:Polish hussars
{{short description|Polish heavy cavalry from the 16th to 18th centuries}}
{{Infobox military unit
| unit_name = Polish hussars
| image = File:Straz hetmanska.JPG
| image_size = 230px
| caption =
| dates = 1503–1702 (disbanded in 1776)
| allegiance = {{flag|Kingdom of Poland}}
{{flag|Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth}}
| type = Heavy cavalry
| role = Maneuver warfare
Raiding
Shock attack
| command_structure =
| garrison =
| garrison_label =
| nickname = The Angels of Death{{sfn|Marek Kępa|2017}}
| patron =
| motto = Amor Patriae Nostra Lex (Love of the fatherland is our law)
| colors_label =
| march =
| mascot =
| equipment = Burgonet, lance, mace (bludgeon), hatchet, sabre
| equipment_label =
| battles = {{hidden
|Tree list
|{{tree list}}
- Crimean–Nogai slave raids in Eastern Europe
- Battle of Martynów
- Battle of Ochmatów (1644)
- Lithuanian–Muscovite War (1512–1522)
- Battle of Orsha
- Moldavian–Polish War (1530–1538)
- Battle of Obertyn
- Danzig rebellion
- Battle of Lubieszów
- Livonian campaign of Stephen Báthory
- Battle of Mogilev (1581)
- War of the Polish Succession (1587–1588)
- Battle of Byczyna
- Polish–Swedish War (1600–1611)
- Battle of Wenden (1601)
- Battle of Kokenhausen
- Battle of Reval (1602)
- Battle of Kircholm
- Polish–Muscovite War (1605–1618)
- Siege of Smolensk (1609–1611)
- Battle of Klushino
- Battle of Moscow (1612)
- Polish–Ottoman War (1620–1621)
- Battle of Khotyn (1621)
- Polish–Swedish War (1626–1629)
- Battle of Gniew
- Battle of Wenden (1626)
- Battle of Trzciana
- Battle of Górzno
- Smolensk War
- Siege of Smolensk (1632–1633)
- Deluge
- Khmelnytsky Uprising
- Battle of Zhovti Vody
- Battle of Loyew (1649)
- Battle of Berestechko
- Battle of Loyew (1651)
- Russo-Polish War (1654–1667)
- Battle of Shklow
- Battle of Polonka
- Battle of Lyubar
- Battle of Chudnov
- Second Northern War
- Battle of Wojnicz
- Battle of Warka
- Battle of Kłecko
- Battle of Warsaw (1656)
- Polish–Ottoman War (1672–1676)
- Battle of Khotyn (1673)
- Battle of Lwów (1675)
- Great Turkish War
- Polish–Ottoman War (1683–1699)
- Battle of Hodów
- Battle of Vienna
- Battle of Párkány
- Battle of Podhajce (1698)
- Great Northern War
- Battle of Kliszów
{{Tree list/end}}
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The Polish hussars ({{IPAc-en|h|ə|ˈ|z|ɑr|s}}; {{langx|pl|husaria}} {{IPAc-pl|ch|u|'|s|a|r|j|9=a}}),{{efn|
- Alternative English pronunciations:
- {{IPAc-en|h|ə|ˈ|s|ɑr}}
- {{IPAc-en|h|ʊ|ˈ|z|ɑr}}}} alternatively known as the winged hussars, were an elite heavy cavalry formation active in Poland and in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth from 1503 to 1702. Their epithet is derived from large rear wings, which were intended to demoralize the enemy during a charge. The hussars ranked as the elite of Polish cavalry until their official disbanding in 1776.
The hussar dress was ostentatious and comprised plated body armour (cuirass, spaulders, bevors, and arm bracers) adorned by gold ornaments, a burgonet or lobster-tailed pot helmet and jackboots as well as versatile weaponry such as lances, long thrusting swords, sabres, pistols, carbines, maces, hatchets, war hammers, and horseman's picks. It was customary to maintain a red-and-white colour scheme, and to be girded with tanned animal hide. The wings were traditionally assembled from the feathers of raptors, and the angel-like frame was fastened onto the armour or saddle.
The early hussars were light cavalry units of exiled Serbian warriors who came to Poland from Hungary as mercenaries in the early 16th century. Following the reforms of King Stephen Báthory ({{reign|1576|1586}}), the Polish military officially adopted the unit and transformed it into heavy shock cavalry, with troops recruited from the Polish nobility. The Polish hussar differs greatly from the light, unarmoured hussars that developed concurrently outside Poland.
