Dictionary Definition
chariot
Noun
1 a light four-wheel horse-drawn ceremonial
carriage
2 a two-wheeled horse-drawn battle vehicle; used
in war and races in ancient Egypt and Greece and Rome
Verb
1 transport in a chariot
2 ride in a chariot
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Noun
chariotTranslations
vehicle used in warfare
- Czech: válečný vůz
- German: Streitwagen
carriage used for ceremonial or pleasure
purposes
- German: Triumphwagen
French
Noun
chariotExtensive Definition
The chariot is the earliest and simplest type of
carriage, used in both
peace and war as the chief vehicle of many ancient peoples.
Chariots were built in Mesopotamia as early as 3000 BC. and in
China during the 2d millennium BC. The original chariot was a fast,
light, open, two- or four-wheeled conveyance drawn by two or
more horses hitched side
by side. The car was little else than a floor with a waist-high
semicircular guard in front. The chariot, driven by a charioteer,
was used for ancient
warfare during the Bronze and
Iron
Ages, armor being provided by bronze shields. The vehicle
continued to be used for travel, processions and in games and races
after it had been superseded militarily.
The word "chariot" comes from Latin carrus, which
itself was a loan from Gaulish. A chariot
of war or of triumph was called a car. In ancient Rome
and other
ancient Mediterranean countries a biga was a two-horse chariot,
a triga utilized three horses and a quadriga was drawn by four
horses abreast. Obsolete terms for chariot include chair, charet
and wain.
The critical invention that allowed the
construction of light, horse-drawn chariots for use in battle was
the spoked wheel. Most
horses at the time could not support the weight of a man in
battle. As horses were gradually bred to be larger and stronger,
chariotry (the part of a military force that fought from chariots)
gave way to cavalry.
The earliest spoke-wheeled chariots date to ca.
2000 BC and their usage peaked around 1300 BC (see Battle of
Kadesh). Chariots ceased to have military importance in the 4th
century BC, but chariot
races continued to be popular in Constantinople
until the 6th century.
Early wheeled vehicles in Sumer
The earliest fully developed chariots known are
from the chariot
burials of the Andronovo
(Timber-Grave) sites of the Sintashta-Petrovka
culture in modern Russia and Kazakhstan from
around 2000 BC. This culture is at least partially derived from the
earlier Yamna
culture. It built heavily fortified settlements, engaged in
bronze
metallurgy on a scale hitherto unprecedented and practiced complex
burial rituals reminiscent of Aryan rituals known
from the Rigveda. The
Sintashta-Petrovka chariot burials yield spoke-wheeled chariots.
The Andronovo
culture over the next few centuries spread across the steppes
from the Urals to the Tien Shan,
likely corresponding to early Indo-Iranian
cultures which eventually spread to Iran and India in the course
of the 2nd
millennium BC.
Chariots figure prominently in Indo-Iranian
mythology. Chariots are also an important part of both Hindu and
Persian
mythology, with most of the gods in their pantheon
portrayed as riding them. The Sanskrit word for
a chariot is ratha, a collective to a Proto-Indo-European
word for "wheel" that also resulted in Latin rota and is
also known from Germanic, Celtic and Baltic.
India
There are a few depictions of chariots among the petroglyphs in the sandstone of the Vindhya range. Two depictions of chariots are found in Morhana Pahar, Mirzapur district. One is shows a team of two horses, with the head of a single driver visible. The other one is drawn by four horses, has six-spoked wheels, and shows a driver standing up in a large chariot-box. This chariot is being attacked, with a figure wielding a shield and a mace standing at its path, and another figure armed with bow and arrow threatening its right flank. It has been suggested (Sparreboom 1985:87) that the drawings record a story, most probably dating to the early centuries BC, from some center in the area of the Ganges–Jamuna plain into the territory of still Neolithic hunting tribes. The drawings would then be a representation of foreign technology, comparable to the Arnhem Land Aboriginal rock paintings depicting Westerners. The very realistic chariots carved into the Sanchi stupas are dated to roughly the 1st century.The scythed
chariot was invented by the King of Magadha, Ajatashatru
around 475 BC. He used these chariots against the Licchavis. A
scythed chariot was a war
chariot with a sharp, sickle-shaped blade or blades mounted on each
end of the axle. The
blades, used as weapons, extended horizontally for a meter on the
sides of the chariot.
