Thats what I thought. The vastly different time periods make this an
apples and oranges discussion here,
I'll stand my ground. I believe it is still discussion about apples and
bigger apples.
As you mentioned in the example you cited, in the 16th and 17th
centuries the ratio of lances to guns dropped considerably in favor of the
guns, for a wide variety of reasons. This made the infantry correspondingly
more vulnerable to cavalry charges.
Gustavus Aldophus of Sweeden, who you mentinend carried things yet further
in this direction with his innovations with grapeshot and ritter knights..
So you mean, he increased firepower and reorganised their cavalry and went to
invade Poland just to show how inefficient his new army is going to be
against Polish warfare? So he failed at that, because their invasion was
successful.
Just to remind - It was I who said that gunpowder and musketry favored
infantry, yet hussaria could still break them. Even if some more pikes would
be better (if so, why Carolus Gustavus did otherwise?) Poles repeatably
fought against such crazy odds, that this kind of argument can be countered.
(By the way, I believe this form was eventually adopted in the West,
at least nominally. IIRC there are still regiments to this day in England for
example which call themselves Hussars...)
Actually not. Hussaria was never adopted anywhere beside Poland. Russians
tried a bit, but putting wings and leopard skin on does not hussar make.
What you refer to is much later times. British adopted their system on
Hungarian light cavalry, called hussars too. Both formation started with
Serbian warriors who were fond of lance, but they evolved differently.
Hungarians dropped lances, we put on some more armor.
Where we disagree is how this would have translated into earlier
battlefields in the Medieval period and the Renaissance. I think Hussars vs
Say the 15th century Swiss Reislauffer, Bohemian Hussites, or German
Landsknechts or for that matter English combined army of dismounted knights
and yeoman archers, would have had the same result as the huge Arab army did
against the hardened infantry of Charles Martel in the battle of Tours; i.e.
no luck.
They fought landsknechten, at Lubieszow, iirc. Wait a moment, I'll check.
Yeap. They broke them too. a.d 1577
Swiss... I can not find anything now, but they were mercenaries fighting for
the highest bider, so I see no reason for never facing them. Should happen.
Hussites are Cossacs, just without firepower to speak of. Hussaria indeed
was no good at fighting them. I mean that they could, of course, but it made
not much sense to use this kind of unit against fortified infantry.
What you still miss, IMHO, is that up to 15th century there was no well
drilled and disciplined cavalry in Europe. Infantry was drilled and
disciplines, so they won. Nothing unusual.
Regards.