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  2. Chariotry in ancient Egypt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chariotry_in_ancient_Egypt

    Egyptian War Chariot. Chariots were very expensive, heavy and prone to breakdowns, yet in contrast with early cavalry, chariots offered a more stable platform for archers. [citation needed] Chariots were also effective for archery because of the relatively long bows used, and even after the invention of the composite bow the length of the bow was not significantly reduced.

  3. Chariot tactics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chariot_tactics

    [3] [page needed] In antiquity heavy chariots with four mounted warriors with four barded horses would be developed. This chariot was a heavy construction and would sometimes be equipped with scythes on wheels. [4] The momentum of this heavy chariot was sufficient to break through enemy formations acting as heavy shock-troops. However engaging ...

  4. Battle of Megiddo (609 BC) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Megiddo_(609_BC)

    Egyptian chariots charging seems to have driven them back, whereupon the now-damaged Judean infantry was attacked by the Egyptian infantry. Desperately trying to maintain his men's morale, Josiah ordered his charioteer to position his chariot right behind his center. Although the Kerathites advised the King to retreat, Josiah adamantly refused ...

  5. Battle of Megiddo (15th century BC) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Megiddo_(15th...

    In the Egyptian account Thutmose gathered an army of chariots and infantry numbering between ten and twenty thousand men. [4] As the Egyptians mustered their forces, the king of Kadesh gathered many tribal chieftains from Syria, Aram and Canaan around him, estimated at between ten and fifteen thousand men, [ 4 ] entered Megiddo and set his ...

  6. Military of ancient Egypt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_of_ancient_Egypt

    Egyptian archer on a chariot, from an ancient engraving at Thebes. The bow and arrow is one of ancient Egypt's most crucial weapons, used from Predynastic times through the Dynastic age and into the Christian and Islamic periods. The first bows were commonly "horn bows", made by joining a pair of antelope horns with a central piece of wood.

  7. Chariot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chariot

    Hittite chariot (drawing of an Egyptian relief) The oldest testimony of chariot warfare in the ancient Near East is the Old Hittite Anitta text (18th century BC), which mentions 40 teams of horses (in the original cuneiform spelling: 40 ṢÍ-IM-TI ANŠE.KUR.RA ḪI.A) at the siege of Salatiwara.

  8. Maryannu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maryannu

    The Maryannu were a caste of chariot-mounted hereditary warrior nobility that existed in many of the societies of the Ancient Near East during the Bronze Age. Maryannu is a Hurrianized Indo-Aryan word, formed by adding Hurrian suffix -nni to Indo-Aryan root márya, meaning "(young) man" [1] or a "young warrior". [2]

  9. Shishak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shishak

    Shishak, also spelled Shishaq or Susac (Hebrew: שִׁישַׁק, romanized: Šīšaq, Tiberian: , Ancient Greek: Σουσακίμ, romanized: Sousakim), was, according to the Hebrew Bible, an Egyptian pharaoh who sacked Jerusalem in the 10th century BC. He is usually identified with the pharaoh Shoshenq I. [1]