Medieval Misconceptions: HORSES

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  • Опубликовано: 24 окт 2019
  • How big were horses in the medieval period and what types of horses were there?
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Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @isakq
    @isakq 4 года назад +1976

    Nah, everyone know all horses during the medieval era were actually servants running behind the rider while banging coconuts together.

    • @TeganThrussell
      @TeganThrussell 4 года назад +79

      Is that a monty python reference I spy?

    • @mralfey
      @mralfey 4 года назад +65

      Yes. BUT . . . . . You fool!
      What about the dragons!

    • @Dragosus
      @Dragosus 4 года назад +57

      How did a coconut get to Britain?

    • @bottomshot4546
      @bottomshot4546 4 года назад +62

      @@Dragosus are you suggesting coconuts migrate?

    • @Dragosus
      @Dragosus 4 года назад +50

      @@bottomshot4546 The swallow may fly south with the sun or the house martin or the plover may seek warmer climes in winter, yet these are not strangers to our land?

  • @Lurker101Gaming
    @Lurker101Gaming 4 года назад +2947

    Remember, for over a millennium a guy on a horse was the fastest internet connection you could get

    • @Jaggaraz218
      @Jaggaraz218 4 года назад +134

      What about dem ravens

    • @Eeter26
      @Eeter26 4 года назад +27

      Lurker101 and they were fine! Garshdarn kids these days

    • @Lurker101Gaming
      @Lurker101Gaming 4 года назад +71

      You know, I'm still waiting for someone to say "but what about dragons?"

    • @sambakich7494
      @sambakich7494 4 года назад +40

      Still faster than dialup

    • @joshdanao2089
      @joshdanao2089 4 года назад +42

      @@Lurker101Gaming but what about dragons?

  • @darthelias490
    @darthelias490 4 года назад +648

    Interesting, so when they say in “The night before Christmas” the line “His coursers they flew” we can take away that Santa’s reindeer are trained for combat. Good to know.

    • @matthiuskoenig3378
      @matthiuskoenig3378 4 года назад +99

      well the medieval Finish did ride reindeer into battle

    • @thehackingburger3002
      @thehackingburger3002 4 года назад +64

      @@matthiuskoenig3378
      That is WAY more bada** sounding than it should be...

    • @nomisunrider6472
      @nomisunrider6472 4 года назад +48

      Not trained. Reindeer are just like that.

    • @Bluecho4
      @Bluecho4 4 года назад +27

      Well, we already know Saint Nicolas was a fighting man. Just as Arius.

    • @markfergerson2145
      @markfergerson2145 4 года назад +17

      @@thehackingburger3002 Well, consider going up against cavalry riding animals with *horns*.

  • @ModernKnight
    @ModernKnight 3 года назад +330

    Shad, This is a bit of a necro comment, but I've just stumbled on this older video of yours about horses, nicely done. I agree completely. Medieval war horses in Western Europe at least, were usually stallions, so stronger and more muscular than most modern riding horses that are usually mares or gelded male horses called geldings. The Stallion hormones make a big difference in behaviour and performance, and smaller horses, about 15 hands high are easier to get on in armour too.

    • @MrBlaktoe
      @MrBlaktoe 3 года назад +9

      I hadn't considered the gendering. I have this feeling that we in the modern age have a distorted sens of the size and power of classical horses because many of the horses we see on TV and in film have Arabian genes

    • @michiganscythian2445
      @michiganscythian2445 3 года назад +29

      Nowadays, most movie horses are Friesians or Andalusians. Destrier type, but bigger now than they were 1000 years ago

    • @MrBlaktoe
      @MrBlaktoe 3 года назад +5

      @@michiganscythian2445 Thanks for that. I'm not a equine enthusiast so my comments reflect that. I guess I could say I was going more for the "horses that are longer and taller" sort of point and Arabian is the thing that springs to mind. Which could be altogether wrong as well.

    • @Brokenlance
      @Brokenlance 3 года назад +12

      I love how the first thing I did when I saw this video was search for a comment by Modern History lol.

    • @Lena-fp5zw
      @Lena-fp5zw 3 года назад +26

      In the 20+ years that I had been involved with horses in one way or another, while stallions could get more muscular, it was actually the geldings that grew bigger. Of course a lot depends on when the horse is gelded as well. I know quite a few geldings that display typically stallion behaviour simply because they were gelded late (and we're not talking a few months after. They had years to get their hormones low). Of course, when the risk of infection became more pharmacologically controllable gelding unpromising stallions became more popular because when you don't need him for breeding why deal with potential aggression and unpredictability? That being said, using stallions was often simply more practical - more consistent behaviour, the fact that you can actually lose a horse in a battle and it makes more sense to inseminate the mare(s) and take the stallion so if you happen to come back 11 months later without your good war horse, you still have a chance of coming to a mare you can ride and a foal that can grow to be the next war horse.

  • @noahjohnson935
    @noahjohnson935 4 года назад +721

    The Broze Age civilazations actually used chariots because the horses were still pretty small. Egyptian horses were prized for being able to be extremely good quality, but could not hold up a man wearing armor.

    • @szarekhthesilent2047
      @szarekhthesilent2047 4 года назад +99

      Assyrians where the first to start using not-chariot-cavalry for warfare, I think.
      Sometimes with 2 men sitting on one horse.
      Poor horse...

    • @noahjohnson935
      @noahjohnson935 4 года назад +78

      @@szarekhthesilent2047 so Assyrians were just as cruel to animals as they were to people
      ;-;

    • @RoulicisThe
      @RoulicisThe 4 года назад +148

      Correction : they used chariots when the landscape where they lived allowed them to. Chariots are...bad, in warfare. very bad : they're fragile, they can't turn too fast or they'll break, if they hit a rock they're basically done... So the only places where they were efficient where open places with few obstacles, like plains or deserts.
      Egyptians, then seleucides used chariots because the landscape allowed them to, not simply because their horses couldn't hold an armoured rider : they still had horsemen, they just didn't have much armor on them. If the landscape didn't allow them to use chariots, they'd have simply rode horses without armor, like Huns or Mongols did (and their horses were even smaller than the ones found in Europe and Egypt)

    • @Krescentwolf
      @Krescentwolf 4 года назад +24

      The Babylonians thought about the donkeys... They used 4-wheeled war carts pulled by donkeys as their own special version of the chariot.

    • @kyomademon453
      @kyomademon453 4 года назад +23

      @C A a mobile platform from there to shoot at enemies and intimidate, its the precursor of horse archers

  • @RifeXD
    @RifeXD 4 года назад +2760

    I asked my horse if he liked this video. Turns out he's a neighsayer.

