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Windt im Wald Farm
Geauga County, Northeast
Ohio
since 1995
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Articles of History:
- FROM THE
PAST:
- Excerpted from
- THE
ARAB
THE
HORSE
OF
THE
FUTURE
- by Hon. Sir James Penn Boucaut
- The Khamsat Vol 10 Num 4 Nov 93
- Part I
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- Part II
-
- Part III
Part 3
Edward III. was a great warrior.
Captain Thomas Brown, 1830, says in his
book that the Turkomans trace all their best horses to Arabian
sires. They believe that the race degenerates unless 'refreshed,'
and they are therefore most anxious to obtain fine Arabian horses.
They live upon plunder, and march from 70 to 105 miles a day
for twelve to fifteen days together without a halt. They have
been known to go 900 miles in eleven successive days. Yet a
sprinter would run away from them for a sprint -- but for a
sprint only. Where would be the sprinter at the end of the fifteen
days of 100 miles a day?
The use of the Arab by the Turkoman is
further alluded to by Mr. Henry Norman, M.P., in his book on
'All the Russias,' fifty years after Captain Brown wrote.
He says that the Cossacks on the Armenian frontier are supplied
with rifles by the Government; their wiry little horses are
their own. Russia has imposed peace on the Turkoman, so, in
spite of Imperial commissions and the importation of Arab stallions,
the fleet and tireless Turkoman horse, with his flashing eye
and scarlet nostril, is extinct for ever. Alas that it should
be so! All honor to Mr. Wilfrid Blunt for his keeping the pure
breed alive!
Captain Brown says that the horses of
Turkey are principally descended from those of Arabia, Persia,
and Barbary, have great fire and spirit, are extremely active,
and he cites Mr. Evelyn as describing one sent to England as
a perfect beauty, spirited, proud, nimble, turning with swiftness,
in a small compass, and then quotes great authority as saying
that nothing can surpass the Arab's gentleness, and that his
obedience to his master and groom are very great.
Captain Brown also says that in the Mysore
country the Princes and people of rank have a superior breed
sprung from Arabian blood, and that the Mahratta country has
also long been celebrated for its horses, which have much of
the Arabian blood in them.
He refers to the East India Company as
keeping very fine stallions, generally of the English blood.
He says that the produce of these are good parade horses, with
more show than the Arabians, but they were unable to stand the
same fatigue, nor had they the same mettle. This is corroborated
by the Australasian, March 2, 1904, fifty-four years
afterwards, which states that at the great Durbar at Delhi there
was a ten days' polo meeting, that the English ponies first
gave in, the Australian lasted a day or two longer, but the
only ones who stayed throughout the match were the Arabs! Yet
they have neither staying power, courage, nor docility! O tempora,
O mores.!
-
And Captain Brown sums up by saying
that of late too little attention has been paid to the introduction
of foreign Arab or Eastern stallions, asks where can we
find such horses at the present day, either as racers or
stallions, as Eclipse, Childers, King Herod, Matchem, and
others; and attributes the present failure to the departure
of our present racers from the foreign blood -- in other
words, that since racing men have abandoned the use of the
Arab their horse is failing.
-
Sir Samuel Baker, in his 'Tributaries
of the Nile' writes;
-
'Never was there a more perfect
picture of a wild Arab horseman than Jali on his mare.
Hardly was he in the saddle than away flew the mare,
whilst her rider, in delight, threw himself almost under
her belly while at full speed, picking up stones from
the ground. Never were there more complete centaurs
than these Hamran Arabs: horse and man appeared to be
one animal, of the most elastic nature, that could twist
and turn with the suppleness of a snake.'
-
Further, in speaking of a particular
horse Aggahr, in hunting a lion, who flew along as easily
as a cat, he says that Aggahr's gallop was perfection, and
his long easy stride as easy to himself as to his rider;
there was no necessity to guide him, he followed an animal
like a greyhound, and sailed between the stems of the trees,
carefully avoiding the trunks, so as to give room for the
rider.
