Category
page 1Carts
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cart
thumb|Horse and cart (England, 2013)
thumb|Dockworkers and hand cart (Haiti, 2006)
A cart is a two-wheeled vehicle designed for transport. It can be pulled by humans or draught animals such as horses, donkeys, mules and oxen, or smaller animals such as goats and large dogs.
shopping cart
cart supplied by a shop for customers to transport merchandise within the premises, before checkout
bullock cart
cart made up of wood and driven by bullocks

Tachanka
thumb|Tachankas turret used in WWI.|alt=
thumb|Tachanka armed with a PM M1910 in the [[Huliaipole museum]]

minecart
thumb|A minecart from the 16th century, found in Transylvania
hand truck
an L-shaped box-moving handcart with handles at one end

sulky
thumb|Harness racing sulky (2007)
thumb|Horse show sulky for Roadster (horse)|roadster classes (2012)
thumb|Wooden racing sulky (c. 1895–1910)
thumb|Horse-drawn mower with a "sulky seat"
caisson
two-wheeled cart for carrying ammunition, also used in certain state and military funerals

carroccio
thumb|The carroccio of Milan on an ancient miniature
A carroccio (; ) was a large four-wheeled wagon bearing the city signs around which the militia of the medieval communes gathered and fought. It was particularly common among the Lombard, Tuscan and, more generally, northern Italian municipalities. Later its use spread even outside Italy. It was the symbol of municipal autonomy. Priests celebrated Mass at the altar before the battle, and the trumpeters beside them encouraged the fighters to the fray.
gig
light, two-wheeled sprung cart

Cart with Black Ox
painting by Vincent van Gogh
shopping trolley
fabric bag or wicker basket with wheels used for carrying groceries on foot between the store and home
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dogcart
thumb|250px|Dogcart with horses in tandem
A dogcart (also dog-cart or dog cart) is a two-wheeled horse-drawn vehicle pulled by a single horse in shafts, or driven tandem. With seating for four, it was designed for sporting shooters and their gun dogs, with a louvred box under the driver's seat to contain dogs. It was developed in the early 1800s to afford more seating than the gig, which seats only two. Seating is two back-to-back crosswise seats, an arrangement called dos-à-dos from French. There is a hinged tailboard which lowers slightly and, supported by chains, acts as a footrest for the
Sicilian cart
sicilian ornate horse-drawn cart
dogcart
cart pulled by one or more dogs
baggage cart
small vehicles pushed by travelers to carry individual luggage
Basterna
thumb|A basterna as illustrated in A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities by William Smith
A basterna was a kind of vehicle, or litter, in which Ancient Roman women were carried. It appears to have resembled the lectica; and the only difference apparently was, that the lectica was carried on the shoulders of slaves, and the basterna by two mules, according to Isaac Casaubon. Several etymologies of the word have been proposed. Salmasius proposes it to be derived from the Greek (Salm. ad Lamprid. Heliog. 21).
Cassius Dio links it to the people known as the Bastarnae, living in what is now s
Tanga
type of two wheeler from India
serving cart
small kind of food cart used to display or deliver food.
Governess cart
small two-wheeled horse-drawn cart
curricle
thumb|Curricle