I think i heard that dressage actualy was a knightly riding art, lol, wonder if they would do it in a full suit of plate in competition?
Jeff
Dressage is actually based on knightly combat. Dressage is an art form of horsemanship where control is very fine and subtle. The higher level dressage includes things such as the canter half-pass (almost a sideways movement), passage (a slow-motion trot), piaffe (a "trot in place"), and pirouettes (a 360-degree circle, in place, at the canter).
These motions had particular use for cavalry in combat, although I'm fairly certain things have changed slightly. For example, the piaffe, where the horse trots in place without moving, would be used to keep the horse warm and ready.
There are more advanced Dressage moves called "The airs above the Ground" which are only done by two groups in the world. One is the Spanish Riding School, located in Austria. [It may be confusing, but it is called a Spanish school due to the origins of horses.] The other is located in Samur, France. They are called the "Cadre Noir", and are a lot less famous than the, "World Famous Lippizaner Stallions" which are the horses used and bred for the Spanish Riding School.
The airs above the ground can only be done by the strongest horses, and that pretty much means only stallions of certain breeds, typically "warmbloods."
There are three major moves in the "Airs above the Ground" that are pretty famous. I'm certain there are other historical moves that warhorses were taught but are forgotten.
In "The Levade" the horse sits back onto his hindquarters and sinks down to the ground in back. The front comes up so that the hind feet are under the center of balance. The front feet are tucked up and in the air. Enormous strength is required to return to standing position, as well as maintain balance in such a tight position.
The "Capriole" is where the horse leaps into the air and kicks out its legs. A potentially disabling or killing blow to nearby enemies. I believe the "Couprade" is similar, but the horse tucks up its legs and is used to evacuate the rider when surrounded by enemies. The horse will actually jump over opponents to get away.
The "Courbette" is a manouver where the horse tucks up its forelegs and hops forward on its hindlegs. A guess on my part is that the horse would lash out with its forelegs to kill or disable opponents, or simply to clear a path, though this isn't seen in "Classical Dressage" performances by the Spanish Riding School or the Cadre Noir.
From what I know of working with horses, any horse trained to such an extent for such a purpose would be useless for anything else. I can't see any historical European figure training a horse to such extremes just to hitch it to a wagon. I've read that warhorses were essentially hayburners and weren't good for anything else, and thus were expensive to keep. I imagine that is true, but I don't have any historical sources to back this up.
I'm very new to ARMA [not a member yet] so sorry if this is common information. I haven't seen anything yet that seems to focus on mounted combat, beyond references to jousting.
~Brad