The hussar formation proved effective against Swedish, Russian, and Ottoman forces, notably at the battles of Kircholm (1605), Klushino (1610), and Khotyn (1673). Their military prowess peaked at the Siege of Vienna in 1683, when hussar banners participated in the largest cavalry charge in history and successfully repelled the Ottoman attack. From their last engagement in 1702 (at the Battle of Kliszów) until 1776, the obsolete hussars were demoted and largely assigned to ceremonial roles.
History
File:Entrance of the Polish delegates in La Rochelle 1573.jpg, France, in 1573, following the Siege of La Rochelle (1572–1573) and their offering of the Polish throne to the Duke of Anjou.]]
The etymology of the word hussar stems from the Serbian word gusar meaning "wanderer/brawler".{{Harvnb|Showalter|Astore|2007|p=44}}{{Harvnb|Nicolle|Sarnecki|2008|p=19}} Hussars originated in mercenary units of exiled Serbian warriors from Hungary.{{Harvnb|Nolan|2006|p=428}}{{Harvnb|Hientze|2018|p=2}} Mercenary lancers of Serb origin, known as the Rascians, were frequently hired to counter Ottoman sipahi and deli cavalry.{{Harvnb|Davies|2012|pp=7–}} In the 15th century, the hussars based on those of Matthias Corvinus were adopted by some European armies to provide light, expendable cavalry units.
The oldest reference of hussars in Polish records dates to the year 1500, when the Rascians were employed by Grand Treasurer Andrzej Kościelecki to serve under the banner of the royal household.{{Harvnb|Plewczyński|1994|p=47}} However, it is possible that they were in service much earlier and their contribution was not well-documented.{{Harvnb|Brzezinski|1987|p=14}} As the Ottoman raids on the southeastern frontier intensified, the so-called Rascian Reform (1500–1501) during the reign of John I Albert solidified the role of an early hussar in Polish ranks.{{Harvnb|Plewczyński|1995|pp=109, 215}}
The first hussar formation was established by the decree of the Sejm (Polish parliament) in 1503, which hired three Hungarian banners. Soon, recruitment also began among the Poles. Being far more expendable than the heavily armoured lancers of the Renaissance, the Serbo-Hungarian hussars played a fairly minor role in the Polish Crown victories during the early 16th century, exemplified by the victories at Orsha (1514) and Obertyn (1531). During the so-called "transition period" of the mid-16th-century, heavy hussars largely replaced armoured lancers riding armoured horses, in the Polish Obrona Potoczna cavalry forces serving on the southern frontier.
File:Polish winged armour (29363797043).jpg.]]
The true winged hussar arrived with the reforms of the King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania Stephen Bathory in the 1570s and was later led by the King John III Sobieski. The hussars became the elite cavalry, and were a branch of cavalry in the Polish army from the 1570s until 1776 when their duties and traditions were passed on to the uhlans by a parliamentary decree. Most hussars were recruited from the wealthier Polish nobility (szlachta). Each hussar towarzysz ("companion") raised his own poczet or lance/retinue. Several retinues were combined to form a hussar banner or company (chorągiew husarska).
Over the course of the 16th century, hussars in Hungary became heavier in character: they abandoned wooden shields and adopted metal-plated body armour. When Bathory was elected king of Poland and later accepted as a Grand Duke of Lithuania in 1576, he reorganized the hussars of his Royal Guard into a heavy formation equipped with a long lance as their main weapon. By the reign of Bathory (1576–1586), the hussars had replaced medieval-style lancers in the Polish Crown army, and they now formed the bulk of the Polish cavalry. By the 1590s, most Polish hussar units had been reformed along the same "heavy" model. These heavy hussars were known in Poland as {{Lang|pl|husaria}}.
File:Rolka Sztokholmska 2.jpg, detail of so-called Stockholm Roll, 1605.]]
With the Battle of Lubiszew in 1577, the 'Golden Age' of the {{Lang|pl|husaria}} began. Between then and the Battle of Vienna in 1683, the hussars fought many battles against various enemies, most of which they won. In the battles of Lubiszew in 1577, Byczyna (1588), Kokenhausen (1601), Kircholm (1605), Klushino (1610), Chocim (1621), Martynów (1624), Trzciana (1629), Ochmatów (1644), Beresteczko (1651), Połonka (1660), Cudnów (1660), Khotyn (1673), Lwów (1675), Vienna (1683), and Párkány (1683), they proved to be the decisive factor against often overwhelming odds. For instance, in the Battle of Klushino during the Polish–Muscovite War, the Muscovites and Swedes outnumbered the Commonwealth army 5 to 1, yet were heavily defeated.
