Equestrian Polish, Eurasian and the Americas history and horsemanship - from Bronze Age to circa1939AD. Historical equestrian art, my own artwork; reconstructions, and some traditional art media and digital artwork-related topics. All rights reserved unless permitted by 'Dariusz caballeros' aka DarioTW, copyleft or fair use.
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Hussaria on History TV
Salve,
my friend and winged hussars re-enactor Rik Fox Suligowski appeared in this episode of ''Museum Secrets'' by History Television Canada .
This episode is interesting to me also because Rik did the sound experiment regarding the feather wings, measuring the level of noise made by the wings, in order to find whether the feathered wings made specific noise that might have scared horses, as it was claimed by some foreign visitors in Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth during XVII century.
Rik found, by the way of sound recording equipment, that the feathered wings made no discernible noise, but wings alone, when seen by the horses unaccustomed to them, might have caused some horses to get nervous and spooky, even unmanageable.
Yet again Rik's experiment showed the role of the long lance (''kopia") with a fluttering long pennon and of the wild animal pelt flying off the winged hussar shoulders - and clearly we can see that these pieces of winged hussar equipment made what was the most important psychological weaponry in the Polish hussaria arsenal; weaponry successfully used against the enemy infantry and cavalry,i.e., a rider and his horse, for some 150 years (starting with the battle of Lubieszow AD 1577 and ending during the Great Northern War)
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