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Skywizard
24th July 2015, 01:06
http://archaeology.org/images/JA2015/Horses/Horses-Bayeux-Tapestry.jpg
Bayeux Tapestry, France, 11th c. A.D.


By the mid-second millennium B.C., the use of horses in warfare had become common throughout the Near East and Egypt. This development was made possible by advances both in the design of chariots, in particular the invention of the spoked wheel, which replaced the solid wooden wheel and reduced a chariot’s weight, and the introduction of all-metal bits, which gave chariot drivers more control over their horses. Though chariot warfare was expensive, and its effectiveness was determined by the durability of the chariots and suitability of the terrain, the vehicles became essential battlefield equipment. According to archaeologist Brian Fagan of the University of California, Santa Barbara, Bronze Age chariots acted largely as mobile archery platforms, with the bulkier four-wheeled ones also being used to carry kings into battle or to allow generals to observe the fighting. Lighter two-wheeled versions, such as those found in Tutankhamun’s tomb, were better suited to carrying a single archer and a driver.

http://archaeology.org/images/JA2015/Horses/Horses-Assyrian-Warchariot.jpg
Assyrian, Nineveh, Iraq, 7th c. B.C.

One of the most informative sources for the use of chariot horses in the ancient Near East is a tablet discovered in 1906–1907 in the royal archive at the Hittite site of Hattusa in Anatolia. The “Kikkuli Text,” written in cuneiform script and dating to around 1400 B.C., is named after its author. Kikkuli introduces himself in the first line as a “horse trainer from the land of the Mitanni,” a state in what is now northern Syria and southeastern Turkey. He then describes an approximately 184-day training cycle that begins in the fall, in which he includes instructions for the horses’ feeding, watering, and care, recommending stable rest, massages, and blankets.

http://archaeology.org/images/JA2015/Horses/Horses-Achaemenid-Chariot.jpg
Achaemenid, Tajikistan, 5th-4th c. B.C.

For nearly a millennium, warhorses were used almost exclusively to pull chariots, but after about 850 B.C. chariotry began to decline. Horses, however, never lost their usefulness in battle. Within about 150 years, cavalry, which is suitable to almost any terrain, virtually replaced chariotry in the Near East, and, eventually, horse-drawn chariots were employed primarily for racing, in ceremonial parades, and as prestige vehicles. In time this happened not only in this region, but across most of Europe as well. The rise of true cavalry was the determining force behind many of the major events that influenced European history, including Charles Martel’s defeat of the Saracens at the Battle of Poitiers in A.D. 732, the creation of the Holy Roman Empire, and the victory of William the Conqueror at the Battle of Hastings in A.D. 1066. “I think that the most important development in history with respect to animals was the adoption of the horse as a weapon of war,” says Fagan.



Source: http://archaeology.org/issues/180-1507/features/3349-warhorses



peace...

Baby Steps
24th July 2015, 06:44
I think Charles Martels cavalry were some of the first to use the stirrup. The Romans did not have these. It made horse soldiers much more deadly as they could put force behind a spear without falling off the horse. This was transformative

Carmen
24th July 2015, 10:50
The High School dressage move of the Spanish Riding School stallions were for battle manoeuvres. Can't remember the correct names of the movement, but caught in the middle of soldiers, they would rear, then leap, kicking out with both back legs to flatten soldiers behind them, spin, and gallop out the gap created! That's is how I understand the original purpose of that particular training.

Cardillac
24th July 2015, 14:47
if one has even half-carefully analyzed the gold chariot photo provided by Skywizzard one sees the drivers are much taller than the horses; giants, anyone?- do read the research of Stephen Quayle and Dr. Joseph P. Farrell (or were horses so much smaller back then?)-

question: why the round knobs on the chariot wheels? (would tend to give an extremely bumpy/slowed ride on hard ground)- am just asking-

please stay well Skywizzard and all-

Larry

Ted
24th July 2015, 18:11
The knobs on the wheel could be used for traction on hard corners, or could be sharpened for running over the enemy. Just a guess.
Cavalry was a devastating weapon against foot soldiers. The horses were taught to kick, bite and run over people. They were effectively used for centuries until the advent of the repeating rifle, or machine gun.
Could you imagine being a conscripted peasant, armed with a hoe, and having to face a very large, heavily armored horse out in the open? Not to mention the rider who was also heavily armored, carrying a lance and a sword to back it up. You wouldn't have a prayer.

DebtoftheDevil
16th September 2015, 14:23
if one has even half-carefully analyzed the gold chariot photo provided by Skywizzard one sees the drivers are much taller than the horses; giants, anyone?- do read the research of Stephen Quayle and Dr. Joseph P. Farrell (or were horses so much smaller back then?)-

question: why the round knobs on the chariot wheels? (would tend to give an extremely bumpy/slowed ride on hard ground)- am just asking-

please stay well Skywizzard and all-

Larry

This artefact does not look military to me, maybe they are ponies and the spokes were for soft land. Maybe ceremonial, judicial or farmwork, etc. Lovely piece of goldwork though.