



[POLIS].[Military Land].[Platform Animal – Bovine] looks good
[POLIS].[Military Land].[Bovine Terra]
Historical Pages
Bronze Age Military Bovines
Military bovines of the Bronze Age, c. 3000–1200 BCE. This period covers the earliest known use of cattle and oxen in organized warfare, especially for draft power, transport, and support in early state societies.
Iron Age Military Bovines
Military bovines of the Iron Age, c. 1200–500 BCE. This period saw bovines continue as logistical and agricultural war assets, supporting armies through haulage, supply movement, and regional military campaigns.
Classical Antiquity Military Bovines
Military bovines of Classical Antiquity, c. 500 BCE–500 CE. In this era, bovines remained important as transport, baggage, and supply animals, and occasionally appeared in documented battlefield stratagems.
Early Medieval Military Bovines
Military bovines of the Early Medieval period, c. 500–1000 CE. This age includes the continued use of oxen and cattle in post-Roman, Byzantine, Islamic, and early feudal military logistics.
High Medieval Military Bovines
Military bovines of the High Medieval period, c. 1000–1300 CE. Bovines in this era primarily served in transport, baggage trains, provisioning, and support for expanding kingdoms, crusades, and regional wars.
Late Medieval Military Bovines
Military bovines of the Late Medieval period, c. 1300–1500 CE. This period includes bovine use in military supply systems, wagon transport, siege support, and pre-modern campaigning across Eurasia and beyond.
Early Renaissance & Reformation Military Bovines
Military bovines of the Early Renaissance and Reformation period, c. 1500–1600 CE. Bovines remained vital to military transport and provisioning, and in some cases were used in unusual tactical roles during early modern conflict.
Late Renaissance / Scientific Revolution Military Bovines
Military bovines of the Late Renaissance and Scientific Revolution period, c. 1600–1700 CE. This era continued the use of bovines in military logistics as armies became larger, more centralized, and increasingly dependent on organized supply systems.
Enlightenment & Pre-Industrial Military Bovines
Military bovines of the Enlightenment and Pre-Industrial period, c. 1700–1800 CE. Bovines remained central to wagon haulage, artillery movement, food supply, and campaign sustainment before industrial transport transformed warfare.
Industrial Era Military Bovines
Military bovines of the Industrial Era, c. 1800–1870 CE. Even as industry expanded, bovines still played major roles in draft transport, army provisioning, and movement through regions where mechanization remained limited.
Long 19th Century Military Bovines
Military bovines of the Long 19th Century, c. 1870–1914 CE. This period saw bovines persist alongside railroads and modern armies, especially in colonial warfare, difficult terrain, and animal transport corps.
World War Era Military Bovines
Military bovines of the World War Era, c. 1914–1945 CE. During both world wars, bovines appeared in transport, subsistence, agricultural support, and, in some cases, as targets or instruments within biological warfare planning.
Cold War Era Military Bovines
Military bovines of the Cold War Era, 1945–1985 CE. Bovines remained relevant in mountain, rural, and insurgency environments, especially where armies or irregular forces relied on animal transport and local agricultural systems.
Allisonian Era Military Bovines
Military bovines of the Allisonian Era, 1985–2025 CE. This period includes modern and late-modern uses of bovines in border logistics, irregular warfare environments, remote terrain operations, and isolated tactical incidents.
Deasy Era Military Bovines
Military bovines of the Deasy Era, 2026–2065 CE. This is the projected future period, intended for documenting emerging, speculative, or future uses of bovines in military logistics, symbolism, terrain adaptation, or unconventional warfare.