2021
DOI: 10.22618/tp.cheiron.20211.1.233005
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Interdisciplinary Approaches to the Medieval Warhorse

Abstract: The warhorse is arguably the most characteristic animal of the English Middle Ages. But while the development and military uses of warhorses have been intensively studied by historians, the archaeological evidence is too often dispersed, overlooked or undervalued. Instead, we argue that to fully understand the cultural significance and functional role of the medieval warhorse, a systematic study of the full range of archaeological evidence for warhorses (and horses more generally) from medieval England is nece… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…It might seem a reasonable assumption that horses found within castles or other high-status sites might be more likely to be warhorses compared with assemblages from other sites. However, castles would have also contained numerous horses used for day-to-day riding and domestic purposes, and even association with a defensive ditch and siege ammunition is not enough to conclusively identify warhorses, as evidence from Odiham castle (Hampshire) shows (Ameen et al, 2021). Another place to expect warhorses would be in mass graves associated with battlefields, though few of these have ever been discovered (Curry & Foard, 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…It might seem a reasonable assumption that horses found within castles or other high-status sites might be more likely to be warhorses compared with assemblages from other sites. However, castles would have also contained numerous horses used for day-to-day riding and domestic purposes, and even association with a defensive ditch and siege ammunition is not enough to conclusively identify warhorses, as evidence from Odiham castle (Hampshire) shows (Ameen et al, 2021). Another place to expect warhorses would be in mass graves associated with battlefields, though few of these have ever been discovered (Curry & Foard, 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The preliminary assessment of the horses from this site shows articulated elements of dismembered horses. The tendency for horse carcasses to be processed post‐mortem for both skins and other materials is well documented (MacGregor, 2012; Thomas & Lacock, 2000), and we know that this happened even to highly valuable horses after their death (Ameen et al, 2021). Given the resources invested in the breeding and training of warhorses, it is not surprising that owners sought to profit from their remains.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Horses 12, 13, and, to a degree, 15 (all with highly radiogenic profiles) also show periods of relative stability in the earlier parts of their 87 Sr/ 86 Sr profiles, which preceded the start of more mobile lifestyles beginning at various points between approximately 18 months and 3.5 years of age ( 18) (text S1, section 3). On the basis of this patterning, our analyses suggest a mobility signature related to the breeding, rearing, and trading of horses, following guidance in hippiatric treatises, and as recorded in royal documents (56)(57)(58). Early 14th-century accounts from royal keepers in England suggest that horses resided at the "king's stud farms through until their second or third year, at which point they would either be broken and trained or sent elsewhere to be sold" (57).…”
Section: Sedentism Reveals Aspects Of Medieval Horse Breeding and Tra...mentioning
confidence: 80%
“…96 In most records the sex of horses for sale is not mentioned, but in general only male horses were trained into instruments of war. 97 This sexual determinism, perhaps combined with a growing regional interest in mounts suited for heavily armoured warfare, may explain the inflated prices of stallions compared to mares.…”
Section: 'If One Should Wish To Sell Slaves or Horses': The Road To M...mentioning
confidence: 99%