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Few breeds of horse have captured
the imagination like the Arabian horse has. Since the dawn of history,
Arabian horses have inspired and influenced many people.
In the
days of early history, Arabian horses were prized as warhorses and
mounts for royalty. The Old Testament in the Bible contains many
references and descriptions to these horses, the most notable being in
the book of Job, where a horse "rejoices in his strength" and "is not
frightened - he devours the distance with fierceness."
Artwork
of the time depicts these chariot horses with many of the physical
attributes of modern Arabian horses, such as the dished face and
high-set tail. The most prized warhorses were bred in Egypt, and it was
indicative of the great wealth of King Solomon that he built entire
cities to house Egyptian-bred warhorses and their handlers. These
attributes of courage and speed are still prized in Arab horses today.
Arising
much later, Islamic legend recounts how Allah made the first Arab horse
from the four winds (or the south wind, depending on which version of
the myth the teller uses), gifting it and all Arabian horses with
"flight without wings" and naming it, "Lord of the other animals" and
one of the "Glories of the Earth."
The Bedouin people in
particular bred Arabian horses with great care for the purity of the
bloodline, which they called Asil. They took this purity of the blood
so seriously that if a mare was ever bred to a non-asil stallion, both
she and all future offspring would be "contaminated."
Legend
has it that the Asil strain are descended from the five favourite mares
of the prophet Mohammed. It is ironic today that some Bedouin-bred
Arabian horses are not considered or registered as purebreds, because
the breeders do not see the need for paperwork to guarantee a horse's
breeding and do not register their horses.
Arab horses have also
played a vital role in the development of Thoroughbred racehorses. All
modern Thoroughbreds can trace their ancestry back to one of three
founding Arabian stallions, known as the Byerly Turk, the Darley
Arabian and the Godolphin Barb ("Turk" and "Barb" were synonymous with
"Arabian" at that time).
Arabian horses today are creatures of
great beauty. Although they are not tall horses - some measure only 14
hands - they are never called ponies, even though they technically fall
into this definition. The distinctive features of the breed are the
dished or concave face (as opposed to the more Roman nose of, for
example, the Shire horse), the flowing high-set tail, the large
expressive eyes and a dark skin colour. The most common colours for an
Arabian horse are grey (which includes white), chestnut and bay. Black
is a rare color, though not completely unheard of.
It may have
been a more common colour in antiquity; the Old Testament lists black
horses alongside "white", "red" and "dappled." Arab horses are
surprisingly strong and tough for their size, and these qualities mean
that they are popular choices when breeding cross-breeds.
There
is very little work that the Arabian horse cannot do. Their powers of
stamina make them very suitable for endurance work. Their intelligence
and beauty gives them a competitive edge in the show ring, and for show
jumping and eventing. Speed makes the Arab horse an excellent racer -
their role in developing the Thoroughbred has already been mentioned.
Intelligence
also makes Arab horses suitable for stock work - one modern tale tells
of how the owner of an Arabian stock horse was mocked by fellow-workers
because of his "fancy show-pony" until they saw just what the horse
could do. And as they have a willingness to please and a great capacity
for affection - a result of millennia of close contact with humans -
Arab horses are popular as pleasure horses and companion animals.
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