Persia
The Persians succeeded Elam in the mid 1st millennium. They may have been the first to yoke four horses (rather than two) to their chariots. They also used scythed chariots. Cyrus the Younger employed these chariots in large numbers. Herodotus mentions that the Libyans and the Indus satrapy supplied cavalry and chariots to Xerxes' army. However, by this time cavalry was far more effective and agile than the chariot, and the defeat of Darius III at the Battle of Gaugamela (331 BC), where the army of Alexander simply opened their lines and let the chariots pass and attacked them from behind, marked the end of the era of chariot warfare.Near East
Some scholars argue that the chariot was most likely a product of the ancient Near East early in the 2nd millennium BC.Armenia
In the Armenian Kingdom of Van (Urartu), the chariot was used by the nobility and the military. In Yerevan,Armenia king Argishti of Urartu is depicted riding on a a chariot which is dragged by two horses. The chariot has two wheels and each wheel has about eight spokes. This type of chariot was used around 800 BC.Hittites
The oldest testimony of chariot warfare in the Ancient Near East is the Old Hittite Anitta text (18th century BC), mentioning 40 teams of horses (40 ?Í-IM-DÌ ANŠE.KUR.RA?I.A) at the siege of Salatiwara. Since only teams are mentioned rather than explicitly chariots, so the presence of chariots in the 18th century is considered somewhat uncertain. The first certain attestation of chariots in the Hittite Empire dates to the late 17th century (Hattusili I). A Hittite horse training text survives, attributed to Kikkuli the Mitanni (15th century BC).The Hittites were
renowned charioteers. They developed a new chariot design, which
had lighter wheels, with four spokes rather than eight, and which
held three warriors instead of two. Hittite prosperity largely
depended on their control of trade routes and natural resources,
specifically metals. As the Hittites gained dominion over
Mesopotamia, tensions flared among the neighboring Assyrians,
Hurrians
and Egyptians. Under
Suppiluliuma
I, the Hittites conquered Kadesh and
eventually the whole of Syria. The Battle of
Kadesh in 1299 BC is likely to have been the largest chariot
battle ever fought, involving some five thousand chariots.
Egypt
The chariot, together with the horse itself, was introduced to Egypt by the Hyksos invaders in the 16th century BC and undoubtedly contributed to their military success. In the remains of Egyptian and Assyrian art there are numerous representations of chariots, from which it may be seen with what richness they were sometimes ornamented. The chariots of the Egyptians and Assyrians, with whom the bow was the principal arm of attack, were richly mounted with quivers full of arrows. The Egyptians invented the yoke saddle for their chariot horses in ca. 1500 BC. The best preserved examples of Egyptian chariots are the four specimens from the tomb of Tutankhamun.Chariots in the Bible
- See also Merkabah.
- And Solomon gathered chariots and horsemen: and he had a thousand and four hundred chariots, and twelve thousand horsemen, which he placed in the chariot cities, and with the king at Jerusalem.
- Song of Solomon 1:9 I have compared thee, O my love, to a company of horses in Pharaoh's chariots.
- Isaiah 2:7 Their land also is full of silver and gold, neither is there any end of their treasures; their land is also full of horses, neither is there any end of their chariots.
- Jeremiah 4:13 Behold, he shall come up as clouds, and his chariots shall be as a whirlwind: his horses are swifter than eagles. Woe unto us! for we are spoiled.
China
The earliest chariot burial site in China, discovered in 1933 at Hougang, Anyang of central China's Henan Province, dates to the rule of King Wu Ding of the late Shang Dynasty (ca. 1200 BC). But chariots may have been known before, from as early as the Xia Dynasty (17th century BC) http://www.china.org.cn/english/MATERIAL/28792.htm. During the Shang dynasty, members of the royalty were buried with a complete household and servants, including a chariot, horses, and a charioteer. Shang chariot was often drawn by two horses, but four are occasionally found in burials. The crew consisted of an archer, a driver, and sometimes a third armed with a spear or dagger-axe. During the 8th to 5th centuries, Chinese use of chariots reached its peak, they appeared in greater number, but infantry often defeated them in battle.The chariot became obsolete during the Age of the
Warring
States; the main reasons were the invention of the crossbow and
the adaptation of nomadic cavalry (mounted
archery), which was more effective.