-
'And once a Hamran,' so
Sir Samuel relates, 'who was hunted by a rhinoceros
who unexpectedly charged, clasped his horse round the
neck, and, ducking his head, blindly trusting to Providence
and his good horse, over big rocks, fallen trees, thick
thorns, and grass 10 feet high, with the infuriated
animal in full chase only a few feet behind him, the
horse doubling like a hare.'
- that is nearly as bold and as manly and as dangerous
a sport as to run 800 yards on a smooth level sward for
a ladies' purse, with silks and satins fluttering along
the lawn!
-
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Sir Samuel also describes a lion-hunt,
where his horse Tetel stared fixedly at the lion and snorted;
but Sir Samuel patted and coaxed him, when within about
6 yards from the lion, the horse facing the lion with astounding
courage, both keeping their eyes fixed on each other, the
one beaming with rage, the other with cool determination.
Sir Samuel then dropped the reins on his horse's neck --
a signal which Tetel perfectly understood -- and he stood
as firm as a rock, for he knew his rider was about to fire.
Tetel never flinched, Sir Samuel fired, and the lion dropped
dead. But what is that compared to the noble achievement
of a jockey in winning a town plate?
-
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Yet one more incident from Sir Samuel's
book: 'Roder Sheriff, on a bay mare, facing an old bull
elephant waiting a good chance to charge, slowly and coolly
advanced till within about 8 yards of the elephant's head,
who never moved; the mare snorted, gazing intently at the
elephant, watching for his attack. Sir Samuel for an instant
saw the white of the elephant's eye, and called out, "Look
out, Roder -- he's coming.!" as, with a shrill scream,
the elephant dashed upon the mare and her rider like an
avalanche.' Roder sheriff had never won a Derby, so, of
course, you suppose the benighted man was killed! Not so,
however. In Sir Samuel's words, 'Round
went the mare as on a pivot, and away over rocks and stones,
flying like a gazelle.' For a moment Sir Samuel thought
that all must be lost; but he describes how Roder watched
the elephant over his shoulder, and lured him on till the
horsemen behind came up and hamstrung him. Yet of such mares
we are gravely told that they have neither speed, stamina,
nor docility!
-
Caulincourt, Duke of Vicenza, when
ambassador to Russia in 1807, saw a review of the Horse
Guards raised by Paul I., the finest corps of horse in Russia,
and reported that their Arabian horses 'were of immense
value.'
-
-
In the 'Souvenirs of Military
Life in Algeria,' by the Comte De Castellane, he says
of a hawking-party that 'the Arab horsemen were mounted
on the fleet mares held in unbounded estimation.' Of
one mare he says: 'Her action was so light that she might,
according to the Arab phrase, have galloped on a women's
bosom.' Of course, a jockey or a racing trainer would
sneer at this, naturally: he is so wise in horses -- 'one
of the knowing ones.' Yet I think that the opinion of
a French officer, often dependent on his horse for his life,
engaged in war, with as brave warriors as there are in the
world facing him, might be fairly considered to be rather
more valuable than that of men engaged only in sprinting
races, as to which horse is the better for the ordinary
purposes of humanity.
-
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Mr. George Flemming, in 'Travels
in Mantchu Tartary,' says that the Russian courier used
to ride one pony 500 miles to Pekin in twelve days, rest
a day, and return in fifteen, on the most unfavorable sort
of forage. He relates that their own rides had been long
and without intermission, and their ponies looked none the
worse, though they were eight or ten hours in the saddle
daily, doing forty or forty-five miles a day, and traveling
nigh 700 miles of rough country, nothing less than that
average on miserable fare -- bran and chopped straw.
-
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Whether Tartar or Turkoman or Mantchu,
all those ponies have been indebted to the Arab cross.
