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Full Description
For millennia, cavalry was the premier combat arm. Horses gave armies mobility and speed; often cavalry charges, either on the enemy's flanks and into his rear or through his center, led to the decision in a battle. This book analyzes the use of mounted troops from prehistoric times to recent conflicts in Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas.
In contrast to many military history treatises that seek to identify a decline of cavalry over time in favor of modern infantry, Alexander Querengässer argues that only modern motor vehicles were able to replace cavalry.
The book examines the many historical uses of cavalry, analyzing conditions for its employment, the role of geographic and climatic factors in its use, and developments in equipment and tactics. More than two hundred contemporary illustrations round out the volume.
Contents
Acknowledgements
Foreword
Mounts as Weapons
Cavalry in Early Antiquity
Cavalry in Antiquity
- The Mediterranean Region
- Rom
- Asia
Middle Ages
- The Sassanid Empire
- India under the Gupta
- China
- Europe in the Early Middle Ages
- The Islamic Expansion
- Europe in the High Middle Ages
- The Mongols
- Tamerlane
- Africa
- India in the High and Late Middle Ages
- Japan
- Europe in the Late Middle Ages
1500-1650
- Europe
- Africa
- Latin America
- Japan
1650-1815
- Europe
- North?America
- Persia
- India
- China
- Indochina
- Africa
- Latin America
An Age of Decline? 1815-1914
- Europe
- North?America
- Latin America
- Africa
- Asia
The First World War
1919 to the Present
- The Inter-War Period
- The Second World War
- Cavalry in the Cold War 1945-1990
- From 1990 to the Present
- Asymmetric Conflicts
In Conclusion
Sources
Literature
Picture Credits