Europe
Northern Europe
The Trundholm sun chariot is dated to ca. 1400 BC (see Nordic Bronze Age). The horse drawing the solar disk runs on four wheels, and the Sun itself on two. All wheels have four spokes. The "chariot" consists solely of the solar disk, the axle, and the wheels, and it is unclear if the sun is imagined as being itself a chariot, or as riding in a chariot. The presence of a model of a horse-drawn vehicle on two spoked wheels in Northern Europe at such an early time is in any case astonishing.In addition to the Trundholm chariot, there are a
number of petroglyphs
from the Nordic Bronze Age showing chariots, such as on one of the
slabs of stone in a double
bural from c. 1000 BC, showing a chariot with two four-spoked
wheels drawn by a team of two horses.
The use of the composite
bow from chariots is not attested in northern Europe.
Central Europe and the British Isles
The Celts were famous
chariot-makers, and the English word car is believed to be derived,
via Latin
carrum, from Gaulish karros
(English chariot itself is from 13th century French
charriote, an augmentative of the same word). Some 20 Iron Age
chariot
burials have been excavated in Britain,
dating roughly from between 500 BC and 100 BC, virtually all of
them in East
Yorkshire, with the exception of one find of 2001 from Newbridge,
10 km west of Edinburgh.
The Celtic chariot may have been called
carpentom, was drawn by a team of two horses, and measures
approximately 2 m (6.56 ft) in width and 4 m (13 ft) in length. The
one-piece iron rims for chariot wheels were probably a Celtic
invention. Apart from the iron wheel rims and iron fittings of the
hub, it was constructed from wood and wicker-work. In some
instances, iron rings reinforced the joints. Another Celtic
innovation was the free-hanging axle, suspended from the platform
with rope. This resulted in a much more comfortable ride on bumpy
terrain. There is evidence from French coins of a leather
'suspension' system for the central box, and a complex system of
knotted cords for its attachment; this has informed recent working
reconstructions by archaeologists.
British chariots were open in front, had a curved
wall behind, often had seats and sometimes had scythes on the
wheels. Julius
Caesar provides the only significant eyewitness report of
British chariot warfare: "XXXIII.--Their mode of fighting with
their chariots is this: firstly, they drive about in all directions
and throw their weapons and generally break the ranks of the enemy
with the very dread of their horses and the noise of their wheels;
and when they have worked themselves in between the troops of
horse, leap from their chariots and engage on foot. The charioteers
in the meantime withdraw some little distance from the battle, and
so place themselves with the chariots that, if their masters are
overpowered by the number of the enemy, they may have a ready
retreat to their own troops. Thus they display in battle the speed
of horse, [together with] the firmness of infantry; and by daily
practice and exercise attain to such expertness that they are
accustomed, even on a declining and steep place, to check their
horses at full speed, and manage and turn them in an instant and
run along the pole, and stand on the yoke, and thence betake
themselves with the greatest celerity to their chariots
again."
Chariots play an important role in Irish
mythology surrounding the hero Cu Chulainn.
The Celts in the Bronze Age used an ancient four-spoked wheel
design called a sun cross or
wheel cross to represent the chariot of the sun.
Chariots could also be used for ceremonial
purposes. According to Tacitus (Annals
14.35), Boudica, queen of
the Iceni and
a number of other tribes in a formidable uprising against the
occupying Roman forces, addressed her troops from a chariot in 61
CE:
- "Boudicca curru filias prae se vehens, ut quamque nationem accesserat, solitum quidem Britannis feminarum ductu bellare testabatur"
- Boudicca, with her daughters before her in a chariot, went up to tribe after tribe, protesting that it was indeed usual for Britons to fight under the leadership of women.
The last mention of chariotry in battle seems to
be at the Battle
of Mons Graupius, somewhere in modern Scotland, in 84 AD. From
Tacitus
(Agricola
1.35 -36) "The plain between resounded with the noise and with the
rapid movements of chariots and cavalry." The chariots did not win
even their initial engagement with the Roman auxiliaries: "Meantime
the enemy's cavalry had fled, and the charioteers had mingled in
the engagement of the infantry."