-
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Mr. John Hill, in the Live Stock
Journal Almanack, 1903, writes that he was much impressed
by the foals and young stock of, amongst others, the Arab
Mootrub, and, again, that it is surer by far to breed up
from the beautiful little Exmoor mare with the Mootrub cross
on top. Further, that two very beautiful youngsters were
shown from Exmoor dams and an Arab sire. He speaks of a
beautiful little pony as a typical Arab in miniature, a
clear proof of the Eastern ancestry of the Welsh mountain
pony. In 'The Breeders' Directory' and in the advertisements
of the same book are several announcements as to Arab sires.
-
-
Mr. Winwood Reade says that Cyrene,
in Northern Africa, was 'famous for its Barbs, which
won more than one prize in the chariot-races of the Grecian
games. ' Further on he says that the Berbers of the
Carthaginian army were a splendid Cossack cavalry.
-
-
I give in Appendix II. the testimony
of several large horse-breeders in the interior of Australia
to the excellence, docility, and endurance of Arab stock
got by pure stallions.
-
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Sir Edward Creasy, in his 'History
of the Ottoman Turks,' relates that when Mahomet II,
heard in 1451 of the death of his father, Amurath II, 'he
instantly sprang on an Arab horse and galloped off towards
the shore of the Hellespont.' and he says that the Sultan
Amerath, when making in 1638 a triumphal entry into Constantinople,'
rode a Nogai charger, and was followed by seven led Arab
horses with jeweled caparisons.' Nogai is between the
Caspian and the Black Sea, in the country of the Kirghiz,
whose horses were partly Arab.
-
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The first of these extracts from
Sir Edward shows the reliance placed by the successful Sultan
on the Arab horse at a great crisis, for often, if not mostly,
many of the candidates were massacred straight away by some
rival claimant. The second extract proves the admiration
shown for him, and the honor always done him by a great
conquering race, who conquered by the endurance, the speed,
and the docility of their horses.
-
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General Sir Thomas Edward Gordon,
Military Attaché at Teheran, says that the Persian horses
are small, but very wiry an enduring, capable of very long
journeys. On one occasion, owing to some great man having
got the post-horses ahead of him, he was driven to continue
the use of those he had been using for ninety-six miles
right away, with only three hours' rest at one place and
one hour's rest at another.
-
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He was shown the Royal Stud racehorses,
Arabs from Arabia, and riding horses, deer-like Arabs of
the best blood.
-
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According to Madame Waddington, wife
of the French Ambassador, the Russian Emperor Alexander
III, always rode his little gray Cossack horse. He rode
it at his coronation, and some days afterwards at a review.
-
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Lieutenant-Colonel Prejevalsky, a
Russian, says the Mongol riders go at full speed across
the desert like the wind, and their horses possess wonderful
powers of endurance on very indifferent feed; they will
live where other horses would perish. The great traveler,
Captain Wood (J.N.), says the same.
-
-
Colonel Ramsay says that the Parsees
give immense prices for high-caste Arabs, and that Sir Jamsetjee
Jeejeebhoy has superb English carriage horses, but they
cannot stand work in the Bombay climate. That is what Mr.
Carwardine, a well known Australian stock-owner, tells me
of the Kimberley climate in North-Western Australia -- that
only Arabs can stand work there. Colonel Ramsay also describes
the funeral of a grandee of Spain at Valencia, where 'there
were some splendid turn-outs -- Arabs of the purest breed.'
And he speaks of his own regiment, the 14th Light Dragoons,
as 'splendidly mounted on Gulf Arabs.'
-
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Colonel Durand describes a horse
he had in India as perfectly untiring, having sinews of
steel, a bold, intelligent eye, and feet of flint - he never
rode his equal on a hillside -- and he goes into ecstasies
over his other wonderful qualities, with his 'easy wolf's
canter, eating up mile after mile without a check, a present
fit for a king.' He says that none but the Arab could
show such a combination of courage, fire, endurance, and
general temper. His bold heart was the only one he trusted
in implicitly.