  • @KICKxURxASS
    @KICKxURxASS 4 года назад +109

    "All right I hope you heard that. She called me a noble steed."
    -Donkey

    • @lisawillis8227
      @lisawillis8227 4 года назад

      Michael Redford 😆😆😆😆🐴🐴

    • @SysterYster
      @SysterYster 4 года назад +2

      Yes! Someone else saw that too! XD

  • @Flugkaninchen
    @Flugkaninchen 4 года назад +87

    One thing I'd like to add: gaited horses were much more common in the middle ages than they are today. Palfreys often had a fourth gait which made them much more comfortable for riding long distances. This ability got lost in most breeds as they were bred for modern cavalry or pulling carriages, but lived on in Iceland and the Americas.

    • @barbaravick5634
      @barbaravick5634 4 года назад +16

      Flugkaninchen
      Fifth.
      walk, trot, cantor, gallop and the fifth, call it racking​ , pace, running walk, whatever, it's a wonderful smooth gait that can cover a lot of ground quickly and a truly smooth horse won't spill water when you hold a glassful while they're at it and you're riding, anticipating a thirsty ride.

    • @michiganscythian2445
      @michiganscythian2445 3 года назад +8

      Some parts of Central Asia too. I watched a documentary on PBS years ago about Tibet and they were riding large ponies doing a flying pace like Icelandics

    • @elishh8567
      @elishh8567 3 года назад +2

      Amazing so cool like they were MADE to be ridden how come???

    • @Flugkaninchen
      @Flugkaninchen 3 года назад +8

      @@elishh8567 Evolution. In Tölt, contrary to trot, there is always at least one foot on the ground. That makes it easier for horses to move around on uneven or slippery ground.

    • @TolkienOtaku
      @TolkienOtaku 3 года назад +4

      This. Today's gaited breeds include the Icelandic, the Missouri Fox Trotter, the Tennessee Walking Horse, the Paso Fino, and the Peruvian Paso. The last two are even considered to be the closest modern descendants of the medieval palfreys.

  • @h.a.harris7423
    @h.a.harris7423 4 года назад +220

    Excellent job, Shad! I'm a lifelong horsewoman and I have to commend you on your research on this subject. Things haven't changed much, the horse world is still full of classifications and terms that aren't clearly understood by the general public.

    • @Krescentwolf
      @Krescentwolf 4 года назад +13

      You mean.... "A horse is a horse of course of course" is wrong?! XD

    • @codycraddock4975
      @codycraddock4975 4 года назад +3

      They also change depending on who you are talking to. I know a ton of people who use the word colt to refer to both a colt and a Filly.

    • @Fluttermoth
      @Fluttermoth 4 года назад +1

      @@codycraddock4975 Where I live, in Cornwall, the older farmers talk about 'horse colts' and 'mare colts' so it's obviously quite widespread.

    • @blkequus
      @blkequus 3 года назад +1

      terms even vary between types of riding. Go from the show jumping world to the reining horses and terminology is all over the place. And colors... iare just a hornets nest!

  • @poilboiler
    @poilboiler 4 года назад +613

    Shad is horsing around.

  • @koryheitkam1443
    @koryheitkam1443 4 года назад +27

    Shad, I have been a lifelong fan of medieval cavalry and I'd like to bring to your attention a story I once heard from a historian. It's been years but the gist of it is a noble came home from war on one (if not the) largest war horses recorded in the medieval period and they believe it was the size of a modern Shire Draft horse, it was solid black and dwarfed the rest of the calvary horses around it. I'll do more research and see if I can find the story to share.

  • @NicAimo
    @NicAimo 4 года назад +76

    Theese terms still are very similar in Italian
    ENG - ITA
    Sumpter - da Soma (in Italian "da" has the same meaning as "-er" in English)
    Rouncey - Ronzino
    Palfrey - Palafreno
    Courser - Corsiero
    Destrier - Destriero: from the latin, and then Italian, "destro", meaning right-handed, which was the hand used by the squire to hold the reins of his Lord's war-horse ;)

    • @DrBernon
      @DrBernon 4 года назад +3

      In Spanish Diestro also means skilled. I think that is closer to the meaning for this category. (Destrier)

  • @Bam_Bizzler
    @Bam_Bizzler 4 года назад +465

    Horse's might have not been that big but ya know what was?
    the snails

    • @adorabell4253
      @adorabell4253 4 года назад +36

      blam gam seriously, those snails were a giant pain in a knight’s but.

    • @BigSauce_
      @BigSauce_ 4 года назад +4

      I don't get the reference

    • @adorabell4253
      @adorabell4253 4 года назад +35

      @@BigSauce_ Look up "Medieval Snails art" and enjoy the WTFery.

    • @carbonado2432
      @carbonado2432 4 года назад +20

      eaten into extinction? by the french i would assume...

    • @Burn_Angel
      @Burn_Angel 4 года назад +14

      "We're fighting against snails?"
      "And we're losing?!"

  • @alvianekka80
    @alvianekka80 4 года назад +847

    Everyone know they can use horse to climb almost vertical cliff

    • @bando5876
      @bando5876 4 года назад +93

      You, your finally awake

    • @wolfwarlordjake8992
      @wolfwarlordjake8992 4 года назад +95

      You were trying to cross the border, right? Walked right into that Imperial ambush. Same as us, and that thief over there.

    • @bando5876
      @bando5876 4 года назад +81

      @@wolfwarlordjake8992 Damn you Stormcloaks. Skyrim was fine until you came along. Empire was
      nice and lazy. If they hadn't been looking for you, I could've stolen
      that horse and been half way to Hammerfell.

    • @bigdiccmarty9335
      @bigdiccmarty9335 4 года назад +34

      Don't forget being able to jump 5 meters straight up from a stand still while being encased in gold plate.

    • @bando5876
      @bando5876 4 года назад +29

      @@bigdiccmarty9335 You ruined the streak but true

  • @Hikaru109Ichijyo
    @Hikaru109Ichijyo 3 года назад +20

    Jumps off his mid lands palfrey to take the fallen lord's destrier . . . and can't jump on . . . "You do not have enough riding skill for this mount" whuut

  • @PolluxA
    @PolluxA 4 года назад +377

    They weren't just trained, they were types, in contrast to modern breeds. The courser was not any horse trained for battle. That's wrong.
    Destrier = Stallion created by crossing something like an andalusian stallions (or what they were back then) with a mare courser. In theory it could be any large stallion outside ones own area. This created hybrid vigor in the first generation. A destrier was usually for tournaments, but could be used for war by rich knights and major magnates. We have written evidence for this breeding practice with andalusian horses.
    Courser = Was the regular large horse breed for warfare and in universal use by men-at-arms. This is a type.
    Palfrey = Was a dedicated riding horse. It was not for warfare and that has to do with the gait. This was for smooth riding. They are amblers. Later, riding horses with a trott was called hackenys.
    Rouncey = This was a jack-of-all-trades horse. It could be used as a medium war horse, riding horse or pack animal. Mounted archers had these.
    Charger = Specifically a horse trained for combat and could be a destrier, courser or rouncey. (You have mixed this up with courser.)
    Hobby = This is a medium riding horse suited for rough terrain because of the gait. They were a specific breed and imported from Ireland in the 14th century. Originally they were palfreys imported to Ireland. Mounted archers would ride these horses.
    Jennet = Spanish riding horse much like the Hobby, but probably more collected.
    Sumter = Pack horse.

