Hungarian cavalry

Hungarian cavalry

Hungarian cavalry ( _hu. Magyar Lovasság) was one of the most famous troops in the world.Fact|date=October 2008 Hungarian horse archers in the medieval age, were unbeatable until 1332.Fact|date=October 2008 The Hungarian heavy knights defeated the Turksa lot times. However the most famous Hungarian units were the Hussars.

Ancient Hungarian cavalry and the horse archery

Since using a bow requires a horseman to let go of the reins with both hands, horse archers need superb equestrian skills if they are to shoot on the move. Horse archery is typically associated with Eurasian nomads of the Eurasian steppe.Fact|date=October 2008 Such were the Scythians and Sarmatians and later the Parthians, Hungarians, and Turks. Scythians were well known for their tactic of the Parthian shot, but evidently it was the Parthians who give it its name. In this tactical manoeuvre the horsemen would make a feigned retreat and progress away from the pursuing enemy while turning his upper body and shooting backwards at the pursuer, guiding his horse with his voice and the pressure of his legs.

Horse archery was widespread among Asian steppe people like the Scythians, Huns, Magyars, Mongols, Turks and so on, but was also adopted by other peoples and armies, notably Chinese and Romans who both suffered serious conflict with peoples practicing horse archery. It developed separately among the peoples of the South American pampas and the North American prairies; the Comanches were especially skilled. [T.R. Fehrenbach. Comanches, the history of a people. Vintage Books. London, 2007. ISBN 9780099520559. First published in the USA by Alfred Knopf, 1974. Page 124.] Horse archery was also particularly honoured in the samurai tradition of Japan, where mounted archery is called Yabusame.

Horse archery is the earliest form of cavalry weaponry.Fact|date=October 2008 The Iron Age horse was not strong enough to bear an armoured rider, being little larger than modern ponies.Fact|date=October 2008 Horse archers replaced the Bronze Age chariot, which allowed mobile attacks even with horses too small to bear a man.Fact|date=October 2008

The hussars of medieval Hungary

A type of irregular light horsemen was already well established by the 15th century. The word hussar (IPAEng|həˈzɑːr, həˈsɑːr, "or" IPA|/hʊ-/) is from the Hungarian "huszár". This word originates from the Serbian "husar" or "gusar", meaning pirate, derived from the Medieval Latin "cursarius" (cf. the English word "corsair"). [cite encyclopedia
editor = Philip Babcock Gove
encyclopedia = Webster's Third New International Dictionary
title = Hussar
year = 1986
publisher = Merriam-Webster
volume = 2
location = Springfield, Massachusetts
id =
isbn = 0-85229-503-0
pages = Page 1105
] According to an alternate theory, the word is derived from the Hungarian word of "húsz" meaning twenty, suggesting that hussar regiments were originally composed of twenty men.Fact|date=October 2008

The hussars reportedly originated in bands of Hungarian warriors crossing into southern Hungary after Turkish invasion on Serbia at the end of the 14th century.Initially they fought in small bands, but were reorganised into a larger, trained, formations during the reign of King Matthias I Corvinus of Hungary. So the first Hussar regiments were the light cavalry of the Black Army of Hungary. Under his command the hussars took part in the war against the Ottoman Empire in 1485 and proved successful against the Turkish Spahis as well as against Bohemians and Poles. After the king's death in 1490, hussars remained the preferred form of cavalry in Hungary. The Habsburg emperors hired Hungarian hussars as mercenaries to serve against the Ottoman Empire and on various battlefields throughout Europe. The "father" of the US cavalry in 1777 was a Hungarian hussar named Michael de Kovats.Fact|date=October 2008

Hussars of Frederick The Great

During and after the Rákóczi's War for Independence, many Hungarians served in the Habsburg army. Located in garrisons far away from Hungary, some deserted from the Austrian army joining that of Prussia. The value of the Hungarian hussars as light cavalry was recognised and in 1721 two Hussaren Corps were organized in the Prussian Army.

Frederick II (later called "The Great") recognised the value of hussars as light cavalry and encouraged their recruitment. In 1741 he established a further five regiments, largely from Polish deserters. Three more regiments were raised for Prussian service in 1744 and another in 1758. While the hussars were increasingly drawn from Prussian and other German cavalrymen, they continued to wear the traditional Hungarian uniform, richly decorated with braid and go1d trim.

Frederick also recognized the national characteristics of his Hungarian recruits and in 1759 issued a royal order which warned the Prussian officers never to offend the self-esteem of his hussars with insu1ts and abuses. At the same time he exempted the hussars from the usual disciplinary measures of the Prussian Army: physical punishments including cudgeling.

Frederick used his hussars for reconnaissance duties and for surprise attacks against the enemy's flanks and rear. A hussar regiment under the command of Colonel Sigismund Dabasi-Halász won the battle at Striegau on May 4, 1745, by attacking the Austrian combat formation in its flank and capturing its entire artillery.

The effectiveness of the hussars in Frederick's army can be judged by the number of promotions and decorations awarded to their officers. Recipients included the Hungarian generals Pal Werner and Ferenc Kőszeghy, who received the highest Prussian military order, the "Pour le Merite"; General Tivadar Ruesh was awarded the title of baron; Mihály Székely was promoted from the rank of captain to general after less than fifteen years of service.

While Hungarian hussars served in the opposing armies of Frederick and Maria Theresa there were no known instances of fratricidal clashes between them.

Notes


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