-
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Mrs. Frances Macnab, in her 'Travels
in Morocco,' writes that she could not say that she
ever met with a horse in Morocco which had any faults or
ill-temper to be compared with other horses, and they would
walk all day without food. In her own horses there was not
a scrap of vice in his whole nature.
-
-
Mrs. G.R.Durand, wife of the British
Minister to the Shah of Persia, in her book writes that
the Bakhtiari horses are often beyond price, of pure Arab
race, as hardy as beautiful; quite extraordinary in the
way they carry their riders over rocks and stones -- they
scarcely ever make a mistake, and their legs seem to be
as hard as steel. A little black mare 'carried her rider
as if she had wings.' Mrs. Durand herself had a little
gray Arab, who used to come into her dining room and stroll
round the table, pushing his head over their shoulders and
whinnying gently for bits of bread. At a Simla dinner-party
he came round the table just like a big dog.
-
-
Mr. J.H.Sanders shows that tradition
had always affirmed that the Percheron, the most active
and beautiful of all heavy breeds, is indebted to the Arab
for his good qualities, and that recent research in France
proves it. What the Darley Arabian was to the thoroughbred,
that, says Mr. Sanders, was the gray Arabian Gallipoli to
the Percheron. The American Percheron Stud-Book attributes
the starting-point of the breed to the overthrow of the
Arabs by Charles Martel at the Battle of Tours in the year
732, which left the fine Arab and Barb steeds of the defeated
Arabs in the hands of the victors. It also show that the
infusion of Arab blood was strengthened by the finest of
Arabian stallions brought back by the Crusaders, and was
kept up at irregular intervals by many French nobles down
to 1820. the form and other distinctive marks of the Arab,
says Mr. Sanders, were thus stamped upon the Percheron.
-
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The Arab breed, he says, was also
the foundation of the celebrated breed of Orloff trotters
established by Count Orloff, who imported a gray stallion
named Smetauxa, from Arabia, to whom a Danish mare was bred,
from the progeny of which cross the breed was founded.
-
-
And the now equally celebrated breed
of American Morgan trotters is also mostly indebted to the
Arab blood for its excellence, through Grand Bashaw, a Barb
imported into America from Tripoli. In fact, says Mr. J.
H. Sanders, this Oriental blood, wherever introduced, in
all nations and all climates, has been a powerful factor
in effecting improvement in the equine race. Yet, says Mr.
Day, for practical purposes this same noble creature is
as extinct as the dodo. O temporta, O mores!
-
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Marco Polo noticed the superb qualities
of the Arab in A.D. 1260. He says that excellent horses
were bred in Yemen and taken to India, and numbers of Arab
chargers were dispatched from Aden to India, and 'fine
horses of great price' were sent to India from Persia.
Colonel Yule has a footnote that these latter horses were
probably the same class of 'Gulf Arabs' that are now sent,
which, as the 'Encyclopedia Britannica' says, are
not equal to the pure Arabian.
-
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Old Marco also speaks of the great
excellence of the horses of Turcomania and Badakshan, remarkable
for their speed, which go at a great pace even down steep
descents, where other horses neither would nor could do
the like, which subsist entirely on the grass, and are very
docile. And he describes how the Turkomans pretend to run
away in battle, turn in the saddle and shoot, the horses
doubling hither and thither, just like a dog, in a way that
is quite astonishing.
-
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He also mentions several instances
of the marvelous endurance of these Eastern horses. One
accomplished 900 miles in eleven days, and another went
from Teheran to Tabriz, returned, and went again to Tabriz,
within twelve days, including two days' rest, a total of
1.100 miles. And he tells us that the Tartars, from converse
with the Assyrians, Persians, and Chaldeans, acquired their
manners and adopted their religion. He should have included
the Arabs, for the religion was certainly theirs; and he
might also have added that the Tartars acquired many of
the Arab horses. In truth, I rather think that it was the
Arabs, and not the Assyrians, Persians, or Chaldeans, that
Marco ought to have referred to.