    • @Ruarscampbell
      @Ruarscampbell 4 года назад +34

      Also as a side note: many English men-at-arms (13th to 15th century) rode rounceys as they almost always fought on foot (with some exceptions), but they would ride the horse to the battlefield and for transport.

    • @diomepa2100
      @diomepa2100 4 года назад +11

      Rouncey - This could also be used by men tilting at windmills.

    • @maritasue5067
      @maritasue5067 4 года назад +5

      Thanks. I was starting to compose an improved definition of palfrey, but you did it first.

    • @Alias_Anybody
      @Alias_Anybody 4 года назад +2

      @@Ruarscampbell
      Basically medieval Dragoons?

    • @MarikHavair
      @MarikHavair 4 года назад +6

      @@Alias_Anybody Basically, courtesy of England's shitty weather or so I've heard.

  • @gauntlettcf5669
    @gauntlettcf5669 4 года назад +56

    In Italian we still use "destriero" (singular) and "destrieri" (plural) when we want to sound fancy when talking about horses. Also we use it specifically to refer to a knight's horse.

  • @michaeljacquart7791
    @michaeljacquart7791 4 года назад +131

    This made my DND campaigns so much easier.

    • @LuckySketches
      @LuckySketches 4 года назад +2

      By using price differences between toles? Stat block differences? Both?

    • @michaeljacquart7791
      @michaeljacquart7791 4 года назад +13

      @@LuckySketches pretty much both of those, yes. It helps seperate a cheap labor horse from a paladin's holy mount. Otherwise he's just a guy with a horse

    • @daemosblack
      @daemosblack 4 года назад +8

      @@michaeljacquart7791 and now you know WHY the game (at least in 5e) has "draft horse" Riding horse" and "war horse" as options, and why war horse is so much more expensive than the other two. though i would personally set the Destrier up as a forth slight higher stated war horse in my own games

    • @WintrBorn
      @WintrBorn 4 года назад +1

      daemosblack It was that way in 3e, as well. Been too long for me to remember 2nd ed.

  • @criminokrimino5846
    @criminokrimino5846 4 года назад +10

    Thank you for clarifying the difference between types of horse and breeds! And for your thorough research into horses! It really showed in this video and your terminology is spot on.
    Many don't know that breed registries only became commonplace long after the medieval period. So, the classifications you described in this video are far more accurate to the period than classifying a horse by 'breed'.

  • @Divinemakyr
    @Divinemakyr 4 года назад +7

    Hey Shad, I'm indigenous of the Tsilhqot'in people, and we're a very horse-oriented culture back when Spaniards came and mingled with us, one of the things they gave/introduced to us was horses. This video hit close to home, thanks, man.

  • @nahuelmat
    @nahuelmat 4 года назад +42

    I've been binge re-watching your videos and at the very moment I go to bed you upload a new one. Please Shad let me continue with my life.

  • @farmerjack418
    @farmerjack418 4 года назад +194

    I once had a woman tell me I couldn't ask her anything about horses that she didn't already know, but I Stumpter.

    • @corison2058
      @corison2058 4 года назад +2

      👏👏👏🤣

    • @Leondragon06
      @Leondragon06 4 года назад +1

      lol that was good.

    • @JCElzinga
      @JCElzinga 3 года назад

      ignoring your terrible joke, ill bet she rode english...

  • @McHobotheBobo
    @McHobotheBobo 4 года назад +11

    More 👏 equine 👏 content 👏
    I tore through a couple wikipedia pages on this on a car ride a month ago and it was simply fascinating

  • @AdelWolf
    @AdelWolf 4 года назад +2

    You've made every historical and high fantasy novel I've ever read make so much more sense with this!

  • @shadfacts6465
    @shadfacts6465 4 года назад +315

    Shad Fact: Shad recently participated in a caber toss. Though we are still waiting for it the log to actually land.

    • @grantexploit5903
      @grantexploit5903 4 года назад +8

      It will never land. It reached solar system escape velocity and is now eternally coasting in space.

    • @mralfey
      @mralfey 4 года назад

      Well . . . . look who’s back.

    • @mralfey
      @mralfey 4 года назад

      Soooooo. Shad Facts is now Chick Noris Jokes: Shad edition!

    • @flowertrue
      @flowertrue 4 года назад

      What in the Sam Hill is a caber?

    • @mralfey
      @mralfey 4 года назад

      Karina Flower, a caber is like a giant log that men would throw for competition.

  • @Thaumogenesis
    @Thaumogenesis 4 года назад +609

    Is it true they taste like raisins?

    • @shadiversity
      @shadiversity  4 года назад +170

      Only if you look at it

    • @poilboiler
      @poilboiler 4 года назад +55

      Sweet lemonade

    • @exlibrisas
      @exlibrisas 4 года назад +34

      Dear GOD you triggered some nostalgia...

    • @MrTimdeK
      @MrTimdeK 4 года назад +28

      Give it a lick

    • @Bam_Bizzler
      @Bam_Bizzler 4 года назад +29

      Sound the alarm, we have an old memer!

  • @LuxisAlukard
    @LuxisAlukard 4 года назад +21

    Shad: "I do hope you enjoyed"
    all of us: Of course we did - thats why we are here

  • @theannouncer5538
    @theannouncer5538 4 года назад +32

    I wasn’t prepared to see a horse wearing a suit

  • @SuperCityscan
    @SuperCityscan 4 года назад +327

    I'm so early, knights are still just people who can afford a horse.

  • @wolfgang8391
    @wolfgang8391 4 года назад +8

    Shad, just started listening to Shadow of the conquer (chapter 19 so far). I've got to say I'm loving it from your worldbuilding, characters, and fight scenes. Carry on good Sir.

  • @SpookyDeadeye
    @SpookyDeadeye 4 года назад +16

    Knights back then who rode armored horses: LOOK AT MY HORSE! MY HORSE IS AMAZING!!

    • @MogofWar
      @MogofWar 4 года назад +2

      The practice of psuedoarchaic speech that popped up in the Victorian Era is responsible for a lot of our misconceptions about the Medieval Period. . .
      So yes those flying, jagged horned, Satan beasts are totally trained for combat. Rudolf and his laser snout killed a lot of NAZIs back in the day... Killed him on the inside he never got to smite the commies...

  • @melvinmayfield470
    @melvinmayfield470 2 года назад +1

    Shad, as usual, does not disappoint! Bravo & Many Thanks!

  • @noahjohnson935
    @noahjohnson935 4 года назад +94

    This video reminds me of the Hand's Joust in the first Game of Thrones book. Gregor Clegane rode a Destrier, and Loras Tyrell rode a mare. Gregor's horse was still pretty strong because it wasn't a gelding, but looked like a pony when Gregor was riding him.
    The strength added by the fact this stallion wasnt gelded turned into a disadvantage, as its natural disobedience made it hard to ride, and Loras' mare was in heat made the stallion go nuts.

