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Arabs were never historically used by knights or lords as "Warhorses." Heavy horses related to the Shire, Clyde, and Friesian were the most common choice for a warhorse by a medieval knight who may have weighed around 300-500lb with his plate armor on; aA weight that even most Arabian cross breeds could not have supported for any length of time. Arabians once brought north through trade routes with the middle east were often seen as delicate showy animals only used to begin a refinement of current breeds around the end of the middle ages. They were more popular during the Renaissance and Baroque than the middle ages due to increased trade and a growing demand for more refined and showy horses, and even then it was not commonplace for them to be used as war animals by Europeans.
They were used as war animals by the Middle Eastern nations and tribes, but by sheiks and tribes men not lords and knights.
Arabs were never historically used by knights or lords as "Warhorses." Heavy horses related to the Shire, Clyde, and Friesian were the most common choice for a warhorse by a medieval knight who may have weighed around 300-500lb with his plate armor on; aA weight that even most Arabian cross breeds could not have supported for any length of time. Arabians once brought north through trade routes with the middle east were often seen as delicate showy animals only used to begin a refinement of current breeds around the end of the middle ages. They were more popular during the Renaissance and Baroque than the middle ages due to increased trade and a growing demand for more refined and showy horses, and even then it was not commonplace for them to be used as war animals by Europeans.
They were used as war animals by the Middle Eastern nations and tribes, but by sheiks and tribes men not lords and knights.