History of the
Andalusian
The world's most aristocratic equine population owes its fame to the
Andalusian horse, along with the Arab and, much later, the
Thoroughbred.
Its history goes back long before the birth of Christ - to 200 BC, at
the time of the Roman Conquests in and around Spain. Roman writers
praised the native Spanish horses' qualities, which were recognized by
Spain's Moorish conquerors, who naturally cross-bred them with their
own Arab and Berber breeds.
After the Moors were driven from Spain in the 15th Century, these
noble Spanish creatures enjoyed a period of great popularity,
influencing almost all other American and European horse breeds.
Not only were they taken by the Spanish conquistadors to the New World
in the Americas, but they laid the foundation of the Frederiksborg,
the royal horse of Denmark; the Neapolitan horse, when Naples was
under Spanish rule from 1504 to 1713; the Austrian Kladruber, and some
of the British breeds, notably the Cleveland Bay, the Hackney, the
Connemara pony of Ireland and possibly the Welsh Cob.
Direct descendants of the Andalusian horse are the Lippizaners of the
Spanish Riding School in Vienna, established in 1572 as an adjunct to
the Court in order to educate their nobility in the equitational arts.
It was called the Spanish Riding School because right from its
formation only Spanish stallions were used there.
The Lippizaners take their name from the stud at Lippiza, near
Trieste, then part of the Austrian empire. It was founded by Archduke
Charles 11, in 1580, who had 9 stallions and 24 mares brought there
from Spain.
This is the horse that became "The very cornerstone of classical
riding." The features that made this caballo de pura raza española -
horse of pure Spanish breed - so highly sought after, are its balletic
elegance, high head carriage, short arched neck, silky flowing mane
compact body and wonderful proportions.
The manes of mares are usually clipped in Spain; only the stallions
are allowed to display the full splendour of theirs. About 50 per cent
of Andalusians are usually grey or white, the rest being bay or black.
Chestnuts or piebalds are excluded from the stud book.
These attributes are combined with a fiery intelligence, strangely at
odds with it's affectionate and docile temperament. It is considered
to be the ideal haute école parade and carriage horse. It is perhaps
somewhat surprising, therefore, that its presence outside Spain is not
more widespread today.
"It can only be the whims of changing fashion that, for the moment,
deny him his place in competitive dressage - that and perhaps the
extraordinarily extravagant and high action of his forelegs," suggests
Elwyn Hartley Edwards in his engaging book, Horses, their Role in the
History of Man. The Andalusian does, in fact, "dish" - throw his
forelegs in an outward arc before putting his feet to the ground. In
Spain, the action is highly esteemed but in countries like England, it
is not appreciated at all.
from www.andalucia.com
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