Southern Europe
The earliest records of chariots are the arsenal inventories of the Mycenaean palaces, as described in Linear B tablets from the 15th-14th centuries BC. The tablets distinguish between "assembled" and "disassembled" chariots.The only Etruscan
chariot found intact dates to ca. 530 BC, and was uncovered as
part of a chariot
burial at Monteleone
di Spoleto. Currently in the collection of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/ho/04/eust/hod_03.23.1.htm,
it is decorated with bronze plates decorated with detailed
low-relief scenes, commonly interpreted as depicting episodes from
the life of Achilles http://www.ancientworlds.net/aw/Post/885645.
Possibly unique to Etruscan chariots, the Monteleone chariot's
wheels have nine spokes. As part of a chariot burial, the
Monteleone chariot may have been intended primarily for ceremonial
use and may not be representative of Etruscan chariots in
general.
Greece
Greek chariots were made to be drawn by two
horses attached to a
central pole. If two additional horses were added, they were
attached on each side of the main pair by a single bar or trace
fastened to the front or prow of the chariot, as may be seen on two
prize vases in the British
Museum from the Panathenaic
Games at Athens,
Greece, in which the driver is seated with feet resting on a
board hanging down in front close to the legs of the horses. The
biga itself consists of a seat resting on the axle, with a rail at
each side to protect the driver from the wheels. Greek chariots
appear to have lacked any other attachment for the horses, which
would have made turning difficult.
The body or basket of the chariot rested directly
on the axle (called beam)
connecting the two wheels. There was no suspension,
making this an uncomfortable form of transport. At the front and
sides of the basket was a semicircular guard about 3 ft (1 m) high,
to give some protection from enemy attack. At the back the basket
was open, making it easy to mount and dismount. There was no seat,
and generally only enough room for the driver and one
passenger.
The central pole was probably attached to the
middle of the axle, though it appears to spring from the front of
the basket. At the end of the pole was the yoke, which consisted of two small
saddles
fitting the necks of the horses, and fastened by broad bands round
the chest. Besides this the harness of each horse consisted of a
bridle and a pair of
reins.
The reins were mostly the same as those in use in
the 19th century, and were made of leather and ornamented with
studs of ivory or metal. The reins were passed through rings
attached to the collar bands
or yoke, and were long enough to be tied round the waist of the
charioteer to allow for defense.
The wheels and basket of the chariot were usually
of wood, strengthened in places with bronze or iron. They had from
four to eight spokes and tires of bronze or iron.
Most other nations of this time had chariots of
similar design to the Greeks, the chief differences being the
mountings.
According to Greek mythology the chariot was
invented by Erichthonius
of Athens to conceal his feet, which were those of a
dragon.
The most notable appearance of the chariot in
Greek mythology occurs when Phaëton, the
son of Helios, in an
attempt to drive the chariot of the sun, managed to set the earth
on fire. This story led to the archaic meaning of a phaeton as one
who drives a chariot or coach, especially at a reckless or
dangerous speed. Plato, in his
Chariot
Allegory, depicted a chariot drawn by two horses, one well
behaved and the other troublesome, representing opposite impulses
of human nature; the task of the charioteer, representing reason,
was to stop the horses from going different ways and to guide them
towards enlightenment.
Roman Empire
The Romans probably borrowed chariot racing from the Etruscans, who would themselves had borrowed it either from the Celts or from the Greeks, but the Romans were also influenced directly by the Greeks especially after they conquered mainland Greece in 146 BC. In the Roman Empire, chariots were not used for warfare, but for chariot racing, especially in circuses, or for triumphal processions, when they could be drawn by as many as ten horses or even by dogs, tigers, or ostriches. There were four divisions, or factions, of charioteers, distinguished by the color of their costumes: the red, blue, green and white teams. The main centre of chariot racing was the Circus Maximus, situated in the valley between the Palatine and Aventine Hills in Rome. The track could hold 10 chariots, and the two sides of the track were separated by a raised median termed the spina. Chariot races continued to enjoy great popularity in Byzantine times, in the Hippodrome of Constantinople, even after the Olympic Games had been disbanded, until their decline after the Nika riots in the 6th century.An ancient Roman car or chariot drawn by four
horses abreast together with the horses drawing it was called a
quadriga, from the Latin quadrijugus (of a team of four). The term
sometimes meant instead the four horses without the chariot or the
chariot alone. A three-horse chariot, or the three-horse team
drawing it, was a triga, from trijugus (of a team of three).