    • @AlgaeNymph
      @AlgaeNymph 4 года назад +43

      Poor horse lost his head over that mare.

    • @panq8904
      @panq8904 4 года назад +19

      Makes sense, Stallions are generally unpredictable if only for being so bloody hormonal, every riding stable I've been to has had one stallion, just one, to about 15-20 mares.
      Those poor guys drove themselves (and their respective owner) mad any time a female came into season, not surprising Destriers were so rare when keeping/riding a stallion safely in the medieval period must've been a huge risk in itself.

    • @blauespony1013
      @blauespony1013 4 года назад +4

      @@panq8904 It depends a bit on the stallion though - our stable owner trains young horses and they had one stallion that was calmer than my mare - even when I walked by with my mare who was in heat at the time. But most stallions would do everything to get to a mare in heat.

    • @panq8904
      @panq8904 4 года назад +10

      ​@@blauespony1013 True, the owners of the stallions I mentioned really only owned them because they came from good bloodlines and were worth a bunch, they weren't very well trained individuals IMO.
      Good trainers these days can do some incredible stuff with horses, but also consider that horse trainers nowadays are far more aware of the psychology and intelligence of the animals they're training, there are so many resources on horse/general animal psychology that aid in horse training in the modern era that people back in Medieval times wouldn't have had access to or understood.
      Even the initial training of breaking in a horse for riding purposes was brutal in the medieval period, at least in Western Europe. Repeated punishment and negative reinforcements likely lead to some pretty psychologically unstable animals.
      Between that, their 'hormonal energy' and the fact that being thrown off a horse in those days could very easily kill you, riding a Destrier Stallion sounds terrifying.
      Crap I've rambled, the subject of animal behavior and how training methods have advanced over time is just so interesting haha

    • @blauespony1013
      @blauespony1013 4 года назад +5

      @@panq8904 I like the last point of your ramble very much. I think there was not much of riding training like today (except for knights and noble men maybe), so for the average rider it must have been scary and highly impressive to see a destrier stallion. They would not have dared to approach such a horse.
      And the knights did take those horses out in the fields and into the cities, rode them on tournaments (jousting), in war etc. - there was so much more going on than today. How they trained the horses for all those experiences is beyond my imagination.
      I own a mare and she gets so nervous sometimes beside her being 17 years old already. And she is out in the fields every other day and on the meadow - but she loses her cool a lot. If I would try to ride her through a crowded street full of screaming vendors, moving pedestrians, carriages, work places, smithes etc. (like an average medieval city on market day or something) ... she would injure everyone around her (at the very least).
      But still with those horses it must have worked somehow.

  • @hipnyah
    @hipnyah 4 года назад +22

    Thanks for being there when I can't sleep shad!!

  • @nasserfirelordarts6574
    @nasserfirelordarts6574 4 года назад +4

    JUST WHAT I NEEDED FOR MY COMIC!!!!!!!! (probably 4 years before there is even any form of a final version though)

  • @colehalford1893
    @colehalford1893 4 года назад +1

    I’m a horse rancher, and I found your medieval terminology fascinating. Thank You Sir Shad.

  • @JulianMakes
    @JulianMakes 4 года назад +152

    I had no idea, I guess it’s obvious once humans started breeding animals for certain traits, their phenotype would change so super fast, very interesting video cheers

    • @handlebarfox2366
      @handlebarfox2366 4 года назад +8

      plants, too. Check out what happened to watermelons.

    • @Ruarscampbell
      @Ruarscampbell 4 года назад +6

      @@handlebarfox2366 They got sweeeeeeeeeeet. And red.

    • @Yal_Rathol
      @Yal_Rathol 4 года назад +8

      @@Ruarscampbell they were already red, but there's an 18th (i think) century painting showing a cut watermelon. that motherfucker has SPIRALS in it, and only like, a third of the internals are actually edible.

    • @Ruarscampbell
      @Ruarscampbell 4 года назад +3

      ​@@Yal_Rathol True, although the genes for the red flesh colouring (Lycopene) and for sugar are on the same chromosome and in close proximity to one another so when they were selectively bred for sweetness, they tended to also (unknowingly) select for the red flesh gene. Over many generations of selection not only did watermelons become sweeter, the red flesh also started to fill the inside and replace the bitter white. (The white is actually edible too... it just tastes bad.)
      Some images of older watermelons from the 17th century:
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Albert_Eckhout_1610-1666_Brazilian_fruits.jpg, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watermelon#/media/File:Pasteques,_extrait_d'un_tableau_de_Giovanni_Stanchi.jpeg
      National geographic post written by their Senior Science correspondent: Mark Strauss
      www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2015/08/150821-watermelon-fruit-history-agriculture/

    • @jamessamuel1255
      @jamessamuel1255 4 года назад +3

      Artificial selection puts such an extreme pressure on a population that it speeds up evolution

  • @RickardLejonhjarta
    @RickardLejonhjarta 4 года назад +63

    Look at my horse
    My horse is amazing

    • @CowCommando
      @CowCommando 4 года назад +6

      If you didn't sing along you did it wrong.

    • @TheDcraft
      @TheDcraft 4 года назад +3

      But my ass is better (get it, ass=donkey or something like that)

    • @u.v.s.5583
      @u.v.s.5583 3 года назад +1

      @@TheDcraft Darth Maul is the best. (Maul = Mule or something like that)

  • @danjaguar126
    @danjaguar126 Год назад

    Every so often I come back to this video, it's one of my favourites. Excellent reference material.

  • @BandB_Bushcraft
    @BandB_Bushcraft Год назад

    Thank you for this video Shad, it has been extremely helpful for me as I write my book, which actually has quite a few horses in it.

  • @Niskirin
    @Niskirin 4 года назад +197

    Wait, what is this? Only a 10 minute video? Ooh, I take it, it's because most horses can't be equipped with machicolations, isn't it?

    • @TealWolf26
      @TealWolf26 4 года назад +9

      Oh that just sounds like lack of ingenuity to me. I'm pretty sure a sturdy enough destrier can be fortified. Maybe build a chariot with wings with holes in them or holes in the walls.

    • @noornasri5753
      @noornasri5753 4 года назад +1

      *most*

    • @guilhermehx7159
      @guilhermehx7159 4 года назад

      Machocolate?

  • @MrOtakulord
    @MrOtakulord 4 года назад +117

    from an italian viewer "destriero" is singular, "destrieri" is plural and is a common term for ridable horse, i like the video btw, very informative!

    • @tirocska
      @tirocska 4 года назад +2

      While I'm not an expert on Italian, I'm quite sure that earlier versions of the language didn't follow the same rules as contemporary Itailan.

    • @MrOtakulord
      @MrOtakulord 4 года назад +14

      @@tirocska for sure but lots of male words as in fiorentino (first italian) as in modern italian are with the final "o" on singular and "i" on plural, it s a common grammatic rule.

