Oriental horse

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
The Arabian horse is one type of Oriental horse

The term oriental horse refers to the ancient breeds of horses developed in the

Barb, and the Turkoman horse. They tend to be thin-skinned, long-legged, slim in build and more physically refined than other types, but with great endurance.[1] Oriental horses, sometimes referred to as hot-blooded breeds, have a level of intelligence that allows them to be athletic, versatile, and learn quickly. They are bred for agility and speed and are generally considered spirited and bold.[2]

History

Oriental Horse. Ceremonial bronze finial with standing horse, 4th-1st century BCE.

"Oriental" horse, was a tall, slim, refined and agile animal arising in western

Four Foundations theory suggested the existence of four basic "proto" horses developed with adaptations to their environment prior to domestication by humans.[4] Another theory suggested that the Oriental horse was a separate species or subspecies (once proposed as Equus agilis though modern taxonomy disputes this ever was a true subspecies).[3] However, modern genetic evidence now points at a single domestication event for a limited number of stallions, combined with repeated restocking of wild mares into domesticated herds,[5] making the later divergence of body types a landrace or selective breeding
adaption.

Over the centuries, European breeders imported oriental horses from the Middle East and Northern Africa for breeding when they wanted to incorporate characteristic traits into their best horse racing and light cavalry horses.[2] Breeders' use of Arabians, and possibly Barb and Turkoman horses, was instrumental in developing the Thoroughbred breed. Analysis of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in the Andalusian horse shows a clear link to an influx of Barb breeding.[6] Nearly all other breeds of light and warmblood horses have some oriental ancestry, usually through the Arabian.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ DeFilippis, p. 4
  2. ^ a b Henry,' pp. 59-60
  3. ^ a b c Edwards, Gladys Brown (1973). The Arabian: War Horse to Show Horse (Revised Collectors ed.). Rich Publishing. pp. 1, 3.
  4. ^ a b Bennett, p. 7
  5. ^
    PMID 15034578
    .
  6. PMID 16251517.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link
    )

Sources

External links