Lancers

A member of the Calvary. A lancer was a type of cavalryman who fought with a lance.


Dragoons

A member of the Calvary. The word dragoon originally meant mounted infantry, who were trained in horse riding as well as infantry fighting skills.


Calvary Archers

A member of the Calvary. A horse archer, horsed archer, or mounted archer is a

cavalryman armed with a bow, able to shoot while riding from horseback.

Constable 


An officer who commanded an army or an important garrison, or the officer who commanded in the king's absence.

Vintenar

Man in charge of twenty soldiers.
Man-at-Arms (also Yeoman)
A soldier holding his land, generally 60 to 120 acres, in exchange for military service.

In English history, a class intermediate between the gentry and the laborers; a yeoman

was usually a landholder but could also be a retainer, guard, attendant, or subordinate

official. Most yeomen of the later Middle Ages were probably occupied in cultivating the

land; Raphael Holinshed, in his Chronicles (1577), described them as having free land

worth 6 (originally 40 shillings) annually and as not being entitled to bear arms.


Foot Soldier

A member of the Calvary. A person who serves in an army; a person engaged in military

service. A person of military skill or experience who serves and fights for pay. A person

who contends or serves in any cause: a soldier of the Lord.

Sergeant

A servant who accompanied his lord to battle, a horseman of lower status used as light

cavalry, or a type of tenure in service of a non-knightly character who might have carried

the lord's banner, served in the wine cellar, or made bows and arrows. Sergeants paid the

feudal dues of wardship, marriage, and relief, but were exempt from scutage.