-
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And Laurence Oliphant says that these
Turcoman and Badakshan people attained to some degree of
civilization by reason of their commercial relations with
the Arabs, and that his experience proved that their ponies
possessed great pluck and powers of endurance.
-
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Long before Marco Polo's time far
Eastern Asia was on the watch for Arab horses. Knei Shan
(probably Khojend towards Merv) was 'celebrated for its
horses of divine race.'
-
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China went to war with the Great
Wan in 104-103, and again in 109-98 B.C., for the possession
of this country and its horses, which were undoubtedly Eastern
horses -- most probably Persian Gulf Arabs.
-
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In 'The History of Russia'
(Bohn's Library) the success of the Tartars is attributed
partly to their 'being masters of the provinces which
produced the finest horses.'
-
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Mr. Shaw, in his 'Visits to High
Tartary,' frequently refers to the handsome horses.
He describes a sport where a dead goat is thrown on the
ground, and the horsemen try to pick it up without leaving
the saddle; when one succeeds he is chased by the others,
doubling and turning, their hands seldom on the reins, banks
and ditches jumped while they are half out of the saddle,
galloping with one another, trusting entirely to their steeds
when tugging with both hands at the goat. But, says he,
'the Toorkee horses seldom make a mistake.'
-
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The Rev. Dr. Henry Lansdell(1893)
writes of his travels in Central Asia, that, fearing his
horse would slip, he dismounted, but found that was for
the worse, since the horse proved the surer footed, and
he had to remount and trust to the animal.
-
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Sir Henry Layard describes clouds
of Bakhtizari and Arab horsemen in mimic fight, pursuing
each other, bringing up their horses on their haunches at
full speed, firing guns as they turned in their saddles,
and performing various feats.
-
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Sir Henry was once chased, and his
horses were weary, having been nearly twenty-four hours
without rest; but, says he, 'they were sturdy beasts,
and eluded their pursuers - it was wonderful!" The horses
were able to bear great fatigue, and required little nourishment.
Could Carbine have saved him?
-
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He describes Mehemet Taki Khan's
magnificent and beautiful Arab mare of pure blood, and the
exercises of his horses of the finest Arab breeds -- galloping
to and fro, wheeling in narrowing circles, while their riders,
discharged their guns from behind, picked up objects at
full speed, or clung at full length to one side of their
horse, in order not to offer a mark to the enemy, and so
on. How would these exercises suit your thoroughbreds, or
your cavalry horses which ran into the streets at Winchester,
and into the sea at Southampton?
-
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Mr. Selah Merrill, of the American
Exploration Society, writing of his journeys in Syria and
Palestine, says that on one occasion he was ten hours and
forty minutes in the saddle, and that on another occasion
he was seventeen hours in the saddle one day, and fifteen
hours the next; that the horses had a remarkable faculty
of finding the way, and that, when riding in a difficult
place, if you trusted entirely to your horse, you were almost
certain to pass it in safety.
-
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The Rev. Hugh Price Hughes, describing
his journey to Jordan and the Dead Sea, writes (1901) that
his chief dragoman was 'magnificently mounted,' as
also were the four Arabs who were his escort. They put their
splendid Arab horses through pretty and skilful performances.
-
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A recent special correspondent writes
in the Land of Arabia-- Ararat, that the region was
celebrated for its breed of horses, high-spirited, well
bred, and noted for great endurance.
-
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Disraeli writes in one of his letters:
'Hunted the other day, and was
the best man in the field, riding an Arabian mare.'
They rode much more cruelly in those days.
- The Hon. Sir James Penn Boucaut, 1905.
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- The End
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- Return to
Part I
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- Return to
Part II
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