Over time, the role of the hussar evolved into a reconnaissance and advanced scout capacity. Their uniforms became more elaborate as their armour and heavy weapons were abandoned. In the 18th century, as infantry firearms became more effective, heavy cavalry, with its tactics of charging into and breaking infantry units, became increasingly obsolete and hussars transformed from an elite fighting unit to a parade one.
Instead of ostrich feathers, the husaria men wore wooden arcs attached to their armour at the back and raising over their heads. These arcs, together with bristling feathers sticking out of them, were dyed in various colours in imitation of laurel branches or palm leaves, and were a strangely beautiful sight to behold – Jędrzej Kitowicz (1728–1804).{{cite book |last=Wasilkowska |first=Anna |date=1998 |title=Husaria: The Winged Horsemen |location=Warszaw |publisher=Interpress |pages=6–7 |isbn=8322326823}}{{cite book |last=Kitowicz |first=Jędrzej |author-link=Jędrzej Kitowicz |date=1855 |title=Opis obyczajów i dziejów za panowania Augusta III |trans-title=Description of customs and history during the reign of Augustus III |language=pl |location=Petersburg i Mohylew |publisher=Bolesław M. Wolff}}
Tactics
{{see also|Cavalry tactics}}
File:Kłuszyn 1610.JPG (1610), painting by Szymon Boguszowicz, 1620.]]
The hussars represented the heavy cavalry of the Commonwealth. The Towarzysz husarski (Companion) commanded his own poczet (kopia) consisting of two to five similarly armed retainers and other servants (czeladnicy) who tended to his horses, food, supplies, repairs and fodder and often participated in battle. His 'lance' was part of a larger unit known as a banner (chorągiew). Each banner had between 30 and 60 kopia (lances) or more. The commander, per his contractual obligation, was called "rotmistrz", while the de facto commander was often the porucznik (lieutenant). There was also one chorąży (ensign) who carried the banner's flag (chorągiew) and could command the banner when the porucznik was unable to. Each banner had one rotmistrz kopia that was larger than its other lances; this included trumpeters, and musicians (kettle drummers, more trumpeters etc.). There were other towarzysze with duties (keeping order, helping with manoeuvres) within the banner during battle, but their functions are rather poorly understood.
The Polish hussars' primary battle tactic was the mounted charge. They charged at and through the enemy. The charge started at a slow pace and in a relatively loose formation. The formation gradually gathered pace and closed ranks while approaching the enemy, and reached its highest pace and closest formation immediately before engagement. They tended to repeat the charge several times until the enemy formation broke (the Polish hussars had supply wagons with spare lances). The tactic of a charge by heavily armoured hussars and horses was usually decisive for nearly two centuries. The hussars fought with a kopia (lance), a koncerz (stabbing sword), a szabla (sabre), set of two to six pistols, often a carbine or arquebus (known in Polish as a bandolet) and sometimes a warhammer or light battle-axe. The lighter, Ottoman-style saddle allowed for more armour to be used by both the horses and the warriors. Moreover, the horses were bred to be especially fearless and resistant, and they could run quite fast with a heavy load while recovering quickly. They were hybrids of old, Polish equine lineage and eastern horses, usually from Tatar tribes. As a result, a horse could walk hundreds of kilometres loaded with over {{convert|100|kg|abbr=on}} (the hussar with their armour and weapons) and instantly charge. Hussar horses were also very agile and maneuverable. This made hussars able to fight with any cavalry or infantry force from heavy cuirassiers to quick light-armed Tatars. There was a death penalty for selling a hussar horse (sometimes the horses were referred to as "tarpan") to someone outside of Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.{{cite web |url=http://hij.com.pl/husaria-w-ketrzynie/ |title=Husaria w Kętrzynie |trans-title=Hussars in Kętrzyn |language=pl |date=October 4, 2012 |website=Hodowca i Jeździec}}
Armour and weaponry
Polish Hussar half-armour Winged Riders.jpg|Hussar half-armour from the mid-17th century, National Museum in Kraków.
