Academic literature on the topic 'Cavalry operations'

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Journal articles on the topic "Cavalry operations"

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Buckler, John. "Cavalry Operations in the Ancient Greek World (review)." Journal of Military History 67, no. 1 (2003): 218–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jmh.2003.0011.

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McMurry, Richard M., and David Evans. "Sherman's Horsemen: Union Cavalry Operations in the Atlanta Campaign." Journal of Southern History 64, no. 1 (February 1998): 149. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2588102.

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Klunder, Willard Carl. "Sherman's Horsemen: Union Cavalry Operations in the Atlanta Campaign." History: Reviews of New Books 25, no. 4 (July 1997): 153. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03612759.1997.9952872.

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Adams, Michael C. C., David Evans, and his Confederate Raiders., and Edward E. Leslie. "Sherman's Horsemen: Union Cavalry Operations in the Atlanta Campaign." Journal of American History 84, no. 3 (December 1997): 1068. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2953147.

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Bou, Jean. "Cavalry, Firepower, and Swords: The Australian Light Horse and the Tactical Lessons of Cavalry Operations in Palestine, 1916-1918." Journal of Military History 71, no. 1 (2007): 99–125. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jmh.2007.0009.

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Khatanzeyskiy, Aleksandr V. "Lend-Lease Armoured Vehicles in Operation Bagration (June 23 – August 29, 1944)." Vestnik of Northern (Arctic) Federal University. Series Humanitarian and Social Sciences, no. 1 (February 17, 2023): 43–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.37482/2687-1505-v242.

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This article dwells on the role of armoured vehicles obtained under the Lend-Lease agreement in the Byelorussian offensive operation (Bagration) in the summer of 1944. The author examines the use of foreign armoured vehicles in combat operations as part of tank, mechanized, and cavalry units of the Red Army and evaluates their quantity and quality. The Lend-Lease armoured vehicles participated in combat operations on all four fronts involved in Operation Bagration. Primarily, these were British Valentine Mk III and American M4A2 Sherman tanks. However, a significant contribution was also made by the SU-57 and M10 self-propelled artillery, as well as by the M3A1 Scout Car. In addition, the troops continued to use a certain number of M3 Medium and M3 Light tanks left over from the previous periods of the war. In 1944, they were no longer supplied. Foreign vehicles showed a good performance both in terms of reliability and combat qualities, in particular manoeuvrability, armour protection and firepower. Importantly, it was in the units advancing in the main direction that the number of Lend-Lease tanks was the largest (in the 1st Mechanized (100 %) and 3rd Guards Mechanized (91 %), in the 3rd Guards Cavalry (82.5 %) and in the 8th Guards Tank (59 %) Corps). In smaller numbers, foreign tanks were also available in the line units of all fronts involved in the operation (1st, 2nd and 3rd Byelorussian and 1st Baltic Fronts). In total, foreign tanks accounted for about 1/3 of the entire Soviet tank fleet in the Byelorussian offensive operation.
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Graf von Thun-Hohenstein, Romedio. "Soviet Cavalry Operations During the Second World War & The Genesis of the Operational Manoeuvre Group." Journal of Slavic Military Studies 33, no. 4 (October 1, 2020): 623–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13518046.2020.1845090.

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Wardono, Sri Wisnu, Trianggo Budhi Sukarso, and Edi Iwan Bangun. "PENGARUH UJI KELAYAKAN DAN SERTIFIKASI TEMPUR AMFIBI TERHADAP KESELAMATAN PERSONEL DAN MATERIEL KORPS MARINIR." SCIENTIFIC JOURNAL OF REFLECTION : Economic, Accounting, Management and Business 6, no. 2 (April 1, 2023): 339–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.37481/sjr.v6i2.657.

