
War Elephant Howdah
Fortified riding platform atop a war elephant
The howdah was a fortified structure mounted on the back of a war elephant, functioning as a mobile elevated fighting platform. Built from wood and metal with protective walls, it housed 2-4 archers or spearmen who fought from a commanding height of 3-4 meters above the battlefield. Used extensively across the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia from the Maurya Empire to the Mughals, the howdah turned the war elephant into a living siege tower. It doubled as a command post for kings and generals who could survey the entire battlefield from its height, making it as much a symbol of royal power as a military asset.
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