Hobelars were used successfully by both sides during the
Wars of Scottish Independence, with
Edward I of England trying to gain an advantage by preventing Irish
exports of hobbies to Scotland.
Robert Bruce employed the tactic in his
guerilla warfare and mounted raids, covering a day. Within Ireland and Britain (and beyond), they were well-known and highly valued.
Edward I was much impressed by the abilities of the Irish hobelar, resulting in extensive use of them in Scotland, even procuring six of them from the
Decies for his own personal use. The first reference to hobelars dates to 1296 in Ireland, when 260 accompanied a contingent of Irish troops to
Scotland under
John Wogan, as part of
Edward I's army. Not until after 1300 were there any references to English hobelars. Edward mustered fourteen at
Carlisle in June 1301. The following year, he had three hundred and ninety included in an Irish force of two thousand three hundred. This rose to a total of four hundred and ninety-nine (out of an army of three thousand, four hundred) in 1303, all indicative of their value as light cavalry. It is clear from their rapid adoption into English armies operating in Scotland that the hobelar met a perceived tactical need, and, in the early years of the 14th century, hobelars were to be found in all the major border garrisons. It is also clear that these hobelars are increasingly Englishmen, rather than Irish. Of the 845 hobelars at the siege of Berwick in 1319, 500 were from
Cumberland and
Westmorland, 36 from
Barnard Castle, 24 from
Norham and 45 from
Tynedale. 376 English, 10 Welsh and 139 Irish hobelars were mustered at
Newcastle in 1322. The hobelar became a standard feature in English forces throughout the country in the 1320s and 1330s. Muster records for 1326 show hobelars being recruited in
Norfolk, Suffolk and
Oxfordshire. In the 1330s, however, a new type of mounted infantryman began to be recorded; the mounted archer. In the period 1335 to 1350, the mounted archer gradually surpassed the hobelar as the predominant mounted auxiliary, especially for foreign service. For example, of the troops summoned to serve at the
siege of Calais in 1346–47, 600 were hobelars as against 5000 mounted archers. At the same time, however, the hobelar's place within the structure of English military obligation crystallised. The arms of a hobelar were first formally defined in 1335. In 1346, it was defined that a man with £10 of goods was to be armed as a hobelar The hobelar remained a named constituent of local forces through the rest of the 14th century but was less commonly mentioned in the 15th century. The final reference to hobelars appears to be a
commission of array in Norfolk and Suffolk in 1485. == Arms and armour ==