    • @alaric375
      @alaric375 4 года назад +9

      @@tirocska the fact is that we really didn't have only one language during history, because Italy as an unified nation is pretty recent compared to the rest of Europe. We had many different regional languages and dialects ( we still have many), and quite literally at some point we said "OK guys, this is Florence dialect, we take a couple of rules from here and there and this is now Italian." and really didn't change that much. And this was done between 1300 and 1500, so yeah, if you know modern Italian you can understand most of Italian text from that times.

    • @kyomademon453
      @kyomademon453 4 года назад

      @@alaric375 interesting but highly doubt all of italy adopted firenze dialect as the base in that time period, Liguria still had its own, venezia, Napoli, sicilia and sardinia were their own thing and still are

    • @imokin86
      @imokin86 4 года назад +4

      @@tirocska the Latin form is dextrarius, plural dextrarii. Later Italian regional forms derived from this, so endings of the same type (-o or -u versus -i) are to be expected.

  • @d33b33
    @d33b33 4 года назад +3

    Another big thing for a war horse, or, destrier, is its training. Not just maneuvering, horses try not step on bodies, so they have to be trained to stomp on corpses as well as get used to the smell of death and blood. Regardless, a war horse that survives a major battle suffers from debilitating PTSD, so that it was sold as a riding horse, or palfrey, after one, sometimes two battles.

  • @audreyblair824
    @audreyblair824 4 года назад +1

    how you described how the warhorses needed to be reminded me of how the horses are for the type of western riding I do.
    I do a style called "Reining", and the better reining horses tend to be short and stocky (though that's not a rule), and breed doesn't matter, they just need to stop quickly, be able to spin around and make sure they don't trip on their feet while they do it.

  • @XellDincht
    @XellDincht 4 года назад +18

    Really interesting. Seems like the way how they differentiated horses back then is similar to how we differentiate cars today

  • @Embetebe
    @Embetebe 4 года назад +362

    I used to make the same argument until my voice got horse...

  • @bookwyrmgirl
    @bookwyrmgirl 4 года назад +13

    Oh, wow... You know, I actually tried researching this topic for my own book some time back and came across these same terms (though I have been sticking with the standard modern sizes/colors of horses >.> 'cause I didn't know that bit). But I don't recall "Sumpter" in any of the references. I've been using "draft" to sum up the work horses or those with more muscle for labor jobs. That was the only term I could find for that role until you mentioned it.

    • @jamesfrankiewicz5768
      @jamesfrankiewicz5768 4 года назад

      Draft horses usually imply large horses meant for pulling extra heavy loads, like a beer "draft" wagon. A sumpter wouldn't necessarily be a large horse, just one that isn't suited for riding, and probably has to be coaxed to even move up to a trot, but is a horse that can still pull a basic farm wagon, or carry a pack of goods while contently following another horse. It might even be a horse that was one of other classes that is now well past its prime, but still has some value left to a farmer or merchant.

    • @StibbonsPonder
      @StibbonsPonder 4 года назад

      Sumpters are specifically pack horses (and mules). They were used on narrow mountain passes, and so had to be sure of foot, free of vertigo and patient. As James says, they are not meant to go fast and were were not particularly high-value horses, but you can't assume that just any horse will be a good or useful sumpter.

  • @robfromjersey7899
    @robfromjersey7899 4 года назад +7

    May the Horse be with you. Always.

  • @ct7567CaptRex
    @ct7567CaptRex 4 года назад +40

    Nice work there shad. People always seem to make the assumption that riding a horse, nevermind riding one in battle, was easy. Let me tell you somethimg (I took riding lessons for 6 years). A horse is a living beeing. They have an own will. Yes, they can be trained but they are still sentient to some degree and they have some caveats to them. Staying on horseback is not easy, nevermind holding a weapon while doing it. Shad, have you ever sat on a horse? It requires a lot of practice.
    Great vid by the way. Keep up the good work.

    • @JohnE9999
      @JohnE9999 4 года назад +3

      I rode a horse once when I was a kid. I didn't have any trouble staying on (it was a dude ranch, and the horses were probably used to novice riders), but getting it to go where I wanted was difficult: it was like the horse was saying, "Stopping tugging the reins, kid. I know where I'm going, and I don't need any input from you." :)

    • @shorewall
      @shorewall 4 года назад +1

      @@JohnE9999 Yeah, I rode a horse at a ranch, and the whole time I was appreciative that he was a good little horsie, and didn't cause me any trouble. You really feel how big and strong they are, especially because I am a big guy myself, and he didn't have a problem with me. :D

    • @Thranduil82
      @Thranduil82 4 года назад

      Have you ever riden on a polo horse? the reins are like a joystick, leaving a hand completly free.
      I did dressage for 15 years, managing a horse with one hand is easy you can do everything with your weight distribution and your legs, it just takes training.

    • @extrastuff9463
      @extrastuff9463 4 года назад

      I only rode a horse once, but went through a fair few of the videos by Jason Kingsley recently on his channel "Modern History TV". Just how spooked one of the less experienced horses was by the movement from a lance impact on the target stand initially, or being a bit wary on the way back after it has been knocked over and isn't in its previous place from before riding at it with the lance is really quite something.
      Long banners flapping around at the end of a stick also was a thing one of his horses didn't entirely trust first time he saw it, given these simple small things under controlled circumstances can already cause fear/stress the added chaos of a full scale battle would require a huge investment in training time. I also wonder how often it happened that a horse for example may still be physically fit for battlefield combat but due to some kind of mental trauma from a past battle won't be able to do his/her function well anymore under those chaotic circumstances.

    • @theshadowling1
      @theshadowling1 4 года назад +1

      @@extrastuff9463 Horses that were ridden into battles were typically bred for aggression, directed aggression, a trait that is avoided in horses from the end of the 19th century onwards. So any horse in modern times is typically bred to be cautious, instead of aggressive, hence the issues recreating jousting with modern breeds. Also, getting a horse used to noise is a matter of training, and once a horse isn't spooked by noise, it doesn't matter what type of noise it is.

  • @DerAnanasKing
    @DerAnanasKing 4 года назад +72

    when I first started watching this video "eh, this is not gonna be that interresting"
    after watching this video "ok, that was actually really interresting to watch"

    • @micahfoote7270
      @micahfoote7270 4 года назад

      Shad tends to do that with any topic he talks about

    • @DerAnanasKing
      @DerAnanasKing 4 года назад

      @@micahfoote7270 like a good athor can make a good movie out of any premise, he can make every information be entertaining to hear about.

    • @micahfoote7270
      @micahfoote7270 4 года назад

      @Kshitij Raj thanks for being a buzzkill 🙍‍♂️

    • @DerAnanasKing
      @DerAnanasKing 4 года назад

      @Kshitij Raj ok, first. he didn´t literally read off of the wikipedia page.
      and second, the information there is correct as far as I know. what else was he supposed to do, make stuff up?
      and, if you already know about that stuff then, yeah. I guess its not that informative, because you already know about it.
      what exactly was your point? telling us how smart you are?

