enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Jousting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jousting

    Jousting is a medieval and renaissance martial game or hastilude between two combatants either on horse or on foot. [1] The joust became an iconic characteristic of the knight in Romantic medievalism. The term is derived from Old French joster, ultimately from Latin iuxtare "to approach, to meet".

  3. Pasola - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pasola

    Pasola is a mounted spear-fighting competition from western Sumba, Indonesia. It is played by throwing wooden spears at the opponent while riding a horse to celebrate the rice-planting season. The word pasola means spear in the local language and derives from the Sanskrit sula. According to legend, pasola originated with a woman from the ...

  4. Quintain (jousting) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quintain_(jousting)

    Quintain was a game open to all, popular with young men of all social classes. While the use of horses aided in training for the joust, the game could be played on foot, using a wooden horse or on boats (popular in 12th-century London). [3] As late as the 18th century running at the quintain survived in English rural districts.

  5. Tournament (medieval) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tournament_(medieval)

    Medieval equestrian warfare and equestrian practices hark back to Roman antiquity, just as the notion of chivalry goes back to the rank of equites in Roman times. [4] There may be an element of continuity connecting the medieval tournament to the hippika gymnasia of the Roman cavalry, but due to the sparsity of written records during the 5th to 8th centuries this is difficult to establish.

  6. Tournament of Kings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tournament_of_Kings

    Draped in a blue robe, Merlin encourages the audience to loudly boo the antagonists and support their knight. [38] He demonstrates to them how to say "Huzzah" when cheering for their knight. [4] The knights from each section joust to secure the privilege of proposing to the princess, and horseback riders who are speared fall off their horses. [39]

  7. Destrier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Destrier

    It carried knights in battles, tournaments, and jousts. It was described by contemporary sources as the Great Horse, due to its significance. While highly prized by knights and men-at-arms, the destrier was not very common. [1] Most knights and mounted men-at-arms rode other war horses, such as coursers and rounceys. [2]

  8. 4-H members show off their 'horse sense' at fair competition ...

    www.aol.com/4-h-members-show-off-090526664.html

    Dedicated to their horses, and simply love riding. She said Thursday’s horse show competition includes barrels, poles, stakes and keyholes. Megan Young scored a first-place spot with a time of ...

  9. Furusiyya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Furusiyya

    The following is a list of known Furusiyyah treatises (after al-Sarraf 2004, al-Nashīrī 2007). [13]Some of the early treatises (9th to 10th centuries) are not extant and only known from references by later authors: Al-Asma'i, Kitāb al-khayl (خيل "horse"), Ibn Abi al-Dunya (d. 894 / AH 281) Al-sabq wa al-ramī, Al-Ṭabarānī (d. 971 / AH 360) Faḍl al-ramī, Al-Qarrāb (d. 1038 / AH ...