Zbroje husarskie.JPG|Hussar armour, dating to the first half of the 17th century, Polish Army Museum in Warsaw.
Karacena.JPG|Scale armour of King John III Sobieski.
Szabla husarska GIM.jpg|Polish hussar sabre (Polish "szabla").
Hussar armour Wawel Museum 4.jpg|Burgonet-style hussar helmet, Wawel Castle
Hussar armour Wawel Museum 2.jpg|Hussar lobster-tailed pot helmet with side wings, Wawel Castle
The hussars' towarzysz were required to provide the arms and armour for themselves and their retainers, except for the lance which was provided by the King.{{cite web |url=https://ciekawostkihistoryczne.pl/2019/01/17/ciekawostki-na-temat-husarii-o-ktorych-nie-uczyli-cie-w-szkole/ |title=Ciekawostki na temat husarii, o których nie uczyli Cię w szkole |trans-title=Interesting facts about hussars that you were not taught about in school |language=pl |first=Radosław |last=Sikora |date=17 January 2019 |website=Ciekawostki Historyczne |access-date=10 June 2021}} Each lance's horses also came at each towarzysz husarski's expense. During their heyday, 1574–1705, winged hussars carried the following arms and armour:
The lance was the main offensive weapon of the hussar. The lances were based on the Balkan and Hungarian lances, but Polish lances could have been longer and, like their predecessors from the Balkans and Western Europe, they were hollowed, with two halves glued together and painted, and were often richly gilded. They were commonly made from fir-wood, with the lance point being made from forged steel. They had a gałka, a large wooden ball which served as the handle guard. The hussar's lances usually ranged from {{convert|4.5 to 6.2|m|ft}} in length and were provided by the King or the banner's owner, not by the regular soldiers. A large 'silk'/taffeta proporzec pennon was attached to the lance below the point. Another type of lance, known as the demi-lance or kopijka, and was {{convert|3 to 3.6|m|ft}} long and was used against the Tatars and Turks in late-17th-century wars.
File:Great Chorąży of the Polish Crown.jpg (Chorąży Wielki Koronny) on the Stockholm Roll (c. 1605).]]
The towarzysz husarski carried underneath his left thigh a koncerz (up to {{convert|1.5|m|ft}} in length) and, often, a palasz (a type of broadsword) under his right thigh. The szabla was carried on the left side, and several types of sabres were known to winged hussars, including the renowned szabla husarska.
Hussars sometimes carried additional weapons, such as a 'nadziak' (horseman's pick). Towarzysz husarski carried one or two wheellock (later flintlock) pistols in the saddle holsters, while retainers also might have carried a pistol or light wheellock arquebus or carbine; from the 1680s a carbine for retainers was mandatory.
Individual hussars may have possibly carried a Tatar or Turkish composite bow with arrows in a quiver, especially after the mid-17th century, when many 'pancerny' companions became hussars, and some sources of the late 17th century note the existence of bows amongst the hussar companions. During the first half of the 18th century, while in non-military attire, the hussars' companion carried a bow in a bow case to denote his military status. Yet bows in bow cases were carried by all cavalry officers of the National Army until the reforms of the 1770s, including uhlan units in the Saxon service.
At the height of their prowess, from 1576 to 1653, hussar armour consisted of a comb-like zischagge (szyszak), burgonet or morion helmets with a hemispherical skull, 'cheekpieces' with a heart-shaped cut in the middle, neck-guard of several plates secured by sliding rivets, and adjustable nasal terminating in a leaf-shaped visor. Zischagge and kettle hat helmets for the lower rank (retainers) were often blackened as was their armour. A cuirass (breast plate), back plate, gorget, shoulder guards and of the Great Steppe, Western vambraces with iron glove and later, during the 1630s, the Persian-originated karwasz vambrace, for forearm protection. A towarzysz also could wear tasset hip, cuisse thigh, and poleyn knee protection, underneath a thigh-length coat of mail or specially padded coat with mail sleeves. Retainers usually wore less expensive and older armour, often painted black, and, after the 1670s, might have no cuirass, according to some sources.
The hussar armour was light, usually around {{convert|15|kg|lb}}, allowing them to be relatively quick and for their horses to gallop at full speed for long periods. Albeit from the 1670s onwards, chain-mail was used when fighting the Muslim Tatars in the southeastern borderlands of the Commonwealth. A rarely-used Sarmatian karacena armour (of iron scales riveted to a leather support) might have consisted of a scale helmet, cuirass, gorget, leg and shoulder protection and became popular during the reign of King John Sobieski, but perhaps due to costs and weight, remained popular mostly with the winged hussar commanding officers.