Russian Tachanka
It might be said that the chariot was briefly revived during the Russian civil war of 1918–1920, when the "tachanka", a cart or wagon with a machine-gun mounted on it, enjoyed a limited tactical success in the Red Army. Since the gun had to be pointed away from the horses, it operated by firing in a direction opposite or lateral to the direction in which the tachanka was moving. One man drove the horses, while another, or a team of two, operated the gun.This may have been done for the sake of a
morale-boosting film but its practical effect when firing on the
move, would be negligible as until its ordinary, non-artillery
wheels collapsed or a horse was shot, it would be bouncing
about too much to be of any use. Inspection of the photograph shows
that the weapon shown in the taczanka article was designed in the
same way as a horse artillery carriage. In other words it was
designed to accompany or to just precede cavalry, to halt and to
suppress enemy infantry fire while the cavalry approached.
It is interesting to note that, in the
photograph, the gun carriage has an artillery wheel but the
limber
has not. In 1898, Vickers, Sons and Maxim were making a four-horse
limber which towed a 37 mm naval machine gun on a carriage. At the
same time they had a two-horse gun carriage which carried a limited
supply of its own ammunition for artillery support and a one-horse
carriage similarly with some of its own ammunition. These latter
guns were Vickers-Maxim .303 inch weapons.
See also
- Chariot burial
- Chariot racing
- Chariot tactics
- Ratha Indian name for chariot
- Temple car
Notes
References
- Anthony, D. W., & Vinogradov, N. B., Birth of the Chariot, Archaeology vol.48, no.2, Mar & April 1995, 36-41
- Anthony, David W., 1995, Horse, wagon & chariot: Indo-European languages and archaeology, Antiquity Sept/1995
- Di Cosmo, Nicolo , The Northern Frontier in Pre-Imperial China, Cambridge History of Ancient China ch. 13 (pp. 885-966).
- Litauer, M.A., & Grouwel, J.H., The Origin of the True Chariot', "Antiquity" vol.70, No.270, December 1996, 934-939.
- Sparreboom, M., Chariots in the Veda, Leiden (1985).
Further reading
- Chamberlin, J. Edward. Horse: How the horse has shaped civilizations. N.Y.: United Tribes Media Inc., 2006 (ISBN 0-9742405-9-1).
- Cotterell, Arthur. Chariot: From chariot to tank, the astounding rise and fall of the world's first war machine. Woodstock & New York: The Overlook Press, 2005 (ISBN 1-58567-667-5).
- Crouwel, Joost H. Chariots and other means of land transport in Bronze Age Greece (Allard Pierson Series, 3). Amsterdam: [Allard Pierson Museum], 1981 (ISBN 90-71211-03-7).
- Crouwel, Joost H. Chariots and other wheeled vehicles in Iron Age Greece (Allard Pierson Series, 9). Amsterdam:[Allard Pierson Museum]:, 1993 (ISBN 90-71211-21-5).
- Drews, Robert. The coming of the Greeks: Indo-European conquests in the Aegean and the Near East. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1988 (hardcover, ISBN 0-691-03592-X); 1989 (paperback, ISBN 0-691-02951-2).
- Drews, Robert. The end of the Bronze Age: Changes in warfare and the catastrophe ca. 1200 B.C. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1993 (hardcover, ISBN 0-691-04811-8); 1995 (paperback, ISBN 0-691-02591-6).
- Drews, Robert. Early riders: The beginnings of mounted warfare in Asia and Europe''. N.Y.: Routledge, 2004 (ISBN 0-415-32624-9).
- Fields, Nic; Brian Delf (illustrator). Bronze Age War Chariots (New Vanguard). Oxford; New York: Osprey Publishing, 2006 (ISBN 978-1841769448).
- Greenhalg, P A L. Early Greek warfare; horsemen and chariots in the Homeric and Archaic Ages. Cambridge [Eng.] University Press, 1973. (ISBN 9780521200561).
