Six Divisions of Cavalry: Difference between revisions
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The '''Six Divisions of Cavalry''' (Altı Bölük) was a corps of mounted [[elite]] soldiers in the [[Ottoman]] army. (There were not really six but four [[division]]s. Two of the six were sub-divisions.) The divisions were: |
The '''Six Divisions of Cavalry''' (Altı Bölük) was a corps of mounted [[elite]] soldiers in the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] army. (There were not really six but four [[division]]s. Two of the six were sub-divisions.) The divisions were: |
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* [[Spahis]] (translated roughly as ''cavarlymen'') |
* [[Spahis]] (translated roughly as ''cavarlymen'') |
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[[Category:Ottoman Empire]] |
[[Category:Ottoman Empire]] |
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[[Category: Cavalry]] |
Revision as of 18:40, 6 November 2004
The Six Divisions of Cavalry (Altı Bölük) was a corps of mounted elite soldiers in the Ottoman army. (There were not really six but four divisions. Two of the six were sub-divisions.) The divisions were:
- Spahis (translated roughly as cavarlymen)
- Silahdars (translated roughly as swordbearers)
- Ulufejis (translated as stipendiaries), organised in two sub-divisions:
- Ulufejis of the Left
- Ulufejis of the Right
- Gurebas (translated roughly as strangers), organised in two sub-divisions:
- Gurebas of the Left
- Gurebas of the Right
The elite cavalry was the mounted counterpart to the Janissaries and played an important part in the Ottoman army. The Six Divisions were probably founded during the reign of sultan Mehmed II (1451-1481), but the Spahis had existed since 1326.
See also the military of the Ottoman Empire.