Charge of the Light Brigade, disastrous British cavalry charge against heavily defended Russian troops at the Battle of Balaklava that was carried out on Oct. 25 (Oct. 13, Old Style), 1854, during the Crimean War. The suicidal attack placed the British light horse brigade, commanded by the feckless James Brudenell, the Earl of Cardigan, against a Russian infantry and cavalry defense backed by heavy artillery batteries that commanded three sides of a narrow valley. Into this 1.25-mile (2 km)-long funnel the Light Brigade charged, their sabres and lances initially useless against the Russians. Some 110 British cavalrymen were killed and 160 wounded, 40 percent of the brigade. Although abandoned by supporting British troops whose commander thought the situation hopeless, the Light Brigade even so managed to destroy one Russian battery, while a unit of French infantry silenced another. The disastrous charge was made famous by Alfred, Lord Tennyson in his 1855 poem of the same name. Military historians and strategists continue to study the attack, now a byword for the senseless waste of soldiers in war, to underscore the importance of military intelligence and a clear chain of command and communication. (For a more detailed discussion of the charge, see Battle of Balaklava.)