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TNI is the main component of national defense which is tasked with implementing state defense policies in order to maintain state sovereignty and the territorial integrity of the Unitary State of the Republic of Indonesia (NKRI). In order to realize the achievement of its duties, the Indonesian Navy requires adequate facilities in the form of the main weapon system (Alutsista). Marines as a component subsystem of the Integrated Fleet Weapon System (SSAT), are required to have high and reliable operational readiness capabilities. The success of the Marine Corps in carrying out its duties is largely determined by the units under it. One of them is the Cavalry Regiment which has an important role to support the main tasks of the Marine Corps, therefore the Cavalry Regiment's ability is needed in fostering and preparing the operational readiness of Cavalry elements both personnel and material in order to carry out Military Operations for War (OMP) and Military Operations. Apart from War (OMSP). In carrying out its duties, functions and roles, both as a unit that operates and maintains the operational readiness of amphibious lander combat vehicles. Before carrying out the Tempur Exercise, it is tested for feasibility and certification tests in order to minimize the occurrence of accidents. This study to see the effect of airworthiness testing and certification on the safety of Marine Corps personnel and materials with quantitative methods and data processing with the SPSS 25 program. Non-Probability Sampling the sampling technique used is incidental sampling. 237. The results of this study are that there is a positive and significant effect between the feasibility test on the safety of personnel and materials with of 3.417 and a t-table of 1.970, there is a positive and significant effect between certification on the safety of personnel and materials with 6.219 and t-table 1.970, there are positive and significant influence between the simultaneous feasibility test and certification on the safety of personnel and material with 118.249 and f-table 0.051. The value of the correlation coefficient is 0.709 which is declared strong or 70.9% and the value of R2 = 0.50.3 which means that it is 50.3% while the remaining 49.7% is influenced by other variables outside the model studied.
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Dixon, David D. "Sherman's Horsemen: Union Cavalry Operations in the Atlanta Campaign (review)." Civil War History 44, no. 1 (1998): 65–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/cwh.1998.0045.

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Lorber, Catharine C. "A Die Study of the Silver Staters (Didrachms) of Thessalian Larissa / Studium powiązań stempli srebrnych staterów (didrachm) tesalskiej Larissy." Notae Numismaticae - Zapiski Numizmatyczne, no. 16 (May 20, 2022): 43–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.52800/ajst.1.16.a2.

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The staters (didrachms) of Larissa were struck from 15 obverse dies and are differentiated by typology and legend configuration into three groups. Type I, known from just two specimens, features a crouching horse reverse. Type II depicts a trotting stallion and comprises two sequences – Series A and B. Die linkage shows that most of Series A was struck using two to four anvils concurrently to speed production. The entire coinage of staters was minted during a short period of time in the mid-4th century BC. It is argued that Series A represents cavalry pay for the joint Macedonian and Thessalian army commanded by Philip II in the Thessalian campaign of c. 352 that culminated in the battle of the Crocus Field, and Series B represents cavalry pay for his subsequent operations in Thessaly.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Cavalry operations"

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Pieper, Henning Herbert. "The SS Cavalry Brigade and its operations in the Soviet Union, 1941-1942." Thesis, University of Sheffield, 2012. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/2911/.

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Nance, William Stuart. "Forgotten Glory - Us Corps Cavalry in the ETO." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2014. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc500140/.

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The American military experience in the European Theater of Operations during the Second World War is one of the most heavily documented topics in modern historiography. However, within this plethora of scholarship, very little has been written on the contributions of the American corps cavalry to the operational success of the Allied forces. The 13 mechanized cavalry groups deployed by the U.S. Army served in a variety of roles, conducting screens, counter-reconnaissance, as well as a number of other associated security missions for their parent corps and armies. Although unheralded, these groups made substantial and war-altering impacts for the U.S. Army.
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Moné, Thierry. "15 mai 1940, le mercredi de La Horgne : de la mémoire à l’histoire. La campagne de mai-juin 1940 de la 3e Brigade de Spahis." Thesis, Paris 4, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016PA040090.