    • @DerAnanasKing
      @DerAnanasKing 4 года назад

      @Kshitij Raj to illustrate this. its like I would be telling someone about the 2nd world war and then you would com along and say "TBH, you just repeat whats in this history book. and if you know about WW2 its not that interresting"
      well, DUH. obviousely I would have my information from somewhere and I am always happy to tell people something they don´t know.

  • @windyellis8292
    @windyellis8292 4 года назад

    Love this! There is so much in the equine world-this is a great introduction to it! Thank you Shad!

  • @bigDbigDbigD
    @bigDbigDbigD 4 года назад

    Thanks Shawn. I was working on these terms myself but it really helps getting them all together like this.

  • @kylethomas9130
    @kylethomas9130 4 года назад +4

    Man, these RUclips ads are almost as long as the video.
    Well, Shad is worth it.

  • @sompret
    @sompret 4 года назад +3

    I always had the impression that the Arabian Horse was like a peek into history into what medieval horses might have looked like. Not big, not small, but hell of an elegant marathoner.

    • @nienor1510
      @nienor1510 4 года назад +4

      Actually it's probably more like an Andalusian. Arabs are too light for European winters, they're more suited to hot climates and long distance travel. They also have a reputation for being a bit nuts haha It could be more like a Barb too perhaps, thinking of Arabians always makes me think of the forgotten Barb which was actually pretty influential in a lot of the newer breeds.

    • @TheAchilles26
      @TheAchilles26 4 года назад +1

      Arabian horses are one of the two still extant breeds that are considered to be about the right size for "accurate" Roman cavalry reenactments, the other being an Irish breed whose name escapes me.

    • @michiganscythian2445
      @michiganscythian2445 3 года назад

      Arabians in the Middle Ages were roughly the same size as a lot of European horses, just more refined and agile.

    • @blkequus
      @blkequus 3 года назад

      @@nienor1510 um... Arabs aren't too 'light' for European winters. It gets very cold in the desert.

  • @jakemarsh8967
    @jakemarsh8967 4 года назад +2

    I know Shad talked about this but I know it can be confusing for some people: a "colt" is the term for a young male horse below the age of 1 year, a "filly" is the term for a female of the same age, the term for a young horse in general around that age is a "foal", once the foal is one year old it is called a "yearling", the term for a castrated male horse is a "gelding", the term for an uncastrated male horse is a "stallion or a stud", and finally the term for a female adult horse is a "mare". Often these terms differ from place to place, I think in England fully and colt means younger than 5 years, particularly when it comes to racing horses.

    • @PintoPassion
      @PintoPassion 4 года назад +1

      Filly foal - female horse up to 1 year; filly - female horse up to 4 years; 4 years and over = mare
      Colt foal - male horse up to 1 year; colt - male horse, usually entire (uncastrated), up to 4 years; 4 years and over = stallion; gelding usually occurs from approx 1 year and over.
      In the US (gereralising here) a colt is any young horse, male or female; usually unstarted. And a “stud colt” if an uncastrated male.

    • @jakemarsh8967
      @jakemarsh8967 4 года назад

      @@PintoPassion I'm from Montana so I just gave what I grew up knowing. There's too many variations in the US alone to be honest.

  • @kacperwoch4368
    @kacperwoch4368 4 года назад +7

    1:42 Technically launching yourself with a trebuchet makes travelling faster than on horseback.

  • @DOOM891
    @DOOM891 4 года назад +4

    "Really Far Back" my new favorite way for describing pre-history :D

  • @xomanowar3988
    @xomanowar3988 4 года назад +6

    So got my mission call, your next book better be out when I get back!

  • @MsWatismyname
    @MsWatismyname 4 года назад

    You know the fact that you editted the word over it made it hilarious while being informative. You just saw the frustration on getting it wrong and it was bloddy brilliant.

  • @DJ_Bonebraker
    @DJ_Bonebraker 4 года назад +1

    There's actually a series of medieval themed dinner theaters (complete with various medieval equestrian/tournament games & jousting) in the US called "Medieval Times" that feature Andalusian horses, which were a popular breed of war horse dating back to the High Middle Ages, which I think is a rather nice touch.

  • @The214thRabidFangirl
    @The214thRabidFangirl 4 года назад +8

    My character in my story has two horses that are very important to him, a war horse and a pack horse. I think I have just named the pack horse Stumpter.

  • @jcfreak73
    @jcfreak73 4 года назад +36

    Sumpter: van or cheap sedan
    Rouncy: a nice sedan
    Palfrey: sports car
    Courser: humvee
    Destrier: basic armoured vehicle
    Elephant: tank
    (Edited: switched courser and destrier and added elephant. See comments below for the reasons. Thanks for the feedback! )

    • @daemosblack
      @daemosblack 4 года назад +6

      i would say the Destrier is more a Tank - as by default Humvee's arent armored.....

    • @jcfreak73
      @jcfreak73 4 года назад +3

      @@daemosblack I thought about tank, but i think of a tank in a different class of vehicle. After all, when you think of a tank, you think of something indestructible. Is that really what you think of with a destrier?
      Mind you, you've got a point about humvees. I don't know the different classifications of military vehicles. We need Lindybeige fur that.

    • @cobraglatiator
      @cobraglatiator 4 года назад

      @@jcfreak73 also tend to think of tanks as slow vehicles, careful,crawling things with big guns on the front/top of them.

    • @volapongyt8496
      @volapongyt8496 4 года назад +4

      @@jcfreak73 War Elephant? Well In history of my country anyway (Siam/Thailand) .
      It cost 8 people to fully crew the beast.
      4 people defend each of the legs
      1 driver on the neck
      1 rear watcher
      1 signaler/weapon handler
      1 commander/lord/king

    • @jcfreak73
      @jcfreak73 4 года назад

      @@volapongyt8496 yes. War elephant = tank

  • @user-ht9my8zq2i
    @user-ht9my8zq2i 4 года назад

    Hey shad!!! I got your book for my birthday a couple days ago I know it’s kinda late but I’ve been wanting to read it since I first heard about it

  • @zachgiardini7766
    @zachgiardini7766 4 года назад +1

    I really enjoy these non-combat videos you make about medieval life.

  • @MandaloreTheReclaimer
    @MandaloreTheReclaimer 4 года назад +14

    I learned about medieval horse classifications from reading the game of thrones books thanks for further elaborating learned more from this then my Google search.

    • @RedFloyd469
      @RedFloyd469 4 года назад +1

      Well, Martin doesn't really explain the differences (at least not in the books I've read so far), but he DOES use the classifications.

    • @theblancmange1265
      @theblancmange1265 4 года назад +1

      @@RedFloyd469 You can deduce a few things, but yes.

    • @igotissues1386
      @igotissues1386 4 года назад +1

      Same! I kept reading those names and finally broke and went down a rabbit hole. Funnily enough, never saw rouncey or sumpter.

