Kśatriya hordes (Kśatriya ganah), which had captured the throne of Ayudhya by dethroning its Vedic king BahuThe Mahabharata,
Ramayana,
numerous Puranas and some foreign sources numerously attest that
"Kamboja cavalry-troopers were frequently requisitioned in ancient
wars". All these sources also agree that the horses of the Sindhu
and Kamboja regions were the finest breed. JAOS attests: "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 commandership 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 Achaemenids
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 30000 infantry, 20000 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 mounted cavalry in support or as an
effective striking force. 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 Yuezhi for this
exact reason, since the Yuezhi 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 calvalry.
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. Native Indian cavalry forces proved decisive in the defeat of nomadic invaders such as the White Huns, and the Mughal occupation met serious opposition from the excellent Maratha cavalry. India has also the oldest evidence for the introduction of toe-stirrups.European Middle Ages
seealso Horses in the 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.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.
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) was 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
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), 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.
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 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 Big
Horn fame, and the African-American
U.S. 9th Cavalry Regiment and
U.S. 10th Cavalry Regiment. 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:* Governor General's Bodyguard (now
President's Bodyguard)
- Skinner's Horse (now India's 1st Horse (Skinner's))
- Gardner's Lancers (now India's 2nd Lancers (Gardner's))
- 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 Pakistani)
- Royal Deccan Horse (now India's The Deccan Horse)
- Poona Horse (now India's The Poona Horse)
- Queen's Own Guides Cavalry (now partitioned between Pakistan and India).
Several of these formations are still active,
though they now are armoured formations, for example Guides Cavalry
in Pakistan. http://defencejournal.com/jun99/guides-cavalry.htm
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
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 their 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 the lancer regiments resumed this impressive but obsolete weapon. Between 1881 and 1910 the Imperial Russian Army converted all its line hussar, lancer and cuirassier regiments to dragoons with an emphasis on mounted infantry training. In 1910 they 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 breakthrough of the trenches
that it seemed would never come. Unfortunately these cavalry forces
looked upon the new tanks that began to appear late in the war with
derision, thus they did not support tank attacks aggressively. This
had unfortunate consequences as the tanks were able to achieve
breakthroughs but did not have the reliable range to exploit them.
Since the cavalry was not on hand to exploit the breakthroughs,
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 some use for mounted
troops, and some wide-ranging actions were fought, again mostly in
the early months and years 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
In retrospect it was clear that by 1918 the
advent of modern vehicles with effective mobility and armor such as tanks and armored
cars had spelled the end of horse troops as the key mobile
element of an army. This change was made even more necessary by the
development of the machine gun
and other weapons which could easily destroy cavalry formations.
Military aircraft had taken over the light cavalry roles of
scouting, screening, and harassment at roughly the same time. As a
result horses became relegated to logistical roles, with few
exceptions (see tachanka), and cavalry
traditions and insignia were often inherited by the emerging
armored formations and air forces.
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.
The last major cavalry battle was the Battle
of Komarów in 1920. 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 US Cavalry abandoned its sabres in 1934 and
commenced the conversion of its horsed regiments to mechanised
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 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. 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 and anti-aircraft weapon, artillery, light and
scout tanks, etc.
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 easily
keep pace with advancing tanks. This approach was also taken
because of the high quality of Russian Cossacks as horse
cavalry.
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 US
26th Cavalry Regiment (PS); 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
US 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 was probably that made 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
The Soviet Army retained horsed cavalry divisions until 1955, and even at the dissolution of the Soviet Union, there was a separate horsed cavalry squadron in Kyrgyzstan.Several armored divisions 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 fell 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 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 Joseph Nkomo. The horse mounted infantry of
the Scouts were very effective and feared by their 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 later 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, Nepalese, 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 (Montreal),
the Governor General's Horse Guards, Lord
Strathcona's Horse, the Royal
Canadian Dragoons, and the
South Alberta Light Horse. Of these, only the Governor
General's Horse Guards maintains an official ceremonial horse
mounted cavalry 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).
Light and heavy cavalry
- Bayreuth Dragoons
- Blues and Royals
- Cataphract
- Chasseurs d'Afrique
- Companions
- Cossacks
- Cuirassier
- Dragoons
- Hakkapeliitta (Finnish cavalry of Thirty Years' War fame)
- Garde Républicaine
- Governor General's Horse Guards (Canada)
- Hussars
- Polish winged hussars
- Kalmyks
- Lancers
- Life Guards
- Light Horse (Australia)
- Mamluks
- Polish cavalry
- Savari (Italian North African)
- Savoia Cavalry
- Sipahi (Ottoman)
- South Alberta Light Horse (Canada)
- Spahi (French North African)
- Uhlans
- United States Cavalry
Some contemporary horse cavalry officers
See also
- Cavalry tactics
- Heavy Cavalry
- Light Cavalry
- Horses in warfare
- War elephant
- Tent pegging
- Ski warfare
- Cheval de frise
- Rohirrim
- See List of British Army regiments by year, for cavalry units: 1881, 1962, 1994
- Cavalry in the American Civil War
- Casimir Pulaski
- Order of the spur
- Charge of the Light Brigade
- Camel cavalry
- London lobsters - The English Civil War armoured cavalry unit formed and lead by Sir Arthur Haselrig.
Notes
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.
External links
- 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)
- Italian Savoia Cavalry during World War 2
- Society of the Military Horse
- Gesellschaft der Freunde der Kavallerie (German)
- http://www.bharat-rakshak.com/LAND-FORCES/Army/Reg-Arm.html
- A Horse is Worth More than Riches by Jason Hribal
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