Hussites A
medieval European war wagon was developed in the
Hussite Wars around 1420 by
Hussite forces led by the Czech general
Jan Žižka rebelling in
Bohemia. It was a heavy wagon given protective sides with firing slits and heavy firepower from either a cannon or a force of hand-gunners, archers and
crossbowmen, supported by
infantry using spears, pikes, and flails. Groups of them could form defensive works, but they also were used as hard points for formations or as firepower in pincer movements. This early use of gunpowder and innovative tactics helped a largely peasant infantry stave off attacks by the
Holy Roman Empire's larger forces of mounted knights. The wagon was first used in war in
Battle of Sudoměř on March 25, 1420, where it was found to be a powerful weapon for the Hussite army. Despite being outnumbered by approximately 400 to 2000, the war wagon allowed the Hussite forces to emerge victorious in the battle. The wagon was then used throughout the rest of the Hussite Wars with great success. After the Hussite wars, they stayed in usage as the special tactical weapon of Bohemian mercenaries which prevailed against knights or foot soldiers. Its successful history came to an end, at least for large scale engagements, with the development of field-piece artillery: a battle wagon wall "fortress" of approximately 300 wagons was broken at the Battle of Wenzenbach on September 12, 1504 by the
culverines and
muskets of the
landsknecht regiment of
Georg von Frundsberg. War wagons mounting
scythe blades and
organ guns were used by the Spanish in the
battle of Ravenna. They had also been sparsely used in Spain since the 15th century.
Zaporozhian Cossacks The
Zaporozhian Cossacks were mostly infantry soldiers who used war wagons, according to two early modern authors -
Erich Lassota, an important primary source on the Zaporozhian Cossacks from the very end of the 16th century, and
Guillaume de Beauplan, a 17th-century cartographer and author of a book describing Ukraine, published in two editions in 1651 and 1660. ==See also==