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Chariot

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

Ornate carvings on a temple chariot from the Airavatesvara Temple in Tamil Nadu.

A chariot is a type of vehicle similar to a cart. It was driven by a person called a charioteer, usually using horses to go fast.

The oldest known chariots were found in places from the Sintashta culture in Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia. They date back to around 1950–1880 BC. These early chariots were important because they showed how people could travel quickly using horses and special wheels.

The key invention that made light, horse-drawn chariots possible was the spoked wheel. Chariots were fast, light, open vehicles with two wheeled parts. They were pulled by two or more equids, usually horses. They had a floor with a guard at the front and sides.

At first, chariots were used for ancient warfare during the Bronze and Iron Ages. Later, even after new ways of fighting like light and heavy cavalries became better, chariots were still used for many things. People used them for travel, in processions, for games, and in races. Chariots were important in many cultures for thousands of years.

Etymology

The word "chariot" began with the Latin word carrus. It later entered French as chariot, coming from the Gaulish word karros.

In ancient Rome, a biga was a chariot pulled by two horses, a triga by three horses, and a quadriga by four horses.

Origins

The wheel may have been invented in several places, with early signs found in Ukraine, Poland, Germany, and Slovenia. Early wheeled vehicles appeared around the middle of the 4th millennium BC in places like the Northern Caucasus and Central Europe. These first vehicles might have been pulled by oxen.

A key step in developing the chariot was the domestication of animals, especially domestication of horses. Horses were likely first tamed around 3500 BC in the Eurasian Steppes, possibly by people of the Botai culture in modern-day Kazakhstan.

The earliest known chariots were found in burial sites of the Sintashta culture in modern-day Russia and Kazakhstan. These chariots helped people in ancient warfare. Some experts debate whether these early finds were true chariots or simple carts.

Spread by Indo-Europeans

Chariots were important in old stories from Indo-Iranian and early European cultures. Many gods in Persian mythology and Hindu mythology ride chariots. The word for chariot in Sanskrit is rátha-, which means "having wheels." Nomadic tribes like the Scythians traveled in wagons, carts, and chariots.

Hittites

The area of the spoke-wheeled chariot finds within the Sintashta-Petrovka Proto-Indo-Iranian culture is indicated in purple.

Old Hittite texts from the 18th century BC show the earliest proof of chariot battles. The Hittites were known for their chariots. They made a new kind with lighter, four-spoked wheels that could carry three warriors. One would steer, another would shoot arrows, and the third would fight or protect everyone.

The Hittites needed to control trade routes and resources like metals. Under Suppiluliuma I, they conquered areas like Syria. The Battle of Kadesh in 1274 BC was a very big chariot battle.

Bronze Age Indian Subcontinent

Main article: Ratha

Old models of ox-drawn vehicles have been found in places like Chanhudaro, Daimabad, Harappa, and Nausharo. True horses were found in Pirak, Pakistan, around 1700 BC.

Pictures of horse-drawn chariots with armed passengers appear in rock paintings from the second millennium BC. These paintings are found in places like Chibbar Nulla and Morhana Pahar in Mirzapur.

Bronze Age solid-disk wheel carts were found in Sinauli in 2018. Some think these were horse-pulled "chariots," but others believe they were pulled by oxen. These findings may relate to early movements of people into the Indian subcontinent.

Horse-drawn chariots and their rituals spread with the Indo-Iranians. These people brought horses and chariots to India, starting the Vedic period around 1750 BC.

In religion

Copper sculpture of a bull-cart and rider, from a hoard at Daimabad, Maharashtra - Late Harappan, c2000 BC

In old Indian texts called the Rigveda, the god Indra rides a chariot pulled by two bay horses. Other gods like the Sun God Surya, the dawn goddess Ushas, and Agni also ride chariots.

Hindu symbolism

In Hindu stories, the chariot (ratha) is a symbol of divine movement and order. A famous example is in the Bhagavad Gita, where Krishna acts as a charioteer for a hero named Arjuna. The chariot stands for the human body, the horses are the senses, and the charioteer represents the higher self guiding the mind.

Persia

Main article: Scythed chariot

The Persians took over after Elam. They might have been the first to use four horses to pull their chariots. They also used special chariots with blades called scythed chariots. A leader named Cyrus the Younger used many of these chariots in a big battle.

Herodotus wrote that areas like Ancient Libyan and Ancient Indian provided horses and chariots to a leader named Xerxes the Great. However, by this time, cavalry was better than chariots. A big battle in 331 BC showed that chariots were no longer the main way to fight, except in some places like India and China.

Introduction in the Near East

Chariots first appeared in the Near East between the 17th and 16th centuries BC. Some experts think the horse chariot was created there early in the second millennium BC. They developed from earlier vehicles with disk or cross-bar wheels. This development happened in the Near East, where chariots with spoke wheels and horses are first known from the early part of the second millennium BC. They were even shown on a Syrian cylinder seal from either the 18th or 17th century BC.

According to Christoph Baumer, the earliest wheels found in Mesopotamia are from the first half of the third millennium BC. Pictures of sleds on wooden rollers or wheels have been found in Mesopotamia. These pictures are from about the same time as early wheel discoveries in Europe.

