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New light on the Warwick Shaffron: understanding horse and shaffron size through the collections of the Royal Armouries
In: Arms & armour, Band 21, Heft 1, S. 1-24
ISSN: 1749-6268
The anarchy: war and status in 12th-century landscapes of conflict
In: Exeter studies in medieval Europe
Introduction -- Historical outline and the geography of 'anarchy' -- Waging war: fields of conflict and siege warfare -- Architecture and authority: castles -- Material culture: from arts to coins -- Performing violence: arms, armour and military apparel -- Faith and fortification: the church -- Town, village and country -- Anarchy on the fen edge: case study of the Isle of Ely -- The twelfth-century Civil War in context: assessment and reassessment
Interdisciplinary Approaches to the Medieval Warhorse
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 necessary. This requires engagement with material evidence at a wide variety of scales — from individual artefacts through to excavated assemblages and landscape-wide distributions — dating between the late Saxon and Tudor period (c. AD 800–1600). We present here a case study of our interdisciplinary engaged research design focusing upon an important English royal stud site at Odiham in Hampshire. This brings together several fields of study, including (zoo)archaeology, history, landscape survey, and material culture studies to produce new understandings about a beast that was an unmistakable symbol of social status and a decisive weapon on the battlefield.
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In search of the 'great horse': A zooarchaeological assessment of horses from England (AD 300–1650)
Popular culture presents a deep-rooted perception of medieval warhorses as massive and powerful mounts, but medieval textual and iconographic evidence remains highly debated. Furthermore, identifying warhorses in the zooarchaeological record is challenging due to both a paucity of horse remains relative to other domesticates, and the tendency of researchers to focus on osteological size, which makes it difficult to reconstruct in-life usage of horses and activity related changes. This paper presents the largest zooarchaeological dataset of English horse bones (n = 1964) from 171 unique archaeological sites dating between AD 300 and 1650. Using this dataset alongside a modern comparative sample of known equids (n = 490), we examine trends in size and shape to explore how the skeletal conformation of horses changed through time and reflected their domestic, elite and military roles. In addition to evidencing the generally small stature of medieval horses relative to both earlier and later periods, we demonstrate the importance of accurately exploring the shape of skeletal elements to describe the morphological characteristics of domestic animals. Furthermore, we highlight the need to examine shape variation in the context of entheseal changes and biomechanics to address questions of functional morphology and detect possible markers of artificial selection on past horses.
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