Horses, War, and Gender
This is a brief introduction to one of my more experimental works in progress. Most people seem to think it’s a bit strange, and it could easily be a complete failure. The idea is to combine my interests in military history, gender, and eco-criticism by looking at a subject I’m familiar with (horses in early-modern war) from an unfamiliar angle.
When I was an undergraduate, Frank Tallett taught me to be careful to make a distinction between military theory and military practice. What drill books said armies should do in battles is not necessarily what they actually did. This is also an important principle in women’s history, where it is now generally recognised that prescriptive literature is more likely to represent the opposite of reality: if women actually were doing what the books told them to, there would have been no need to keep republishing them. Writers on cavalry tactics in seventeenth century England usually recommended stallions as the best war horses.
The administrative records of parliament’s armies during the English Civil War show that in practice mares and geldings were used as well as stallions. The commissaries responsible for taking delivery of horses from horse dealers and issuing them to the New Model Army kept an account book which records a total of 6,723 horses in 1645 and 1646 (PRO SP28/140 part vii). The consignments of horses issued to cavalry regiments were usually described in the account as “horses, mares, and geldings”. The word “horse” can be as ambiguous as the word “man” (although this in itself reveals something about gender assumptions). In this context it almost certainly refers to stallions as geldings and mares are referred to separately. However, the word “horse” on its own might just denote the species rather than the sex. This is more of a problem with the lists of horses donated to the Earl of Essex’s army in 1642 by parliament’s supporters (PRO SP28/131 part iii). These lists are more detailed than those for the New Model Army, describing each horse in detail and giving individual values. In many cases, sex is specified, but where only the word “horse” is given it isn’t clear whether this means a stallion or whether it means that sex is unspecified. Nevertheless, very few of the horses listed for the cavalry are specifically described as “mares”.
Feminism makes a significant distinction between sex and gender. Sex is defined as being essential: determined by the physical reality of the body and its biology. Gender is defined as being constructed: an ideology invented and perpetuated by human culture and society. This distinction is very important for women’s rights: there is no logical reason why having a vagina and a uterus should bar you from certain professions or make you earn lower wages. However, it can be difficult to separate sex and gender in practice. Gender ideology perpetuates itself by creating a false impression that it’s natural. This can lead to an assumption that gender follows automatically from sex, or even that there is no difference between gender and sex.
No assumptions about the origins of gender are safe, because we know absolutely nothing about how or when it originated. We only know that by the time of the earliest written records of human culture, gender ideology had gone way beyond the scientific facts of sexual dimorphism. In Making Sex (Harvard University Press, 1992), Thomas Laqueur showed that from ancient Greece to 19th century Europe, perceptions of sex and the body were distorted by gender assumptions and that scientific evidence was often misinterpreted to fit in with the dominant gender ideology. Although the specifics of Laqueur’s analysis have been heavily criticised, the general point about the insidious influence of gender on perceptions of sex can’t be denied, and this can make it difficult to separate sex from gender in historical records.
Language and culture lead to all humans being influenced by gender (gender roles can vary across cultures and over time, but as far as I know there is no evidence of cultures which have no gender at all). But what about animals? They have their own existence outside human language and culture. It seems unlikely that any animals have created their own gender ideology. In the wild, most animal behaviour is probably innate (although I don’t know enough about biology to be sure of this). Although animals have their own communication systems and might learn some behaviours, all the evidence suggests that humans are the only species whose brains and language are sophisticated enough to develop anything which we could define as cultural ideology. The most crucial thing is that no other animals are interested in each others thoughts to the extent that humans are. At Babel’s Dawn (a fascinating blog about the origins of speech), Edmund Blair Bolles talks about how experiments with chimpanzees have shown that they can be taught sign language in order to communicate with humans, but they show very little interest in communicating with each other.
This raises an interesting question about what happens when humans (who are obsessed with gender) interact with animals (who are probably incapable of knowing anything about gender). Whether they like it or not, animals are used and influenced by humans in many different ways. Since gender has had a huge influence on how humans perceive their own bodies, it might also be expected to influence how they perceive animals. The sex of animals is a biological fact, and this necessarily influences how they are used by humans. For example, you can’t milk a bull, and a cock can’t lay eggs. What I’m aiming to find out is whether it goes further than that. How far were human perceptions and uses of animals influenced by human gender ideology? Were there any roles which could have been performed equally well by either sex, but which were performed mostly or exclusively by one sex?
War is one of the most gendered aspects of human culture. Joshua Goldstein found that war has occurred in nearly every human culture ever recorded, and that women have mostly been excluded from combat roles in a way which is not consistent with sexual dimorphism. This makes war a useful case study for the relationship between animal sex and human gender. Were stallions better war horses than mares, or did the drill books just reflect the dominant gender ideology? Were mares used in practice because they were just as good as stallions, or because there weren’t enough stallions?
The situation is complicated by the common practice of castrating male horses. While there might be some parallels with human eunuchs, geldings were, and are, more numerous. In some ways, geldings are an artificially created third sex, which raises the question of whether they were considered male or not male, and where they would be placed on the chain of being.
