Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Boer War (1899-1902) and British Cavalry Doctrine: A Re-Evaluation
View through CrossRef
Among the important British Army reforms following the Boer War (1899â1902) was the introduction of a longer-range rifle for the cavalry instead of a carbine, and a tactical doctrine including dismounted fire. It remains the view of most historians that the cavalry learned dismounted tactics from their Boer opponents, and that postwar reform of the cavalry was imposed from outside. Senior cavalry officers of the period are viewed as reactionary, and their performance in the First World War judged accordingly. This view is based on a partisan interpretation of the Boer War and the cavalry's role in it, fostered by its contemporary institutional critics. In fact, a cavalry reform movement was introducing dismounted tactics before the Boer War, both sides in the war used mounted and dismounted tactics, and the cavalry's problems were largely those of supply and not of their own making. This has much wider implications for the assessment of British military doctrines up to the end of the First World War.
Title: The Boer War (1899-1902) and British Cavalry Doctrine: A Re-Evaluation
Description:
Among the important British Army reforms following the Boer War (1899â1902) was the introduction of a longer-range rifle for the cavalry instead of a carbine, and a tactical doctrine including dismounted fire.
It remains the view of most historians that the cavalry learned dismounted tactics from their Boer opponents, and that postwar reform of the cavalry was imposed from outside.
Senior cavalry officers of the period are viewed as reactionary, and their performance in the First World War judged accordingly.
This view is based on a partisan interpretation of the Boer War and the cavalry's role in it, fostered by its contemporary institutional critics.
In fact, a cavalry reform movement was introducing dismounted tactics before the Boer War, both sides in the war used mounted and dismounted tactics, and the cavalry's problems were largely those of supply and not of their own making.
This has much wider implications for the assessment of British military doctrines up to the end of the First World War.
Related Results
Anais da VIII Jornada Odontológica da Unicastelo
Anais da VIII Jornada Odontológica da Unicastelo
CATEGORIA PAINELP 01. NÓDULOS PULPARES - CALCIFICAÇÕES. TAVARES, THAÍS RUAS; SEKI, NATHALIA MARIKO ASSAKAWA; SOUZA, EDMARA REGINA DIAS; SIVA, AMANDA SOUZA; SIMONATO, LUCIANA ESTEVA...
Cavalry since 1500
Cavalry since 1500
Cavalry, one of the three principal combat branches, has long been known as “the combat arm of decision.” This view, of a horse-mounted cavalry soldier delivering a charge at a gal...
Anglo‐Boer Wars (1880–1881, 1899–1902)
Anglo‐Boer Wars (1880–1881, 1899–1902)
AbstractThe Anglo‐Boer Wars were fought in what is now South Africa between the British Empire and the Boers or Afrikaners, descendants of European settlers mainly from the Netherl...
Finding the Major Questions Doctrine
Finding the Major Questions Doctrine
<p>The major questions doctrine has been invoked primarily in the rulemaking context, where it requires agencies to identify particularly clear statutory au...
Operation Of The 14th Cavalry Division Between 26-31 August 1922
Operation Of The 14th Cavalry Division Between 26-31 August 1922
With the occupation of Anatolia by the Greek forces in 1919, the national resistance operation began. When it was understood that there would be no success against the Greek regula...
Non-Recommended Publishing Lists: Strategies for Detecting Deceitful Journals
Non-Recommended Publishing Lists: Strategies for Detecting Deceitful Journals
Abstract
The rapid growth of open access publishing (OAP) has significantly improved the accessibility and dissemination of scientific knowledge. However, this expansion has also c...
Professors in Humanities at Vilnius University and the Doctrine in the Period of Activities of Donatas Sauka
Professors in Humanities at Vilnius University and the Doctrine in the Period of Activities of Donatas Sauka
The analysis of professors in Humanities at Vilnius University in 1948–1956, the period of studies and post-graduate course of Donatas Sauka, established that professors who had no...