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Le mercredi 15 mai 1940, dans le petit village ardennais de La Horgne à l’ouest de Sedan, les cavaliers de la 3e Brigade de Spahis (2e Régiment de Spahis Algériens de Tlemcen et 2e Régiment de Spahis Marocains de Marrakech) tentent d’arrêter une partie de la plus moderne Panzer-Division de la Wehrmacht. L’histoire commémorative a retenu que la 3e Brigade de Spahis aurait été tout simplement « anéantie » en une dizaine d’heures de combats, non sans avoir auparavant mis hors de combat un bon millier de soldats allemands. De son côté, l’histoire scientifique dénombre 50 Spahis et 31 soldats allemands tués. Plus de 76 ans après les faits, il est plus que temps d’en finir avec la légende du « massacre inutile de 700 Spahis chargeant à cheval les chars allemands à La Horgne »
Wednesday, May 15, 1940, in the small Ardennes village of La Horgne, west of Sedan, the troopers of the 3rd [Cavalry] Brigade of Spahis (2nd Regiment of Algerian Spahis from Tlemcen and 2nd Regiment of Moroccan Spahis from Marrakech) try to stop a part of the most modern Panzer-Division of the Wehrmacht. Commemorative History has focused on a 3rd Brigade of Spahis that was simply "annihilated" in about ten hours of fighting, but not before putting out of action a thousand German soldiers. For its part, the scientific History takes into account 50 Spahis and 31 German soldiers killed in action. More than 76 years after the fact, it is more than time to put an end to the legend of the "useless slaughter of 700 Spahis charging German tanks on horseback at La Horgne"
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Moné, Thierry. "15 mai 1940, le mercredi de La Horgne : de la mémoire à l’histoire. La campagne de mai-juin 1940 de la 3e Brigade de Spahis." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Paris 4, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016PA040090.

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Le mercredi 15 mai 1940, dans le petit village ardennais de La Horgne à l’ouest de Sedan, les cavaliers de la 3e Brigade de Spahis (2e Régiment de Spahis Algériens de Tlemcen et 2e Régiment de Spahis Marocains de Marrakech) tentent d’arrêter une partie de la plus moderne Panzer-Division de la Wehrmacht. L’histoire commémorative a retenu que la 3e Brigade de Spahis aurait été tout simplement « anéantie » en une dizaine d’heures de combats, non sans avoir auparavant mis hors de combat un bon millier de soldats allemands. De son côté, l’histoire scientifique dénombre 50 Spahis et 31 soldats allemands tués. Plus de 76 ans après les faits, il est plus que temps d’en finir avec la légende du « massacre inutile de 700 Spahis chargeant à cheval les chars allemands à La Horgne »
Wednesday, May 15, 1940, in the small Ardennes village of La Horgne, west of Sedan, the troopers of the 3rd [Cavalry] Brigade of Spahis (2nd Regiment of Algerian Spahis from Tlemcen and 2nd Regiment of Moroccan Spahis from Marrakech) try to stop a part of the most modern Panzer-Division of the Wehrmacht. Commemorative History has focused on a 3rd Brigade of Spahis that was simply "annihilated" in about ten hours of fighting, but not before putting out of action a thousand German soldiers. For its part, the scientific History takes into account 50 Spahis and 31 German soldiers killed in action. More than 76 years after the fact, it is more than time to put an end to the legend of the "useless slaughter of 700 Spahis charging German tanks on horseback at La Horgne"
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ABBIATI, MICHELE. "L'ESERCITO ITALIANO E LA CONQUISTA DELLA CATALOGNA (1808-1811).UNO STUDIO DI MILITARY EFFECTIVENESS NELL'EUROPA NAPOLEONICA." Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Milano, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/2434/491761.