This project will make use of the administrative records, drill books, and battle reports which I’ve been familiar with for a long time, but it also involves moving into cultural history and literary criticism. Some literary critics have already started looking at animals and gender in literature (for example, Bruce Boehrer, Shakespeare Among the Animals, Palgrave, New York, 2002), but this has mostly focused on how animals were used as metaphors for human gender. I’ll be concentrating more on how humans imagined the animals themselves, which will mean dealing with some difficult questions about metaphors and reality. If literary texts consistently portray war horses as male and not female, that would suggest a dominant ideology at work. This might allow me to avoid the difficult question of author’s intentions, because if the idea is ubiquitous is doesn’t necessarily matter whether it entered the text consciously or unconsciously. If it can be shown that humans imposed their own gender ideology onto animals, that might make it easier to draw a line between sex and gender, and demonstrate how arbitrary gender is.
Right now I’m just trying to get my plans together, and thinking about methodology and sources. I’m heading into unknown territory with this research. It might change direction, or it might not work out at all, but I’m determined to try. At the very least it should be useful experience, and even if I don’t end up with anything worth publishing in print, there should be some interesting blog posts along the way.
Bibliography
- Bruce Thomas Boehrer, Shakespeare among the animals (Palgrave: New York, 2002).
- Joshua S. Goldstein, War and Gender (CUP: Cambridge, 2003).
- Thomas Walter Laqueur, Making Sex (Harvard University Press: Cambridge, Mass., 1992).

Comment by Zebee Johnstone — 8:55 pm, 24 October 2006 [permanent link to this comment]
You don’t mention practical reasons for preferring one to another.
When a mare goes into season she upsets all stallions withing scent range and quite a few geldings. She herself can be a bit odd! In a close packed picket line a mare in season could make life a bit difficult I’d have thought if there were stallions about.
I think if you are going to follow this you have to separate out the actual physical reasons, that is definitely observed differences, to the ideological. People who live all their lives with horses and work with them are going to observe what differences there arem how can you tell whether it’s that or an untested assumption?
Do mares have more endurance and in an army setting that outweighs the nuisance of season? Do stallions have better weight carrying and more eagerness, making them better for certain cavalry work even though they can be a nuisance?
My experience with stallions used for working is with quarter horses which have a different temprement anyway. The thoroughbreds are usually kept segregated and racehorses are treated oddly anyway so they are going to be useless for comparison. So where’s a good source of info on the general habits and temprement of the kinds of horses used for calvalry in the Civil War? Of the way they were handled when young?
And how many of each were there anyway? These days most colts are gelded young as there’s no reason to keep a horse entire unless you were definitely going to breed from it. So was a stallion hard to get or expensive or much better bred, and so a status symbol for that?
Zebee
Comment by Gavin Robinson — 8:34 pm, 25 October 2006 [permanent link to this comment]
Those are all good points which I’ll be thinking about. I’ve got some experience of schooling ex-racehorses for dressage, so I know how unpredicatable and uncontrollable they can be. This also relates to how cavalry worked at the tactical and operational levels. Drill books often said that cavalry should be lined up knee to knee in battle formation. That would probably be difficult to maintain at the best of times and even more difficult with stallions attacking “friendly” horses or trying to mate with mares. The sources are generally vague about what pace cavalry attacked at. There would most likely have to be some trade off between speed and the tightness of the formation, as the faster they went the more ragged the line would get. In practice the aim of a charge was probably to intimidate the enemy into running away before contact was made, and either speed or a solid looking line might achieve that (or it might not). Being able to pull up and reform after a charge was really important, although it wasn’t always achieved.
However, one of the things I want to bring out is that armies spent very little of their time fighting big battles. The day to day work of cavalry was patrolling, raiding, bringing in contributions, guarding convoys, or just trying to find enough to eat (feeding horses was a major logistical problem). In those circumstances, endurance would be more important than speed or aggression.
I can relate all this back to ideology in that if there were practical reasons why stallions were unsuitable for cavalry use (being aggressive, uncontrollable, and sexually active) then theorists who recommended them might have been influenced by gender bias, or at least didn’t know what they were talking about.
Comment by Zebee Johnstone — 1:26 pm, 27 October 2006 [permanent link to this comment]
When it comes to theorists, it’s probably not knowing what they were talking about! I think of Patton recommending sabre work for cavalry based on school fencing on foot. Thus quite different to the styles that people who had fought on horseback had recommended. I could see a theorist in early modern times basing ideas on what fitted a theory of how the world worked compared to how it really did.
Pingback by Investigations of a Dog » Happy New January — 11:12 am, 1 January 2007 [permanent link to this comment]
[...] In addition to all that, there’s still my Horses, War, and Gender project, which I haven’t done much about recently, my ongoing journey into critical theory (or insanity, depending on your point of view), learning latin (amorem faciamus et mortem desuper audiamus!), a couple of conference proposals which I’ll need to turn into papers if they get accepted, an article under consideration which will probably need revising when it finally comes back from the reviewers (unless they say it’s so bad that it should be burnt by the common hangman), and various ideas about computer games. Maybe it’s actually a good thing that I don’t have a job. [...]
Pingback by Investigations of a Dog » Horses and Gendered Language — 9:04 am, 21 July 2008 [permanent link to this comment]
[...] in October 2006 I posted about my speculative (and slightly mad?) project about gendered perceptions of war horses. In a [...]