- Kulkarni, Raghunatha Purushottama. Visvakarmiya Rathalaksanam: Study of Ancient Indian Chariots: with a historical note, references, Sanskrit text, and translation in English. Delhi: Kanishka Publishing House, 1994 (ISBN 978-8173-91004-3)
- Littauer, Mary A.; Crouwel, Joost H. Chariots and related equipment from the tomb of Tutankhamun (Tutankhamun's Tomb Series, 8). Oxford: The Griffith Institute, 1985 (ISBN 0-900416-39-4).
- Littauer, Mary A.; Crouwel, Joost H.; Raulwing, Peter (Editor). Selected writings on chariots and other early vehicles, riding and harness (Culture and history of the ancient Near East, 6). Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers, 2002 (ISBN 90-04-11799-7).
- Moorey, P.R.S. "The Emergence of the Light, Horse-Drawn Chariot in the Near-East c. 2000–1500 B.C.", World Archaeology, Vol. 18, No. 2. (1986), pp. 196–215.
- Piggot, Stuart. The earliest wheeled transport from the Atlantic Coast to the Caspian Sea. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1983 (ISBN 0-8014-1604-3).
- Piggot, Stuart. Wagon, chariot and carriage: Symbol and status in the history of transport. London: Thames & Hudson, 1992 (ISBN 0-500-25114-2).
- Pogrebova M. The emergence of chariots and riding in the South Caucasus in Oxford Journal of Archaeology, Volume 22, Number 4, November 2003, pp. 397–409.
- Raulwing, Peter. Horses, Chariots and Indo-Europeans: Foundations and Methods of Chariotry Research from the Viewpoint of Comparative Indo-European Linguistics. Budapest: Archaeolingua, 2000 (ISBN 9638046260).
- Sandor, Bela I. The rise and decline of the Tutankhamun-class chariot in Oxford Journal of Archaeology, Volume 23, Number 2, May 2004, pp. 153–175.
- Sandor, Bela I. Tutankhamun's chariots: Secret treasures of engineering mechanics in Fatigue & Fracture of Engineering Materials & Structures, Volume 27, Number 7, July 2004, pp. 637–646.
- Sparreboom M. Chariots in the Veda (Memoirs of the Kern Institute, Leiden, 3). Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers, 1985 (ISBN 90-04-07590-9).
External links
- 30 Coins whose Keyword is "chariot". Perseus Digital Library.
- 114 Vases whose Keyword is "chariot". Perseus Digital Library.
- Ancient Celtic Warfare. Apple Warrior.
- Ancient Egyptian chariots: history, design, use. Ancient Egypt: an introduction to its history and culture.
- The Chariot in Egyptian Warfare. Tour Egypt Travel, Tours, Vacations, Ancient Egypt, History and shopping.
- Chariot - LoveToKnow 1911. 1911 Edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica.
- Chariot Tactics in the Bronze Age « War and Game. WordPress.com.
- Chariot Usage in Greek Dark Age Warfare, by Carolyn Nicole Conter: Title page for Electronic Theses and Dissertations ETD etd-11152003-164515. Florida State University ETD Collection.
- Charioteers and Racing Factions. VRoma: A Virtual Community for Teaching and Learning Classics.
- Chariots in Greece. Hellenica - Michael Lahanas.
- Kamat Research Database - Prehistoric Carts. Varieties of Carts and Chariots in prehistoric cave shelter paintings found in Central India. Kamat's Potpourri -- The History, Mystery, and Diversity of India.
- LacusCurtius • Greek and Roman Chariots (Smith's Dictionary, 1875).
- Ludi circenses (longer version). SocietasViaRomana.net.
- Remaking the Wheel: Evolution of the Chariot - New York Times. February 22, 1994.
chariot in Catalan: Carro de guerra
chariot in German: Streitwagen
chariot in Spanish: Carro de guerra
chariot in French: Char (Antiquité)
chariot in Italian: Biga
chariot in Hebrew: מרכבה (רכב)
chariot in Dutch: Strijdwagen
chariot in Japanese: チャリオット
chariot in Polish: Rydwan
chariot in Portuguese: Biga
chariot in Russian: Колесница
chariot in Finnish: Sotavaunu
chariot in Swedish: Häststridsvagn
chariot in Ukrainian:
Колісниця