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L’esercito italiano e la conquista della Catalogna (1808-1811) Uno studio di Military Effectiveness nell’Europa napoleonica Settori scientifico-disciplinari SPS/03 – M-STO/02 La ricerca ha lo scopo di ricostruire e valutare l’effettività militare dell’esercito italiano al servizio di Napoleone I. In primo luogo attraverso un’analisi statistica e strategica della costruzione, e del successivo impiego, dell’istituzione militare del Regno d’Italia durante gli anni della sua esistenza (1805-14); successivamente, è stato scelto un caso di studi particolarmente significativo, come la campagna di Catalogna (1808-11, nel contesto della guerra di Indipendenza spagnola), per poter valutare il contributo operazionale e tattico dei corpi inviati dal governo di Milano e la loro integrazione con l’apparato militare complessivo del Primo Impero. La tesi ha voluto rispondere alla mancanza di studi sul comportamento in guerra dell’esercito italiano e, allo stesso tempo, introdurre nella storiografia militare italiana la metodologia di studi, d’origine anglosassone e ormai di tradizione trentennale, di Military Effectiveness. La ricerca si è primariamente basata, oltre che sulla copiosa memorialistica a stampa italiana e francese, sulla documentazione d’archivio della Secrétairerie d’état impériale (Archives Nationales di Pierrefitte-sur-Seine, Parigi), del Ministère de la Guerre francese (Service historique de la Défence, di Vincennes, Parigi) e del Ministero della Guerra del Regno d’Italia (Archivio di Stato di Milano). Dal punto di vista dei risultati è stato possibile verificare come l’esercito italiano abbia rappresentato, per Bonaparte, uno strumento duttile e di facile impiego, pur in un contesto di sostanziale marginalità numerica complessiva di fronte alle altre (e cospicue) forze messe in campo da parte dell’Impero e dei suoi altri Stati satellite e alleati. Per quanto riguarda la campagna di conquista della Catalogna è stato invece possibile appurare il fondamentale contributo dato dal contingente italiano, sotto i punti di vista operazionale e tattico, per la buona riuscita dell’invasione; questo primariamente grazie alle elevate caratteristiche generali mostrate dallo stesso, ma anche per peculiarità disciplinari e organizzative che resero i corpi italiani adatti a operazioni particolarmente aggressive.
The Italian Army and the Conquest of Catalonia (1808-1811) A Study of Military Effectiveness in Napoleonic Europe Academic Fields and Disciplines SPS/03 – M-STO/02 The research has the purpose of reconstruct and evaluate the military effectiveness of the Italian Army existed under the reign of Napoleon I. Firstly through a statistic and strategic analysis of the development, and the following deployment, of the military institution of the Kingdom of Italy in the years of its existence (1805-14). Afterwards, a particularly significant case study was chosen, as the campaign of Catalonia (1808-11, in the context of the Peninsular War), in order to assess the operational and tactical contribution of the regiments sent by the Government of Milan and their integration in the overall military apparatus of the First Empire. The thesis wanted to respond to the lack of studies on the Italian army’s behavior in war and, at the same time, to introduce the methodology of the Military Effectiveness Studies (of British and American origin and, by now, enriched by a thirty-year old tradition) in the Italian historiography. The research is primarily based, besides the numerous memoirs of the Italian and French veterans, on the archive documentation of the Secrétairerie d’état impériale (Archives Nationales of Pierrefitte-sur-Seine, Paris), of the French Ministère de la Guerre (Service historique de la Défence, of Vincennes, Paris) and of the Italian Ministero della Guerra (Archivio di Stato di Milano). About the results, it has been verified how the Italian army has become a flexible and suitable instrument for Bonaparte, albeit in a context of substantial overall numerical marginality in comparison to the heterogeneous forces available to the Empire and its others satellites and allied states. Regarding the campaign of Catalonia, instead, it was possible to ascertain the fundamental contribution of the Italian regiments, in an operational and tactical perspective, for the success of the invasion. This was primarily due to the excellent general characteristics shown by the expeditionary force, but also to disciplinary and organizational peculiarities that have made the Italian corps suitable for particularly aggressive operations.
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Books on the topic "Cavalry operations"

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US Army Armor School. Armor Cavalry Tactics Division, ed. Introduction to air cavalry operations. [Fort Knox, Ky.?]: Armor Cavalry Tactics Division, Command & Staff Dept., U.S. Army Armor Center, 1991.

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Kedves, Gyula. A szabadságharc huszárai. [Budapest]: Hadimúzeum Alapítvány, 1992.

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author, Szebenyi István, ed. Az utolsó töltényig: Magyar huszárok a második világháború forgószínpadán. Gencsapáti: Szülőföld Könyvkiadó, 2021.

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Gaebel, Robert E. Cavalry operations in the ancient Greek world. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2002.

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Piekałkiewicz, Janusz. The cavalry of World War II. Harrisburg, PA: Historical Times Inc., 1987.

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Piekałkiewicz, Janusz. The cavalry of World War II. Harrisburg, PA: Historical Times Inc., 1987.

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Axentowicz, Marek. Gabinet Szwoleżerów Gwardii Cesarskiej Napoleona I im. Agnieszki i Marka Axentowicz: Muzeum Romantyzmu, Opinogóra, 18 maja 2013 roku. Opinogóra: Muzeum Romantyzmu w Opinogórze, 2013.

