Changes

Jump to: navigation, search

What has been the Role of Horses in Human Societies

14 bytes added, 21:17, 22 November 2018
m
insert middle ad
{{Mediawiki:kindleoasis}}
__NOTOC__
[[File:1200px-%C3%84gyptischer_Maler_um_1355_v._Chr._001.jpg|left|thumbnail|300px|Horses used in Ancient Egypt to pull chariots.]]
The horse today is often seen as an animal useful for recreation, sport, transport, and work. The nature of the horse, however, has changed in different societies across time. Sometimes horses were seen as war animals, while in other places and periods there use was the privy of royalty.
With the migration of Indo-European and Central Asian groups into the Near East by the end of the 3rd millennium BC and early 2nd millennium BC, we now begin to see horses used in warfare in early urban societies. The horse increasingly gains prominence in the ancient Near East, where the ancient Amarna texts refer to them as a trade item and that they were desired by elites.<ref>For information on the trade of horses from the Amarna letters, see: Morkot, Robert, and Robert Morkot. 2010. ''The A to Z of Ancient Egyptian Warfare''. Lanham: Scarecrow Press, pg. 107.</ref> Although horses had clear advantages in warfare, they may have taken sometime before they became more commonly used. For one, there was the complexity of training horses, which was considered more difficult and perhaps exchanges for horses indicates that few people had the needed skills to properly train them. In fact, texts exist that show that horses were often difficult to train. Horses, although used for warfare, were also seen as useful pack animals and were utilized in trade routes in the ancient Near East. Prices for horses, however, were more expensive than other pack animals, further suggesting the difficulty in mastering these animals.<ref>For more information on how horses were used and spread in the ancient Near East, see: Orlin, Louis L. 2007. ''Life and Thought in the Ancient Near East''. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, pg. 82.</ref> Horses by around 1800-1600 BC were utilized with chariots in war, making them now among the most important war weapons available for ancient armies. <ref>For information on war horses and chariots, see: Eglan, Jared. 2015. ''Beasts of War: The Militarization of Animals''. JEG Publishing, pg. 47.</ref>
 
<dh-ad/>
==The Golden Age of the Horse==
We see that horses, which were first domesticated in Eurasia, began to spread rapidly soon afterwards in the 3rd millennium BC. Horses and their roles included agricultural work, as pack animals, and as instruments of war. By the mid-2nd millennium BC, horses begin to have an even more dominant role in large-scale, complex society warfare. In the early 1st millennium BC, elite soldiers and horsemen replaced charioteers and became the elite soldiers of the battlefield until the early 20th century AD, even after innovations such as gunpowder and rifles. Key innovations such as the stirrup and harness facilitated the dominance of horses as beasts of burden and warfare.
 
==References==
<references/>
 
[[Category:Wikis]]
[[Category:History of Science and Technology]] [[Category:Ancient History]]
{{Contributors}}
 
<div class="portal" style="width:85%;">
==Related DailyHistory.org Articles==
</div>
{{Mediawiki:Ancient Greece}}
 
==References==
<references/>
 
[[Category:Wikis]]
[[Category:History of Science and Technology]] [[Category:Ancient History]]
{{Contributors}}

Navigation menu