Cavalry Corps (United Kingdom)

The Cavalry Corps was a formation of the British Army during World War I. and part of the British Expeditionary Force. The corps was formed in France in October 1914, under General Sir Edmund Allenby. It was later broken up in March 1916, but re-established in the following September.

Contents

Formation

The Corps consisted of the three cavalry divisions serving in France, the 1st, 2nd, 3rd divisions.[1]

The cavalry division consisted of cavalry regiments in brigades. They were armed with rifles, unlike their French and German counterparts, who were only armed with the shorter range carbine. The cavalry division also had a high allocation of artillery compared to foreign cavalry divisions, with 24 13-pounder guns organised into two brigades and two machine guns for each regiment. However, when dismounted, the cavalry division was the equivalent of two weakened infantry brigades with less artillery then the infantry division.[2]

Battles

Notes

  1. ^ Gudmundsson & Anderson (2007), p.29
  2. ^ Badsey (2008), p. 198

References