The oldest pictures of vehicles used in warfare are on the Standard of Ur in southern Mesopotamia, from about 2500 BCE. These were heavy wagons pulled by oxen or a mix of a donkey and an onager, called a Kunga. They were used by armies from Ebla, early Sumer, Akkad, and Ur III. The picture shows lines of these wagons, each with a driver and a fighter carrying axes or spears. These heavy wagons might have been used for carrying things during important events.

The Sumerians had a lighter, two-wheeled cart pulled by four donkeys, with solid wheels. Spoked wheels did not appear in Mesopotamia until the middle of the second millennium BC.

Standard of Ur in southern Mesopotamia, c. 2500 BCE, depicting solid four wheeled, Kunga drawn, war wagons.

Egypt

Chariots came to Egypt around 1650 BC during the Hyksos invasion. The Hyksos invaders brought chariots and horses to Egypt from the 16th century BC onward. Egyptian and Assyrian art often shows chariots with rich decorations. Usually, chariots had two people: one to guide the horses and another to shoot arrows. The best-preserved Egyptian chariots are from the tomb of Tutankhamun. Chariots could be pulled by two or more horses.

Ancient Canaan and Israel

Ramses II fighting from a chariot at the Battle of Kadesh with two archers, one with the reins tied around the waist to free both hands (relief from Abu Simbel, 13th century BC)

See also: Merkabah

Chariots are often mentioned in the Hebrew Tanakh and the Greek Old Testament. They are talked about as tools for war or symbols of power and glory. They are first mentioned in the story of Joseph in Genesis 50:9. "Iron chariots" are mentioned in Joshua and Judges as weapons used by the Canaanites and Israelites. The Philistines, sometimes linked to the Sea Peoples or early Greeks, also had chariots.

Examples from The Jewish Study Bible of the Tanakh include references in Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Psalms, and the Song of Songs. Examples from the King James Version of the Christian Bible include mentions in 2 Chronicles, Judges, and Acts.

Small horses might have lived in northern Negev before 3000 BC. Jezreel has been linked to King Ahab's chariot base. A decorated bronze tablet thought to be part of a Canaanite chariot was found at a site that may be Sisera's fortress Harosheth Haggoyim.

Urartu

In Urartu (860–590 BC), chariots were used by both nobles and soldiers. In Erebuni (Yerevan), King Argishti of Urartu is shown riding a chariot pulled by two horses. This chariot had two wheels, each with about eight spokes, and was used around 800 BC.

Introduction in Bronze-Age Europe

The earliest known wheeled vehicle was found on the Bronocice pot from around 3500 BC in Poland. This clay pot came from a settlement of the Funnelbeaker culture in Swietokrzyskie Voivodeship. The oldest real wheel-axle combination found in Eastern Europe is the Ljubljana Marshes Wheel from around 3150 BC.

Stone stele from Grave Circle A at Mycenae, c. 1600 BC

The Greeks started using chariots around 1600 BC, likely from the Hittites. These chariots were used in races, ceremonies, and public events like the Olympic and Panathenaic Games. They were simple with a seat, wooden wheels, and leather reins. Greek stories tell of chariots, like the sun chariot driven by Phaëton, son of Helios.

In Northern Europe, the Trundholm sun chariot from around 1500-1300 BC shows a horse-drawn vehicle with wheels. Carvings from the Nordic Bronze Age also show chariots. The Celts in Western Europe were known for their chariots. Their use influenced words like "car" and "carry" in modern English. British chariots were open in front, and Julius Caesar wrote about how they were used in battle.

In Rome, chariots were mainly used for racing in circuses and for celebrations, not for war. The Circus Maximus in Rome was a big place for these races, with teams in colorful costumes. Chariot racing stayed popular in the Byzantine Empire too.

Introduction in Ancient China

The oldest proof of chariots in China was found in 1933 near Anyang in Henan. This discovery dates back to around 1250 BC, during the time of King Wu Ding of the Late Shang. Early writings suggest that enemies used a few chariots in battles, but the Shang mostly used them to move leaders around and for royal hunts.

During the Shang dynasty, important people were buried with their households, servants, chariots, horses, and even charioteers. A typical Shang chariot had two horses, but sometimes four were used.

After the Shang, the Zhou dynasty used chariots more often. They created a new way to connect four horses together. A chariot crew usually had an archer, a driver, and sometimes a third fighter with a spear or dagger-axe. From the 8th to the 5th centuries BC, chariots were very common, but foot soldiers often beat charioteers in fights.

Chariots as main battle tools stopped being used after the Warring-States period (476–221 BC). This was because new weapons like the crossbow became common, and cavalry with mounted archery worked better. Chariots were still used by leaders during the Qin dynasty and the Han dynasty. In the Han dynasty, armored chariots fought against enemies in the Han–Xiongnu War, especially at the Battle of Mobei (119 BC).

Before the Han dynasty, how strong a country was often shown by how many chariots it had. A country with a thousand chariots was considered medium-sized, and one with ten thousand chariots was very powerful.

Images

Aerial view of the ancient city of Arkaim, an archaeological site in Russia dating back to the 17th–16th century BC.
An ancient Iranian vase from around 2000 BC, showing a warrior riding a chariot pulled by a horse.
An ancient model of a two-wheeled chariot from the Oxus Treasure, dating back to the 5th-4th century BC.
Ancient Greek statue of a charioteer from Delphi, depicting an athlete from the Pythian Games over 2,400 years ago.
Map showing how chariots spread across different regions from around 2000 BC to 500 BC.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Chariot, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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