Origin
of the Arabian
Horse
The
origin of the
Arabian horse
remains a great
zoological mystery.
Although this
unique breed has
had a distinctive
national identity
for centuries,
its history nevertheless
is full of subtleties,
complexities and
contradictions.
It defies simple
interpretation.
When
we first encounter
the Arabian, or
the prototype
of what is known
today as the Arabian,
he is somewhat
smaller than his
counterpart today.
Otherwise he has
essentially remained
unchanged throughout
the centuries.
Authorities
are at odds about
where the Arabian
horse originated.
The subject is
hazardous, for
archaeologists'
spades and shifting
sands of time
are constantly
unsettling previously
established thinking.
There are certain
arguments for
the ancestral
Arabian having
been a wild horse
in northern Syria,
southern Turkey
and possibly the
piedmont regions
to the east as
well. The area
along the northern
edge of the Fertile
Crescent comprising
part of Iraq and
running along
the Euphrates
and west across
Sinai and along
the coast to Egypt,
offered a mild
climate and enough
rain to provide
an ideal environment
for horses. Other
historians suggest
this unique breed
originated in
the southwestern
part of Arabia,
offering supporting
evidence that
the three great
river beds in
this area provided
natural wild pastures
and were the centers
in which Arabian
horses appeared
as undomesticated
creatures to the
early inhabitants
of southwestern
Arabia.
Because
the interior of
the Arabian peninsula
has been dry for
approximately
10,000 years,
it would have
been difficult,
if not impossible,
for horses to
exist in that
arid land without
the aid of man.
The domestication
of the camel in
about 3500 B.C.
provided the Bedouins
(nomadic inhabitants
of the middle
east desert regions)
with means of
transport and
sustenance needed
to survive the
perils of life
in central Arabia,
an area into which
they ventured
about 2500 B.C.
At that time they
took with them
the prototype
of the modern
Arabian horse.
There
can be little
dispute, however,
that the Arabian
horse has proved
to be, throughout
recorded history,
an original breed-which
remains to this
very day.
Neither
sacred nor profane
history tells
us the country
where the horse
was first domesticated,
or whether he
was first used
for work or riding.
He probably was
used for both
purposes in very
early times and
in various parts
of the world.
We know that by
1500 B.C. the
people of the
east had obtained
great mastery
over their hot-blooded
horses which were
the forerunners
of the breed which
eventually became
known as "Arabian."
About
3500 years ago
the hot-blooded
horse assumed
the role of king-maker
in the east, including
the valley of
the Nile and beyond,
changing human
history and the
face of the world.
Through him the
Egyptians were
made aware of
the vast world
beyond their own
borders. The Pharaohs
were able to extend
the Egyptian empire
by harnessing
the horse to their
chariots and relying
on his power and
courage. With
his help, societies
of such distant
lands as the Indus
Valley civilizations
were united with
Mesopotamian cultures.
The empires of
the Hurrians,
Hittites, Kassites,
Assyrians, Babylonians,
Persians and others
rose and fell
under his thundering
hooves. His strength
made possible
the initial concepts
of a cooperative
universal society,
such as the Roman
empire. The Arabian "pony
express" shrank
space, accelerated
communications
and linked empires
together throughout
the eastern world.
This
awe-inspiring
horse of the east
appears on seal
rings, stone pillars
and various monuments
with regularity
after the 16th
century B.C. Egyptian
hieroglyphics
proclaim his value;
Old Testament
writings are filled
with references
to his might and
strength. Other
writings talk
of the creation
of the Arabian, "thou
shallst fly without
wings and conquer
without swords." King
Solomon some 900
years B.C. eulogized
the beauty of "a
company of horses
in Pharaoh's chariots," while
in 490 B.C. the
famous Greek horseman,
Xinophon proclaimed: "A
noble animal which
exhibits itself
in all its beauty
is something so
lovely and wonderful
that it fascinates
young and old
alike." But
whence came the "Arabian
horse?" We
have seen this
same horse for
many centuries
before the word "Arab" was
ever used or implied
as a race of people
or species of
horse.
The
origin of the
word "Arab" is
still obscure.
A popular concept
links the word
with nomadism,
connecting it
with the Hebrew "Arabha," dark
land or steppe
land, also with
the Hebrew "Erebh," mixed
and hence organized
as opposed to
organized and
ordered life of
the sedentary
communities, or
with the root "Abhar"-to
move or pass. "Arab" is
a Semitic word
meaning "desert" or
the inhabitant
thereof, with
no reference to
nationality. In
the Koran a'rab
is used for Bedouins
(nomadic desert
dwellers) and
the first certain
instance of its
Biblical use as
a proper name
occurs in Jer.
25:24: "Kings
of Arabia," Jeremiah
having lived between
626 and 586 B.C.
The Arabs themselves
seem to have used
the word at an
early date to
distinguish the
Bedouin from the
Arabic-speaking
town dwellers.
This
hot blooded horse
which had flourished
under the Semitic
people of the
east now reached
its zenith of
fame as the horse
of the "Arabas." The
Bedouin horse
breeders were
fanatic about
keeping the blood
of their desert
steeds absolutely
pure, and through
line-breeding
and inbreeding,
celebrated strains
evolved which
were particularly
prized for distinguishing
characteristics
and qualities.
The mare evolved
as the Bedouin's
most treasured
possession. The
harsh desert environment
ensured that only
the strongest
and keenest horse
survived, and
it was responsible
for many of the
physical characteristics
distinguishing
the breed to this
day.
Go
to Horse
of the Desert
Bedouin
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