The towarzysz usually wore a leopard (sometimes tiger,{{Citation needed|date=January 2018}} jaguar{{Citation needed|date=January 2018}} or lion) pelt over his left shoulder, or as often depicted in the surviving Podhorce Castle paintings, he had the exotic pelt underneath his saddle or wrapped around his hips. Wolf, brown bear and lynx pelts were reserved for leaders and veterans (starszyzna).
File:Koncerz.png a stabbing type of sword of the Polish hussars, often used against heavily armored opponents.]]
Legacy
The Polish hussars are depicted on the commemorative 500 złotych gold coin.{{cite web |url=https://wiadomosci.onet.pl/kraj/husarzy-na-monetach/f2jdw |title=Husarzy na monetach |trans-title=Hussars on coins |language=pl |website=Onet Wiadomosci |date=24 January 2009 |access-date=10 July 2021}}
File:Stemma della 11 Lubuska Dywizja Kawalerii Pancernej (Polonia).svg featuring a stylized hussar wing and helmet.]]
The badge of the Polish Army's 11th Armoured Cavalry Division features a stylized hussar wing and helmet.{{cite web|url=https://www.wojsko-polskie.pl/11dkpanc/Barwy_symbole/|title=11th Lubuska Armored Cavalry Division: Colours and symbols|publisher=Wojsko Polskie|accessdate=2022-11-23}} The Division's patron is Jan III Sobieski, who led the winged hussars at the Battle of Vienna, and the unit's commemorative badge is inscribed with the inherited battle honour "Vienna 1683".
In 2016, the Swedish metal band Sabaton wrote the song "Winged Hussars" for their album The Last Stand. The song is about the Battle of Vienna in 1683 and the hussars' charge which helped defeat the Ottomans.{{cite web |url=https://www.sabaton.net/discography/the-last-stand/winged-hussars/ |title=Winged Hussars – Lyrics |website=Sabaton.net |access-date=10 July 2021}}
One, then two for one scene, were featured in the Canadian TV series Murdoch Mysteries, in the 2018 season 11 episode 16 entitled, "Game of Kings".
In 2023, in the Netflix series 1670, Bogdan is seen wearing the winged hussars in Season 1 Episode 1, "The Assembly".
On May 1, 2024, Poland announced that Polish-operated F-35 fighter aircraft will be called "Husarz" in honor of the hussars.{{cite news |last=Parken |first=Oliver |date=29 April 2024 |url=https://www.twz.com/news-features/polands-future-f-35s-have-been-offically-named-husarz |title=Poland's Future F-35s Have Been Officially Named 'Husarz' |work=The War Zone}}
See also
Notes
{{notelist}}
References
=Citations=
{{reflist}}
=Bibliography=
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- {{cite book |last1=Showalter |first1=Dennis |last2=Astore |first2=William |title=The Early Modern World – Soldier's Lives Through History |date=2007 |publisher=Greenwood Press |location=United States |isbn=978-0-313-33312-5}}
- {{cite book |last=Sikora |first=Radosław |date=2003 |title=Fenomen husarii |trans-title=The Phenomenon of Hussars |language=pl |location=Toruń |publisher=Duet |isbn=83-918712-8-2}}
- {{cite book |last=Sikora |first=Radosław |date=2010 |title=Kłuszyn 1610 |language=pl |location=Warsaw|publisher=Instytut Wydawniczy Erica |page=160 |isbn=978-83-62329-05-2}}
- {{cite book |last=Sikora |first=Radosław |date=2005 |title=Lubieszów 17 IV 1577 |language=pl |location=Zabrze |publisher=Wydawnictwo Inforteditions |isbn=83-89943-05-0}}
- {{cite book |last=Sikora |first=Radosław |date=2010 |title=Z Dziejów husarii |trans-title=Of the History of Hussars |language=pl |location=Warsaw|publisher=Instytut Wydawniczy Erica |isbn=978-83-62329-04-5}}
- {{cite journal |url=https://www.msz.gov.pl/resource/21badcbf-0c18-4fb8-8b19-3d382469d25f:JCR |title=Winged Hussars |first1=Radosław |last1=Sikora |first2=Bartosz |last2=Musialowicz |name-list-style=amp |date=October 2016 |journal=Business Ukraine |pages=30–34 |issn=1360-6158 |via=Ministerstwo Spraw Zagranicznych |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170125172842/https://www.msz.gov.pl/resource/21badcbf-0c18-4fb8-8b19-3d382469d25f:JCR |archive-date=2017-01-25}}