  • @randomicus4782
    @randomicus4782 4 года назад +316

    the amount of people who think the american indians always had horses is also shocking.

    • @RoulicisThe
      @RoulicisThe 4 года назад +88

      Well, they adapted so fast to horse introduction it's no surprise many people think that way

    • @mondaysinsanity8193
      @mondaysinsanity8193 4 года назад +81

      Fun fact horses were originally from the Americas(long ago) they crossed to Asia around the same time as humans went to America the ones in the americas died out long before Europeans showed up though

    • @CreeCore94
      @CreeCore94 4 года назад +50

      Native American. America isn't India.

    • @randomicus4782
      @randomicus4782 4 года назад +44

      @@CreeCore94 blame Columbus, he named them. he wasnt very bright.

    • @bigdiccmarty9335
      @bigdiccmarty9335 4 года назад +65

      @@CreeCore94
      he said "american indian", hush your pointless self

  • @kira07
    @kira07 4 года назад +1

    I really like those kind of videos ! they are great

  • @morthismejere1879
    @morthismejere1879 4 года назад

    Thank you so much for this information! I have a horse in my novel that I didn't know how to describe it properly and while I have been talking with equestrian experts, they don't know the middle ages, just horses and particulars to them, evidently I got a scene of two individuals racing one another horrifically wrong... 😱🤯.
    I always value and appreciate your content, MOST INFORMATIVE AND INFLUENTIAL!

  • @gotisc
    @gotisc 4 года назад +13

    When you said Stumpter I was like, "Ooh I like that!." When you corrected yourself I was mildly disappointed.

    • @jacobr2022
      @jacobr2022 4 года назад +1

      I know. I was like "I want a Stumpter!" but then my dreams were shattered. :(

    • @jamesblanton9364
      @jamesblanton9364 4 года назад +2

      Yeah it really stumped me.

  • @neansath
    @neansath 4 года назад +3

    May the Horse be with you.

  • @kiloyardstare
    @kiloyardstare 4 года назад

    You rock, Shad! I'm using all this medieval knowledge in my D&D games.

  • @shellknight1323
    @shellknight1323 4 года назад

    Another informative class I could actually use in my writting

  • @noahjohnson935
    @noahjohnson935 4 года назад +5

    5:08 don't feel too bad. You pronounced it well there!!!

  • @Eucep
    @Eucep 4 года назад +3

    When something is important in a culture, it tends to get many many names.

  • @sebastiantapia804
    @sebastiantapia804 4 года назад

    Thanks for this video, I have recently been really intrigued by medieval culture, and horses in particular.

  • @david269100
    @david269100 4 года назад

    Another great informative video. Thank you this is really useful for my stories. I hope you'll make a follow up video on what exactly made the horses good for those classes. Like what qualities would be instilled in them and how they differentiate from each other.

  • @verbalbbq7976
    @verbalbbq7976 4 года назад +23

    Interestingly enough, most of this classifications have analogous terms in Spanish. I haven’t found anything for sumpter but the rest are as follows:
    Rouncey -> Rocín
    Palfrey - Palafrén
    Courser -> Corcel
    Destrier -> Destrero
    And from “rocín” comes “Rocinante”, Don Quixote’s famous horse (those who watch “The Expanse will be familiar with that name)

    • @stefanb6539
      @stefanb6539 4 года назад

      What is the grammatical gender of Rocinante? I always assumed it's a female word, and Don Quixotte is riding a mare, namely because in German a pejorative word for a horse is "Schindmähre", which is female, and someone used it apparently in the first translation I read. But recently someone told me that Rocinante is obviously male. Is that true?

    • @verbalbbq7976
      @verbalbbq7976 4 года назад +1

      Stefan B It is masculine

    • @diomepa2100
      @diomepa2100 4 года назад +1

      @@stefanb6539 Rocinante is male, there is chapter he gets excited over some mares, and gets himself, don Quixote and Sancho beaten up - with only Dapple (Sancho's donkey) being smart enough to run away.

  • @TheMorfra
    @TheMorfra 4 года назад +8

    As an A Song Of Ice And Fire reader I have needed this video for a long time.

  • @khodexus4963
    @khodexus4963 4 года назад +1

    I was actually having a discussion on this very subject less than a week ago, trying to explain many of the points you brought up to a friend who hasn't done the same level of research as I have into things of this nature.

  • @SaintsTerror
    @SaintsTerror 3 года назад

    I really like these videos, thank you

  • @vincentproductions8963
    @vincentproductions8963 4 года назад +98

    Plot Twist: Horses are actually aristocratic Donkies.

    • @bananakitofinternetclan8350
      @bananakitofinternetclan8350 4 года назад +6

      The world will change due to your theory. Thank you for your contribution to the human race.

    • @Burn_Angel
      @Burn_Angel 4 года назад +4

      Nah, it's just that donkeys are horses that can carry more stuff at once and can withstand more misstreating. Like peasants.
      From what I've heard, in the south of the US, people used donkeys instead of horses because horses wouldn't keep up with the misstreating slaves gave them, as well as slaves forgetting to feed them most of the time.
      Again, _that's only what I've heard_ , I didn't take the time to fact check that.

    • @rabbittris
      @rabbittris 4 года назад +3

      Just like most if not all politicians!Aristocratic donkeys that is.

    • @jenniferschmitzer299
      @jenniferschmitzer299 4 года назад +1

      BananaKitOfInternetClan I think I like your thought process here

    • @annoyingbananana
      @annoyingbananana 3 года назад

      *donkeys

  • @jojooffaraway2675
    @jojooffaraway2675 4 года назад +14

    Yes, a horse video :D
    Though the whole category thing made me think because even though you said that the categories had nothing to do with breeds I assume that there were still 'breeds' (or what was similar to that) in the medieval period for the different categories. Because I can't imagine a nobleman buying a destrier who is from the same bloodline as some sumpter. That just makes no sense value wise. So logically speaking there were the categories which probably still had different body types and bloodlines in them if not called breeds. Because you can't just take every horse, raise it differently and have it being good at what they were raised at. A pack horse should have a different build from a riding horse, and different traits at that and since people back then weren't stupid I think it is safe to assume that they did do purposefully breed for certain traits depending on what they wanted their horse to do or sell them to do (even if we don't know about breeds and only the categories :) ).
    Also also if the destries were valued for speed and quick turns and stops then they can't have been Clydesdale and other heavy bred horses because those are slow as F*** (very calm and lovely but usually not in a great hurry to get anywhere). So yeah agree with that big horses not necessarily good for fast combat :)

    • @shanesellman8487
      @shanesellman8487 4 года назад +1

      Though bloodlines may hve been important to some degree the real value came from the years of intense training that destriers would receive (it is also believed by some that the closest thing we have to a destrier in modern times is a percheron but smaller)

    • @LuckySketches
      @LuckySketches 4 года назад +1

      Breeds would have to factor into it. A cold-blooded horse like a Clydesdale might be the best Sumter you've ever seen, but you would need a faster hot-blooded horse for a destrier.

