Benjamin Smith wrote:One big issue is that a solid line of mounted elite warriors with lances just as long or longer than your polearms coming at you at 30-40 kph, is pretty intimidating. It's entirely possible for the infantry to begin to falter even before the knights hit.
Breaking the enemy before contact
is the whole point of a cavalry charge!
Thirdly, some of the time the knights hit the enemy in the flank rather than charging down the middle of the battlefield. People often forget that this is where Henry V had his cavalry at Agincourt so that once the French stalled at the bulwarks they could mop them up.
Hmm...that sounds more like the Anglo-Gascon cavalry at Poitiers rather than the English at Agincourt. According to some interpretations of Poitiers, it was the Gascon charge into the French flank that finally broke the third (and largest) French battle.
But, anyway, I agree with the idea that people often overlook the fact that medieval cavalrymen were not reluctant to charge an unprotected flank if they had the chance to do so. After all, this was the reason why medieval infantry spear formations were arrayed in shallow but wide blocks--to stall a flanking move by opposing horsemen.
Brandon Paul Heslop wrote:I believe the difference in our respective arguments is largely one of circumstance. As I said before, I was descibing the knightly charge under optimal conditions. When all is said, it is ultimately a matter of what two opposing forces can afford to do. Do they have the luxury of employing their preferred tactics, or do the terrain, the current state of their forces, their supplies, etc., demand something else?
I'm still not buying it. Show me
any proof that the "superweapon first" vs. "superweapon last" was indeed an Eastern/Western phenomenon. Let me have a look at the statistics. Otherwise the generalization doesn't hold water.
At Bremule, Henry's forces were mostly composed of Saxon English (who traditionally fought on foot, though there is evidence of English cavalry before 1066 - such as at Stamford Bridge - for example, though this was not hard-and-fast custom amongst them, and there were still fairly strong divisions between Saxon and Norman). The Anglo-Norman barons and their knightly retainers made up but a small fraction of the resources Henry could marshal to his command, essentially forming Henry's reserve forces, (as a large proportion of his fuedal subjects within Normandy were essentailly in open rebellion against Henry's rule there, and were fighting on the side of Louis VI). If Henry had access to a different pool of resources, that battle would probably have gone very differently.
How do you know that? Are there any scholarly analyses of the Battle of Bremule that actually went so far to actually establish that most of Henry's forces were Saxon? If so, I'd certainly want to know where I can obtain it. Otherwise I wouldn't believe the idea.
Not to mention that I don't see why Anglo-Norman horsemen would have been incapable of dismounting; after all, it's quite possible that a large proportion of William the Conqueror's heavy infantry at Hastings were men-at-arms who had to serve on foot because there was not enough transport for their horses!
Yes, but how common were such defenses? By the time these defenses began to appear, knights were having trouble being able to afford to equip themselves with the latest armour, let alone their horses. The manufacture and maintenance of their gear was becoming so cost-prohibitive that it precluded even some of the better-off knights from equipping their horses with barding. Further, just because your horse is armoured, are you going to trust in it enough to rush headlong into a hedge of spears, glaives, and what-have-you's?
Remember that a formation didn't have to be entirely equipped with plate barding--it seems that the rule among French and Burgundian formations and others based on them was that the gendarmes with barded horses would make up the front ranks and the less well-armored horsemen (and horses) would bulk up the formation in the rear ranks if needed. The barding seemed to be quite effective, too; it rendered the French heavies pretty much immune to crossbows and longbows, and on some occasions it
did make the cavalrymen and horses braver in attacking infantry--like in the fight against the Swiss pike squares at Marignano, the numerous cavalry vs. infantry charges at Ceresole, and the famous gendarmes vs. Swiss clash at Dreux (though the last one may be a bit dubious).