- {{cite book |editor-last=Sikorski |editor-first=Janusz |date=1965 |title=Zarys dziejów wojskowości polskiej do roku 1864, t.1 |trans-title=An outline of the history of the Polish military until 1864, Vol. 1 |language=pl |location=Warsaw|publisher=Wydawnictwo Ministerstwa Obrony Narodowej}}
- {{cite book |last=Szcześniak |first=Robert |date=2008 |title=Kłuszyn 1610 |series=Historyczne bitwy |language=pl |edition=2nd |location=Warsaw|publisher=Bellona |isbn=978-8-311110953}}
- {{cite book |last=Teodorczyk |first=Jerzy |date=1966 |chapter=Bitwa pod Gniewem 22.IX – 29.IX. 1626, pierwsza porażka husarii ["The Battle of Gniew 22–29 September 1626, The First Defeat of the Hussars"] |title=Studia i materiały do Historii Wojskowości, t. XII |trans-title=Studies and materials for the history of the military, Vol. XII |language=pl |location=Warsaw|publisher=Wojskowy Instytut Historyczny}}
- {{cite book |last=Wisner |first=Henryk |date=1987 |title=Kircholm 1605 |series=Historyczne bitwy |language=pl |location=Warsaw|publisher=Wydawnictwo Ministerstwa Obrony Narodowej |isbn=978-8-311073876}}
- {{cite book |last=Żygulski |first=Zdzisław |author-link=Zdzisław Żygulski (art historian) |date=1982 |title=Broń w dawnej Polsce na tle uzbrojenia Europy i Bliskiego Wschodu |trans-title=Weapons in old Poland compared to the armaments of Europe and the Middle East |language=pl |location=Warsawa |publisher=Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe |isbn=83-01-02515-8}}
- {{cite book |last=Żygulski |first=Zdzisław |date=1998 |title=Broń wodzów i żołnierzy |trans-title=The weapons of commanders and soldiers |language=pl |location=Kraków |publisher=Wydawnictwo Kluszczyński}}
- {{cite book |last=Żygulski |first=Zdzisław |date=2000 |title=Husaria polska |trans-title=Polish hussars |language=pl |location=Warsaw|publisher=Wydawnictwo Pagina |isbn=978-8-386951314}}
- {{Cite web |author=Marek Kępa |date=27 December 2017 |title=Poland's Winged Knights: From Invincible Glory To Obsolescence |url=https://culture.pl/en/article/polands-winged-knights-from-invincible-glory-to-obsolescence |access-date=12 February 2024 |website=Culture.pl}}
{{refend}}
External links
{{commons category|Polish Winged Hussars}}
- [http://www.kismeta.com/diGrasse/PolishHorseArtillery.htm Reenactment]a Polish reenactment information site. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121018232750/http://www.kismeta.com/diGrasse/PolishHorseArtillery.htm |date=2012-10-18 }}
- [http://www.erakart.com/82-winged-polish-hussar-armour-helmet.html Polish Hussar Replica vs Antique]Understand the difference in Polish hussar Replica & Antique. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180615153254/http://www.erakart.com/82-winged-polish-hussar-armour-helmet.html |date=2018-06-15 }}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20130604223228/http://husaria.us/ Husaria.us] a Los Angeles-based Polish hussar reenactment group and reference library.
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20180413084453/http://www.foxywebdesigns.com/] The first Los Angeles based website for this portrayal.{{dead link|date=August 2022}}
- [http://www.jest.art.pl/zbroja.html About hussar's armour](Polish). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071007150712/http://www.jest.art.pl/zbroja.html |date=2007-10-07 }}
- [https://shariaunveiled.wordpress.com/2016/06/06/polska-husaria-the-calvary-of-the-polish-winged-hussars-video/ Polska Husaria: The Cavalry of the Polish Winged Hussars (video)]{{dead link|date=August 2022}}
{{National symbols of Poland |state=collapsed}}
Category:Military ranks of Poland
Category:Cavalry units and formations of Poland
Category:Military units and formations of the early modern period