No concept of chariot warfare.
It has been suggested that such activities as chariot warfare and bronze-making may have been transmitted to the east by these Indo-European nomads.
By the medieval Chinese dynasties, with the decline of chariot warfare, the use of the dagger-axe was almost nonexistent.
This was the original horse used for early chariot warfare, raiding, and light cavalry.
The invention of the wheel was a major technological innovation that gave rise to chariot warfare.
Because chariot burials were never practised in Ireland, the nature or existence of chariot warfare in that country remains unclear.
The use of the composite bow in chariot warfare is not attested in northern Europe.
Julius Caesar provides the only significant eyewitness report of British chariot warfare:
Although "the general character of chariot warfare remains unexplored," Dr. Drews wrote, the vehicle was probably used as a mobile shooting platform for archers.
In ancient times chariot warfare was followed by the use of war horses as light and heavy cavalry.