    • @jojooffaraway2675
      @jojooffaraway2675 4 года назад

      @@LuckySketches Agreed, though I always imagine Destriers more like friesians (Not necessarily black, just build like them).

    • @kyomademon453
      @kyomademon453 4 года назад +1

      @@jojooffaraway2675 best horses you could get in the medieval period were spanish, frisians, hungarian and if possible arab

    • @jojooffaraway2675
      @jojooffaraway2675 4 года назад +1

      @@kyomademon453 Yes, aren't arabs one of the oldest horse breeds on earth? I mean today they are still valued for their great temper and loyalty.

  • @robertgaines-tulsa
    @robertgaines-tulsa 4 года назад

    I love the chairside chats (presentations, whatever). I hope you will do more of them.

  • @domdombear
    @domdombear 4 года назад

    This was really helpful, thanks!

  • @aspensmith5905
    @aspensmith5905 4 года назад +5

    Shad: there are a lot of terms in eqiunes
    lol and there's still the whole world of horse colors
    Anyways, very helpful :) I was curious to see what the classifications in dnd would mean and this put that more in perspective

  • @nobodx
    @nobodx 4 года назад +3

    I still hope you play Mount 'n Blade someday to give your impressions of the Medieval depictions in that game (esp combat and sieges)

  • @Redbeardblondie
    @Redbeardblondie 4 года назад

    Really love this episode.

  • @GrandDukeMushroom
    @GrandDukeMushroom 3 года назад

    Good video Shad

  • @Langenbacher
    @Langenbacher 4 года назад +4

    This kind of info is extremely helpful for artists, (screen)writers and everyone else who does some sort of recreation of past times!

  • @TheDcraft
    @TheDcraft 4 года назад +3

    Sun Pin said:
    "In employing the army there are ten objectives for which the cavalry is advantageous:
    1) When moving to counter a enemy, to arrive first.
    2) to exploit vacuities at the enemy's back.
    3) to pursue the scattered and strike the chaotic.
    4) when moving to counter an enemy, to strike their rear, forcing them to run off.
    5) to intercept provisions and foodstuffs, to sever the army's roads.
    6) to defeat forces at fords and passes, to open large and small bridges.
    7) to surprise unprepared troops, to strike as yet unorganized brigades.
    8) to attack lassitude and indolence, to go forth where not expected.
    9) to incinerate accumulated stores and empty out market lanes.
    10) to forage in the fields and countryside, to bind up their children.
    "For these 10 tactical objectives it is advantageous to employ the cavalry in warfare. Now the cavalry is able to separate and combine, able to disperse and assemble. A hundred kilometers comprise a marching period; for a thousand kilometers they travel forth, their going and coming unbroken. Thus they are termed 'the weapon of separating and combining."
    (And is in fact exactly what Napoleon would do a millennium or two later, defeat in detail)
    And Xenophon likened a cavalry file to a sword. Saying the youngest, boldest, and most daring should be at the head of the file. While the more experienced should make up the rear. This way, like a sword it'll be sharp, capable of cutting deeply, with a strong back so the blade does not break. (I'm paraphrasing here, I couldn't find the exact quote. The book it's in apparently went awol on me).

    • @immikeurnot
      @immikeurnot 4 года назад +2

      Nathan Bedford Forrest summed up #1 pretty nicely - "Get there the firstest with the mostest."

    • @TheDcraft
      @TheDcraft 4 года назад

      @@immikeurnot exactly, it's right along the lines of what Sun Tzu said, to defend strength can be enough, but to attack this is not enough. To attack you need to be fast. Only than can you ensure your attack cannot be defended. And true enough we can see this even in combative sports like boxing were there's so much emphasis put on angles and such.

    • @TheDcraft
      @TheDcraft 4 года назад

      @@immikeurnot and I think that really speaks to the universal truth of such schools of thought that the same concepts seemingly pop up independently of each other over great distances.

  • @bassface8580
    @bassface8580 4 года назад +2

    Aww Shad. Dude you give such educational videos on this kind of thing. I dont know much on the art of sword fighting or Medieval arts and ways of life but its so incredibly interesting. You make me want to get into it more. I believe I'm of a sort of caveman mentally. If I could choose a way to make a living it would be a blacksmith. Bless you good sir for providing me and millions of others with the information we want to hear

  • @modernvaquero
    @modernvaquero 4 года назад +2

    Any time I see a RUclipsr with a medieval/war horse video I kind of hold my breath in expectation of how bad it will be. ;) I have been jousting and actively studying and practicing fencing on horseback for about 20 years. So when I see a video like this that finally gets some stuff right I have to say, well done! I just wish more RUclipsrs would actually do some real research and maybe talk to people who actually fight on horseback before they post videos. So again, well done and thank you. PS Just a little FYI. We don't call it "prancing" if it is done on purpose. When it is a specifically trained movement it would be a piaffe or passage. ;)

  • @DragonfameDracas
    @DragonfameDracas 4 года назад +4

    Shad find himself stumped on how to pronounce sumpter.

  • @aquarius5719
    @aquarius5719 4 года назад +4

    Bigger horses, more food. Bigger astronauts, more fuel.

  • @jamesorthegreat9070
    @jamesorthegreat9070 4 года назад

    Ah, horsemen and cavalry. A wonderful and interesting topic. I enjoyed the video Shad.

  • @albankillingback3672
    @albankillingback3672 4 года назад

    Really interesting and useful video. I read a lot of medieval crime books and this has helped me understand the descriptions of the horses they use.

  • @YourFavoriteBotGarethThompson
    @YourFavoriteBotGarethThompson 4 года назад +36

    "In the county of Flanders in 1297, one destrier was worth seven Diddly Doodlies."

    • @jdriley24
      @jdriley24 4 года назад +1

      How many foot pounds per bushel is that? Us yanks use our own measurements 😂😂😂

  • @AHEM1313
    @AHEM1313 4 года назад +5

    5:08 Even a broken Shad gets the name right once a video?

  • @CarlosCruz-mw4hp
    @CarlosCruz-mw4hp 4 года назад

    Thank you for another amazing video Shad. Now I have to take a look at my D20 Noble Steeds book to se how accurate it was written.

  • @jaredsuggitt996
    @jaredsuggitt996 10 месяцев назад +1

    Great Video. One horse I am quite fond of in this video is the Percheron which survives to this day. This breed is the true Destrier of the lot. Bred in France in Perche and used in the crusades these were big white draft hybrids perfect for a heavy cavalry role. Not a horse for the poor man...but for aspiring Royals looking to cut their teeth in the Holy Land. Big and Strong. Docile yet agile. Easy Grooming with no hoof feathers. A good match for the Role of war fighting against the circling Saracen. They were used again in WW1 but were nearly lost. Bar U Ranch Alberta became the genetic homestead for the breed and they have been redistributed throughout England France the US and Canada. Good Horses never die.