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Re: Hob-goblin Companion Cavalry



Spoiler alert: Don't you hate know-it-alls who moan about neat ideas?

Actually, stirrups weren't invented in Alexander's time. They hit the Levant & Europe after the fall of Rome. Cavalry charges by lancers, as we usually picture them, were impossible before then. I've never heard of Alexandrian cavalry deploying multiple skirmishers, though there is evidence that his cavalry were used like dragoons were (i.e. as mobile light infantry which dismounted to attack the flank & rear of heavy infantry & command units) in the 18th & early 19th centuries.

Considering how small ancient horses were compared to modern ones, I'm not sure how hanging a couple guys off a saddle would be possible, stirrups or not.

Fantasy theme aside, why would anyone who wanted mobile light infantry *not* use carts or chariots? That is, in fact, what those vehicles were used for in the ancient world: as a platform for light infantry wielding missile weapons, and for flanking enemy units.

In any case, before stirrups, a horse's back was far too unstable a platform to permit effective melee or ranged attacks.

See Archer Jones, "The Art of War in the Western World"; John Keegan, "The Mask of Command".

Man, I can be such a kill-joy.

Cheers!

- Jack