a horseman, or person mounted on horseback; especially if he be armed withal, and have a military appearance.
Anciently the word was restrained to a knight, or miles. The French still use Chevalier in the same sense.
considered as a faction. See BRITAIN, No. 109.
in fortification, an elevation of earth of different shapes, situated ordinarily in the gorge of a bastion, bordered with a parapet, and cut into more or less embrasures, according to the capacity of the cavalier. Cavaliers are a double defence for the faces of the opposite bastion; they defend the ditch, break the besiegers galleries, command the traverses in dry moats, scour the salient angle of the countesscarp, where the besiegers have their counter batteries, and enflade the enemy's trenches, or oblige them to multiply their parallels; they are likewise very serviceable in defending the breach and the retrenchments of the besieged.
in the manege, one that understands horses, and is practised in the art of riding them.