Central Asian warfare for kids - weapons, tactics, soldiers

Central Asian Warfare

Mongol siege
The Mongols besiege a city in West Asia

One thing people always remembered about Central Asian wars was that the soldiers fought on horseback. Because Central Asian people spent a lot of time on horseback, herding their cattle, and because the grasslands where they lived were great places to ride horses, Central Asian people were very good at riding horses and they had a lot of horses. Central Asian soldiers were able to use the horses to give them a big advantage in fighting wars.

Because Central Asian soldiers fought from horses using bows and arrows and spears, women were able to fight alongside the men in some battles. Some Scythian women fought with the men; the Greeks called these women "Amazons", from a Persian word meaning "fighting together."

Giovanni Carpini, and Italian traveller who visited the Mongols in 1245 AD, wrote that, "Girls and women ride and gallop as skillfully as men. We even saw them carrying quivers and bows, and the women can ride horses for as long as the men; they have shorter stirrups, handle horses very well, and mind all the property.... They all wear trousers, and some of them shoot just like men."

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During the time of Genghis Khan and Tamerlane, in the 1200s and 1300s AD, people also said that the Mongols were very blood-thirsty. People said that the Mongols killed an awful lot of people in their wars, even people who had surrendered and were not fighting back.

Tales told in Tents Empire of the Mongolians

Tales Told in Tents: Stories from Central Asia by Sally Pomme Clayton (2000). For kids.
Empire Of The Mongolians, by Michael Burgan (2005). Young adult.