The ultimate Husarian weapon was psychological. As well as wearing helmets, thick steel breastplates, shoulder and arm guards, they also wore wings; great wooden arcs bristling with eagle feathers attached to their shoulders or the back of their saddles. Over their shoulders they wore the skin of a tiger or leopard as a cloak. Their harnesses, saddles and horse cloths were embroidered and embellished with gold and gems. Their boots were painted with gold. Their long lances were painted with stripes and decorated with a 5 foot long silk pennant which along with the wings and jingling jewels and gear, made a Frightful sound, described as "an Evil Hiss." They even painted their horses red and white on occasions. The sight and sounds alone of the elite regiment at a full charge could strike fear in the bravest of men.
For over a century, the Husaria were the Lords of the battlefield delivering the decisive blow in many an important engagement. At Kircholm (1605) 4,000 Poles accounted for 14,000 Swedes. At Klushino (1610) 6,000 Poles (of only 200 were infantry) defeated 30,000 Muscovite and 5,000 German and Scottish mercenaries.
In 1656, 5,500 Husaria defeated 13,000 Swedes and outside Vienna in 1683, The Winged Cavalry saved Europe from the until then, unstoppable might of the Ottoman Empire.
Husaria Cavalry Overture is a Tribute to these Gallant Men and Their Horses!