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Bott, Alan. Cavalry of the clouds. [Toronto?]: McClelland, Goodchild & Stewart, 1994.

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Bott, Alan. Cavalry of the clouds. Toronto: McClelland, Goodchild & Stewart, 1994.

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Trout, Robert J. After Gettysburg: Cavalry operations in the eastern theater, July 14, 1863 to December 31, 1863. Hamilton MT: Eagle Editions Ltd., 2011.

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Book chapters on the topic "Cavalry operations"

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Pieper, Henning. "The SS Cavalry Brigade and Operation Barbarossa." In Fegelein’s Horsemen and Genocidal Warfare, 48–78. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137456335_4.

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Nance, William Stuart. "Cavalry in the Bocage." In Sabers through the Reich. University Press of Kentucky, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813169606.003.0003.

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This chapter covers corps cavalry operations from D-Day to the beginnings of the breakout in Operation COBRA. It highlights the difficulties of fighting in the hedgerows as well as how the cavalry had to improvise while fighting in constricted terrain.
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Nance, William Stuart. "Race to Glory." In Sabers through the Reich. University Press of Kentucky, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813169606.003.0004.

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This chapter covers corps cavalry operations from Operation COBRA to the slowdown of operations in late September and early October 1944. It highlights how corps cavalry enabled Patton's freewheeling attack across France, led the liberation of Paris, and helped leap the Seine and Marne rivers. It also details the heavy fighting around Metz and the siege of Brest, as well as the fighting through Belgium and the Netherlands. Finally, it highlights Operation ANVIL, the invasion of southern France. It details operations throughout the Rhone River valley, including the Battle of Montélimar.
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Hsieh, Wayne Wei-Siang. "Lucky Inspiration." In Petersburg to Appomattox, 110–37. University of North Carolina Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469640761.003.0005.

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This essay explores how Philip Sheridan's operations during the Appomattox campaign represented the culmination of an evolutionary process of the Union cavalry arm in the East from 1861 though the spring of 1865. Sheridan's aggressive style of command and gradual maturation proved central to its success. There were other senior cavalry officers in the Army of the Potomac who might have commanded the Cavalry Corps in 1864 including Alfred Pleasonton or David McMurtie Gregg. But Sheridan’s ascendancy and his leadership style ultimately restored a measure of fluidity to military operations in Virginia that had evaporated in the Overland Campaign. With an independent command in the Shenandoah Valley during the fall of 1864, Sheridan had deployed infantry in conjunction with the cavalry units, many of which carried Spencer repeating carbines – a tactic that would prove key as Federal forces pursued Lee’s army the following spring.
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Nance, William Stuart. "Sabers through the Reich." In Sabers through the Reich. University Press of Kentucky, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813169606.003.0008.

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This chapter covers operations from each army crossing the Rhine until the end of the war in May 1945. It highlights the encirclement of the Ruhr Pocket as well as the fighting in the Harz Mountains. It also discusses the role of cavalry in protecting the truck-mounted infantry, allowing very mobile operations. It shows how cavalry led the U.S. First and Ninth Armies to the Elbe, and the Seventh and Third Armies to Czechoslovakia and Bavaria.
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Nance, William Stuart. "Introduction." In Sabers through the Reich. University Press of Kentucky, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813169606.003.0001.

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This chapter introduces the reader to the key military terms in the book, such as security operations, reconnaissance, and economy of force. It also summarizes the previous scholarship and historiography of American World War II cavalry and places the work in the context of those previous works. Finally, the chapter lays out the argument that corps cavalry were highly successful despite their equipment and doctrinal challenges.
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Nance, William Stuart. "To the Rhine." In Sabers through the Reich. University Press of Kentucky, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813169606.003.0007.

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This chapter covers from February 1945 to approximately March 1945. It highlights corps cavalry contributions to Operations GRENADE and LUMBERJACK, involving the U.S. Ninth and First Armies driving across the Cologne Plain. It also discusses the seizure of the Remagen Bridge and the role of cavalry in that action. Finally, it also details the offensives of both Patton's U.S. Third Army and Patch's U.S. Seventh Army across the Saar-Palatinate.
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Igielski, Rafał. "Społeczno-gospodarcze uwarunkowania skuteczności bojowej Kozackiego Wojska Zabajkalskiego w wojnie rosyjsko-japońskiej 1904–1905." In Syberia. Kultura. Tradycja. Język, 36–61. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Rzeszowskiego, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.15584/978-83-8277-182-4_2.

