“A dog may be man’s best friend…but the horse wrote history.”
Author Unknown
There is something majestic and fearsome about a horse charging the enemy in battle formation. The spirit of the cavalryman merging with his mighty steed is something carved in our minds and one which has come down to us through history. While the domestication of horses can be traced to about 5,500 years ago, the battle-hardened warhorse came later.
Standard of Ur, Mesopotamia, War Panel, 2600–2400 BC
"For Greeks who had never before seen a person on horseback, the first sight of these riders racing toward them while firing volleys of arrows must have been truly terrifying. Some modern scholars wonder if early sightings of strangers on horseback might have inspired the Greek myths about the legendary half-man, half-horse beings called centaurs."*
Breeds of Horses Used in Warfare
Arabian Mare
Various types of horses were chosen for different uses. Light-weight animals like the Arabian or Akhal-Teke were known for speed, agility, and endurance. Riders used light spears, bows, javelins, and in later years, rifles. The light-weight breeds were used with chariots that included a driver and warrior and were also used as a light cavalry horse.
Medium-weight horses were the workhorses, used to pull heavy supply wagons or larger chariots with more than two riders. Medium weight horses could carry an armored cavalry rider and were used to move cannons on the battlefield. In the middle ages, these horses were called destriers, and likely looked much like a Baroque horse.
Black Cheval Percheron
The larger heavy-weight horses found their place in the European middle ages and we know them today as draught horses. These muscled breeds could pull giant supply loads and were known for their calm demeanor under pressure. It is likely the Percheron, agile and maneuverable in battle, is a good example of this sort of horse.
"Whether horses were trained to pull chariots, to be ridden as light or heavy cavalry, or to carry the armoured knight, much training was required to overcome the horse's natural instinct to flee from noise, the smell of blood, and the confusion of combat. They also learned to accept any sudden or unusual movements of humans while using a weapon or avoiding one. Horses used in close combat may have been taught, or at least permitted, to kick, strike, and even bite, thus becoming weapons themselves for the warriors they carried."*