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War elephant - History | A Wisdom Archive on War elephant - History |  | War elephant - History A selection of articles related to War elephant - History |  |
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More material related to War Elephant can be found here:
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War elephant, War elephant - Battles, War elephant - External link, War elephant - History, War elephant - Tactical use, War elephant - War elephants in popular culture, Crushing by elephant, Sassanid army, History of elephants in Europe, List of historical elephants, Military animals, Chinese chess - which includes the war elephant (象 xiàng) as one of the pieces; the chess bishop was also originally an elephant.
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ARTICLES RELATED TO War elephant - History | |
 |  |  | War elephant - History: Encyclopedia II - War elephant - HistoryElephant taming began in the Indus valley around 4,000 years ago. Taming is not used here as a synonym of domestication. Domesticated animals, such as cows or dogs, are born in captivity and eventually subjected to selective breeding. Elephants, probably due to their bad temper, expensive feeding and slow growth rate (15 years to adulthood), were, with very few exceptions, always caught in the wild and subsequently tamed for several purposes. The first species to be tamed was thus the Asian elephant, for agricultural ends. The first military application of elephants dates from around 1100 BC and ...
See also:War elephant, War elephant - History, War elephant - Tactical use, War elephant - Battles, War elephant - War elephants in popular culture Read more here: » War elephant: Encyclopedia II - War elephant - History |
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 |  |  | War elephant - History: Encyclopedia II - War elephant - HistoryElephant taming began in the Indus valley around 4,000 years ago. Taming is not used here as a synonym of domestication. Domesticated animals, such as cows or dogs, are born in captivity and eventually subjected to selective breeding. Elephants, probably due to their bad temper, expensive feeding and slow growth rate (15 years to adulthood), were, with very few exceptions, always caught in the wild and subsequently tamed for several purposes. The first species to be tamed was thus the Asian elephant, for agricultural ends. The first military application of elephants dates from around 1100 BC and ...
See also:War elephant, War elephant - History, War elephant - Tactical use, War elephant - Battles, War elephant - War elephants in popular culture, War elephant - External link Read more here: » War elephant: Encyclopedia II - War elephant - History |
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 |  |  | War elephant - History: Encyclopedia II - War elephant - Tactical useThere were plenty of military purposes for which elephants could be used. As enormous animals, they could carry heavy cargoes and provided a useful means of transport. In battle, war elephants were usually deployed in the centre of the line, where they could be useful to prevent a charge or start one of their own.
An elephant charge could reach about 30 km/h (20 mi/h), and unlike horse cavalry, could not be easily stopped by an infantry line setting spears. Its power was based on pure force: it would crash into an enemy line ...
See also:War elephant, War elephant - History, War elephant - Tactical use, War elephant - Battles, War elephant - War elephants in popular culture, War elephant - External link Read more here: » War elephant: Encyclopedia II - War elephant - Tactical use |
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More material related to War Elephant can be found here:
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