depicting hippeus in combat with
Amazon, 4th century AD (
Louvre) The utility of the Greek citizen-cavalry was low on account of their heavy armor, their metal helmet, and their coat of
mail, their metal-fringed kilts, their
cuisses reaching to the knee and their leather leggings. They did not take shields into battle. As offensive weapons, they had a straight two-edged sword and a spear, used either as a
lance or thrown as a
javelin. Horseshoes and
stirrups were unknown to the Greeks. The closest approximation to a saddle was either a saddle cloth or a piece of felt that was firmly fastened under the horse's belly. The
Thessalians were considered the best riders. Trained in horsemanship as well as infantry warfare, the
Sacred Band of Thebes may have accompanied the great Theban cavalry commander
Pelopidas to Pelopidas's fatal confrontation with
Alexander of Pherae in 364 (Pelopidas taught
Philip II of Macedon many cavalry skills). Cavalry first became important in the Macedonian army under
Philip II of Macedon and his son
Alexander the Great. Although in earlier times the number of horsemen in the Greek forces was low, in Alexander's later army they formed nearly a sixth. The Macedonian cavalry was divided into heavy and light, both consisting of squadrons (
ilai) of an average strength of 200 men. The light cavalry, which was formed under the name of
prodromoi (skirmishers), consisted of Macedonian
sarissophoroi, so-called from the
sarissa, a lance from 14 to long (
Polybius, XVIII, 12), and of
Thracian horsemen. The heavy-cavalry men each had a mounted servant and probably a led horse to transport baggage and forage. After Alexander,
Tarentini equites, or light-armed spearmen, with two horses each, emerged (192 BC,
Livy, XXXV 28, 29). ==Evolution==