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This text is about role of Transbaikal Cossack community during Russ-Japan War of 1904–1905, with particular emphasis on influence of their social and economic situation on military effectiveness. Transbaikal Cossacks were the biggest part of Cossack forces and cavalry on the theater of operations in Manchuria. They had excellent horses but also lack of military experience and bad training of soldiers, which led to lack of, expected before the war, important successes on the battlefield, in cavalry raids and during distant reconnaissance. They had mostly not enough brave and trained soldiers to spectacular charges on horseback and to fight with enemy’s cavalry on armee blanche. Conclusions are as follow: Transbaikal Cossack community in the realities of the early 20 th century modern warfare was emanation of anachronic formation from earlier ages.
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Sims, Jennifer E. "Battlefield Intelligence." In Decision Advantage, 115—C5.P160. Oxford University PressNew York, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197508046.003.0005.

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Abstract During the American Civil War, rival commanders shared traditions, experiences, and mindsets about how to fight and win. Still, the Union and the Confederacy started with uneven advantages in knowledge about how battles would be fought and what they needed to know to win. Shared uncertainties at the start of the war (First Manassas, 1861) included the readiness of conscripted troops and volunteers; the effects of varying weapons, including rifling, on troop performance and battlefield tactics; the availability of maps and mapmakers and the implications for the movement of large armies; the vulnerabilities of railroads and their relevance to strategy; the utility of telegraph systems in war; the uses of ballooning; and the requirements for effective cavalry operations. In almost everything except cavalry operations, the Union had opening informational advantages.
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Nance, William Stuart. "A Desperate Winter." In Sabers through the Reich. University Press of Kentucky, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813169606.003.0006.

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This chapter covers not only the Battle of the Bulge in the Ardennes, but the lesser known Operation NORDWIND against the Sixth Army Group in the Vosges Mountains. Spanning December 1944 and January 1945, this chapter covers corps cavalry operations as part of both battles, as well as their contributions on the forgotten flanks of these famous events. Moreover, this chapter tells the whole story of both campaigns, from beginning to end, highlighting the vicious fighting that continued well after both battles were considered over.
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Conference papers on the topic "Cavalry operations"

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Camara, Daniel. "Cavalry to the rescue: Drones fleet to help rescuers operations over disasters scenarios." In 2014 IEEE Conference on Antenna Measurements & Applications (CAMA). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cama.2014.7003421.

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LĂȚCAN, Mihail Cătălin. "CAPTAIN COMMANDER MICLESCU GHEORGHE, KNIGHT OF THE ROMANIAN WINGS." In SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AND EDUCATION IN THE AIR FORCE. Publishing House of “Henri Coanda” Air Force Academy, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.19062/2247-3173.2021.22.24.

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Descendant of a large family of Moldavian boyars, Lieutenant Commander Miclescu Gheorghe represents in the history of Romanian aeronautics a complex personality, the spirit of the perfect soldier, endowed with an boundless love of country and people, tireless in his desire to improve continuously, his career beginning as cavalry, later aerial observer and pilot, specializing as a fighter pilot. With an exceptional training, with studies and specializations at the great aviation schools in France, England, Germany, fearless and bold defender of the sky of his homeland Romania, he participated in all the battles for the defense of airspace in the Second World War , the liberation of Bessarabia and the defense of the Black Sea airspace, the defense against the Anglo-American bombings, the fight against the German bombings of Bucharest. Through the position he held as commander of Hounter Group in the operations on the front, he gave an admirable personal example to his comrades through his courage, patriotism and spirit of initiative.
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Reports on the topic "Cavalry operations"

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Watson, Andrew J. U.S. Cavalry: Still Relevant in Full Spectrum Operations. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, May 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada523200.

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Becker, Patrick J. Cavalry Operations in Support of Low Intensity Conflict. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, January 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada225452.

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