Highlights

29 May 2023

1889 Italian Cavalry Regulations

Having already made available the 1873 and 1885 editions of the Italian cavalry regulations, today I am pleased to present the first volume of the 1889 edition, with its slightly shortened title Regolamento di esercizi per la cavalleria.

***Click here to view***

As it states on the title page and the notes on the following two pages, this version was explicitly 'experimental' due to the number and nature of the changes made to the previous 1885 version, the primary goal being to simplify the material and put it in a more logical order. While the first volume of the 1889 edition, containing the fencing material, is actually longer than the first volume of the 1885, the fencing material itself is indeed shortened slightly, reduced from 52 pages down to 48.

Like the previous edition, the fencing instruction of the 1889 regulations is heavily based on the Radaellian method, with Masaniello Parise's proposed cavalry sabre method having been rejected by a ministerial commission earlier the same year. In the years following, however, Parise's method would finally be approved for use in the cavalry with the help of Salvatore Pecoraro. Thus the 1889 cavalry regulations mark the last edition to feature Radaelli's method prior to the introduction of the Parise-Pecoraro method in 1891, which would remain in force until a more Radaellian-aligned method was reintroduced in 1912.

Compared to the previous version, the fencing instruction of the 1889 regulations gives less emphasis to the on-foot instruction and prioritises techniques that can be done as part of the come a cavallo or 'as if on horseback' part of training. Cut and thrust drills against a stuffed dummy are added to this section as well as paired drills between soldiers wearing masks and gloves. Slight changes to the positions can be seen for example in the guard position, which becomes a more retracted but still high 3rd, more resembling the first position for the thrust on horseback. A curious change is also found in the 'Principles and general rules', where instead of being told that the sabre should be wielded with a firm wrist, 'through movement of the forearm and never the hand' as in the 1885 edition, the 1889 regulations say to wield the sabre 'through movement of the forearm with the assistance of the hand.'

Due to the sheer number of pages in all three volumes of the regulations and the reduced relevance of the other material in relation to this blog, I have only provided scans of the first volume here. Nevertheless, if any researchers wish to read the second and third volumes (containing unit manoeuvres and accessory instructions, respectively), I would be more than happy to oblige.

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