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  2. Pattern 1796 heavy cavalry sword - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pattern_1796_heavy_cavalry...

    Variant sword types with the standard trooper's blade, but a bowl hilt similar to that of the officers' pattern, in brass with a brass scabbard (for the Life Guards) or iron with an iron scabbard (for the Horse Guards), exist and are believed to have been issued to the other ranks of the Household regiments for use when on home (ceremonial ...

  3. Old Horse Guards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Horse_Guards

    New Horse Guards by Canaletto, c.1753. It is now in the collection of Tate Britain, on a long-term loan from the Andrew Lloyd Webber Foundation. [4] It hangs in the Pimlico gallery a short distance away from the artist's New Horse Guards, painted a few years later and showing the replacement building under construction. [5]

  4. Category:Headgear (horse) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Headgear_(horse)

    This is a category for all horse tack that may be placed primarily on a horse's head, used for a variety of purposes, including control, restraint, or safety. This includes items such bridles , hackamores , and halters , as well as accessories such as martingales , which act primarily on the head.

  5. Chevalier Guard Regiment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chevalier_Guard_Regiment

    This painting by Bogdan Willewalde depicts the meeting of officers of the Russian Guards cavalry with the residents of one of the European cities in 1813–1814. It depicts (left - right) officer of the Life Guards Hussar Regiment, chief- and staff officers of the Life Guards Horse Regiment, chief-officers of the Life Guards Uhlan and Chevalier Guard Regiments.

  6. Mounted Grenadiers of the Imperial Guard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mounted_Grenadiers_of_the...

    Within this guard, a cavalry regiment was formed and most cavalrymen were drawn from the 9th dragoons. However, the horse guards would only take service in 1796 and a 1797 regulation stated that the guards were to be called 'grenadiers'. The next major reorganisation came with the French Consulate, just days after the Coup of 18 Brumaire.

  7. Limbs of the horse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limbs_of_the_horse

    Skeleton of the lower forelimb. Each forelimb of the horse runs from the scapula or shoulder blade to the third phalanx (coffin or pedal) bones. In between are the humerus (arm), radius (forearm), elbow joint, ulna (elbow), carpus (knee) bones and joint, large metacarpal (cannon), small metacarpal (splint), sesamoid, fetlock joint, first phalanx (long pastern), pastern joint, second phalanx ...

  8. Charge (warfare) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charge_(warfare)

    Their own casualties amounted to eight dead and 34 wounded. 60 horses were killed and another 83 injured. [citation needed] On 16 May 1919, during the Third Anglo-Afghan War, the 1st King's Dragoon Guards made the last recorded charge by a British horsed cavalry regiment [12] at Dakka, a village in Afghan territory, north west of the Khyber ...

  9. Bit guard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bit_guard

    Bit burr. Resembling a bit guard is a bit burr (sometimes burr bit, also bubble cheeker in Australia), which has teeth laid against the horse's cheek. The burr bit was for a time widely used on coach horses in New York City, until the use was stopped in part through the efforts of Henry Bergh circa 1879. [1]

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