Benjamin Parker wrote:Actually early cavalry of that time were just soldiers that were wealthy enough to own a good horse and knights were well displined, the only instance that I know of where they broke formation to show off their own prowess was at agincourt
No, that was Crecy. At Agincourt they mostly dismounted--the small mounted contingents that were supposed to work around the English flank blundered into the English front instead and was so hugely outnumbered by the English archers and men-at-arms in front of them that they would have gone down anyway regardless of whether they were disordered or not.
Both disciplined charges and disorganized individual attacks probably saw use throughout the entirety of the European Middle Ages. I wish people would stop trying to argue that medieval men-at-arms used only one or the other, since the evidence we have tends to indicate the concurrent existence of several different tactical paradigms.
Cooper Braun wrote:In an word NO! The organized cavalry charge is a thing of a much later date than 1066.
Wrong. Organized cavalry charges were already present during Carolingian times at the earliest, and might never have disappeared at all (
i.e there might have been a great deal of continuity between late Roman and early medieval European cavalry tactics). Have a look at
Bernard Bachrach's article about this very subject.
I think the biggest myth of all is that there was one tactical method that
all medieval mounted men-at-arms subscribed to. In reality, methods would have varied from region to region, from company to company, and even from man to man; and just like in the modern world, in medieval times there would have been top-notch disciplined cavalry coexisting with horse-mounted rabble that barely even deserved the name "horsemen."
There's another interesting article about
medieval Italian warfare that described a German "regional style" that relied on tighter formation and discipline than those used by the contemporary Italian observers who wrote about them.
While at places like Hastings and the "Battle on the Road to Jaffa" from the third Crusade, we see one powerful commander holding his knights in check and then telling them to charge when he wanted hem to.
How is that different from a "controlled" charge? Even in the 19th century, with all the sophistication in the command-and-control system of European armies, it as still widely recognized that you couldn't control your troops once you had committed them to battle. The ones you could control--at best--was your uncommitted reserve, and this was exactly the role that medieval men-at-arms often played in war.
In general it was considered knightly to be the first to reach the enemy, so all the knights would charge as fast as they could at the enemy, usually without regard to their commander's wishes
The myth of "they all did it the same way" again. Give it up, please.
This is from the battle outside of Antioch where the crusaders broke a much larger army, partly because their knights pulled off what seems to be a ranked charge (which to Fulcher was something he had never seen)
Fulcher might have never seen such a thing before, but is that a guarantee that a solidly disciplined charge had never happened in European warfare during his lifetime? I'm afraid the answer is no.