The caracole or caracol (from the Spanish caracol - "spiral") consists of a manoeuvre on horseback in dressage and, previously, in military tactics.
Some historians associate the demise of the caracole with the name of Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden (1594-1632). Certainly he regarded the technique as fairly useless, and ordered cavalry under Swedish command not to use the caracole. However, there is evidence that the tactic was already falling out of use by 1620, before Gustavus Adolphus reached Poland and Germany.
The caracole as a military tactic ultimately proved ineffective. It sacrificed the cavalry advantages of speed and mobility, while also leaving mounted soldiers at a disadvantage to massed infantry equipped with heavier and longer-ranged weapons. The caracole gave way to close artillery support for cavalry (see Horse artillery ) - breaking up the infantry formations, forcing the soldiers to scatter and allowing cavalry the advantage in close quarters, melee combat. The last recorded use of the caracole was by the French at the Battle of Minden in 1759.
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"Caracole".
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