Camel cavalry was a common element in desert warfare throughout history in the Middle East, due in part to the animals' high level of adaptability. They were better suited to working and surviving in arid environments than the of conventional cavalry. The smell of the camel, according to Herodotus, alarmed and disoriented horses, making camels an effective anti-cavalry weapon of the Achaemenid Persians in the Battle of Thymbra.
More than sixty years later, the Achaemenid emperor Xerxes I recruited a large number of Arab mercenaries into his massive army during the Second Persian invasion of Greece, all of whom were equipped with bows and mounted on camels. Herodotus noted that the Arab camel cavalry numbered as many as twenty thousand, including a massive force of Libyan charioteers. Recruited from the nomadic tribes of Arabia and Syria, the camel-mounted mercenaries in Achaemenid service fought as skirmishing archers, sometimes riding two to a camel.
According to Herodian, the Parthian Empire king Artabanus IV () employed a unit consisting of heavily armored soldiers equipped with lances (kontos) and riding on camels.Herodian of Antioch, History of the Roman Empire (1961) pp.108-134. Book 4. CHAPTER XIV
The Roman Empire used locally enlisted camel riders along the Arabian frontier during the 2nd century. The first of these, the Ala I Ulpia Dromoedariorum Palmyrenorum from Palmyra, saw service under the Emperor Trajan. Arab camel-troops or dromedarii were employed during the Later Roman Empire for escort, desert-policing, and scouting duties. Their normal weaponry included long swords of Persian style, bows, and daggers.
The camel was used as a mount by pre-Islamic civilizations in the Arabian Peninsula. As early as the 1st century AD Nabatean and Palmyrene Empire armies employed camel-mounted infantry and archers recruited from nomadic tribes of Arabian origin. Typically, such levies would dismount and fight on foot rather than from camel-back. The initial campaigns of Muhammad and his followers made extensive use was made of camels. Subsequently, Arabs used camel-mounted infantry to outmaneuver their Sasanian Empire and Byzantine Empire enemies during the early Muslim conquests.
The Göktürks used camel cavalry according to the Buddhist pilgrim Xuanzang from Tang China (d. 664), who visited the western Göktürk capital Suyab (in present-day Kyrgyzstan) and left a description of the Tong Yabghu Qaghan and his army. "The rest of his military retinue was clothed in fur, serge and fine wool, the spears and Asena and bows in order, and the riders of camels and horses stretched far out of sight."Adapted from Watters I:74,77.
[[File:Camillo Bechis alla testa delle truppe cammellate.jpg|thumb|left|300px|[[Dubats|Italian Dubats]] in Somalia in the 1930s.]]
Napoleon employed a camel corps for the French invasion of Egypt and Syria. During the late 19th and much of the 20th centuries, camel troops were used for desert policing and patrol work in the British, French, German, Spanish, and Italian colonial armies. Descendants of such units still form part of the modern Moroccan Army and Egyptian Army armies and the paramilitary Indian Border Security Force.
The British-officered Egyptian Camel Corps played a significant role in the 1898 Battle of Omdurman; one of the few occasions during this period when this class of mounted troops took part in substantial numbers in a set-piece battle. The Ottoman Army maintained camel companies as part of its Yemen and Hejaz Corps, both before and during World War I.
The Italians used Dubat camel troops in Italian Somaliland, mainly for frontier patrol during the 1920s and 1930s. These Dubats participated in the Italian conquest of the Ogaden in 1935–1936 during the Second Italo-Ethiopian War.
Colonial authorities in the Spanish protectorate in Morocco used locally recruited camel troops in the northern part of the protectorate, mainly for frontier patrol work from the 1930s until 1956. Forming part of the Tropas Nomades del Sahara, these camel-mounted units had a limited local role in the Spanish Civil War during 1936–1939. Jose M. Bueno, pages 155–156, Uniformes Militares de la Guerra Civil Espanola, Liberia Editorial San Martin, Madrid 1971
Bikaner State (now Bikaner, Rajasthan) maintained a unit called the Bikaner Camel Corps that fought in China during the Boxer Rebellion in 1900, in Somaliland from 1902 to 1904 during the Somaliland Campaign, in Egypt during the Middle Eastern theatre of World War I in 1915 where they destroyed the Turkish forces during the Raid on the Suez Canal with a camel cavalry charge and in the Mediterranean and Middle East theatre of World War II.
In 1966, the Grenadiers added another camelry battalion, the 17th battalion led by Lieutenant Colonel KS Harihar Singh.In 1967, a camel artillery regiment, the 185 Light Regiment (Pack), was also raised. The 185 Light Regiment (Pack) gave away its camels to the Border Security Force in 1971 on the insistence of Major General J. F. R. Jacob, the then-commander of the army's Eastern Command and a major advocate for mobile warfare who found camels to be too old fashioned for modern military use and had them replaced with gun-towing vehicles, however the 13th and 17th Grenadier battalions and the Border Security Force continued to use camels for infantry purposes. In the same year, camels were once again used in the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 by both the grenadiers as well as the BSF, who fought alongside the army in the Eastern Theatre. The 13 and the 17th camel-mounted Grenadier battalions fought in the Bikaner and Gadra sectors where they captured a significant amount of territory. Five BSF camels were killed in the Battle of Longewala, one of the most significant battles of the war. The Indian Army finally stopped using camels in 1975. A local officer rejected a subsequent attempt to convert the 13th Grenadiers battalion and the 24th Rajput battalions into camel-mounted units.
During the 2011 Egyptian revolution on February 2, 2011 pro government Baltagiya riding camels and horses using swords and machetes attacked protesters in Tahrir Square in a medieval-like cavalry charge, it is the last recorded use of camel cavalry in an attack.
The Jordanian Desert Patrol still uses camels. Jordan's Bedouin 'desert forces' - Middle East - Al Jazeera English. 2010
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