Horses in Iran explained

Horses in Iran
Use:Show jumping

The history of horses in Iran goes back to Greek sources from ancient Persia, which mention horse worship and the practice of hippomancy. Today, Iranians breed several breeds of horse, most of them Arabian, in particular the Koheilan and Saklawi lines.

History

Horses played an important cultural role in ancient Persia.[1] Herodotus and Ctesias attest to the practice of hippomancy (divination by horse), which continued into the Sasanian era.[2] According to Herodotus' Histories, the Nisean horse was considered sacred in the 5th century BC.[3]

Darius exploited this Persian belief in hippomancy to ensure his royal legitimacy.[4] It is possible that Darius used this ruse or propagated the story to appease his people, who strongly believed in hippomancy.[5] Georges Dumézil sees it as a possible Indo-European rite of enthronement.[6] Persian military horsemen may also have been diviners.[7]

In 1965, an American, Louise Firouz, rediscovered the Caspian horse in the Elbourz mountains, on the shores of the Caspian Sea. In the 1970s, the Royal Iranian Horse Society proposed the name "Persian plateau horse" to designate a group of fairly heterogeneous horses bred in the tribal areas of the Iranian plateau with various Indo-European influences.

Breeding

The DAD-IS database lists 21 breeds of horse currently or formerly bred in the Islamic Republic of Iran: Bakhtiari, Basseri, Caspian, Dareshuri, Ebian, Haddian, Hamdani, Iranian Arabian horse, Jaf, Kahilan, Kurdish horse, Persian Arabian, Qarabagh, Qashqai, Saklawi, Shirazi, Sistani, Taleshi, Taropud, Turkemin and Yabu.[8]

See also: Dareshuri.

The CAB International study (2016) distinguishes three main types or breeds of horse in Iran: the Persian Arabian, the Persian Plateau horse and the Turkoman, divided into numerous subtypes, whose characterizations remain unclear. It also mentions the existence of the Tchenaran horse.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Llewellyn-Jones, Lloyd . King and Court in Ancient Persia 559 to 331 BCE . Oxford University Press . 2013 . 978-0-7486-7711-5 . 272.
  2. Book: Ferlampin-Acher, Christine . Fées, bestes et luitons : croyances et merveilles dans les romans français en prose (xiiie – xive siècles) . Presses Paris Sorbonne . 2002 . 978-2-84050-193-0 . 513 . fr.
  3. Web site: Histoires . fr.
  4. Web site: Hérodote, Histoires . fr.
  5. Book: Wagner, Marc-André . Le cheval dans les croyances germaniques : paganisme, christianisme et traditions . Nouvelle bibliothèque du moyen âge . 2005 . 978-2-7453-1216-7 . 974 . fr.
  6. Book: Dumézil, Georges . L'oubli de l'Homme et l'honneur des Dieux . 1985 . 246–253 . fr . Hérodote et l'intronisation de Darius.
  7. Book: Fagan . Garrett . New Perspectives on Ancient Warfare . Trundle . Matthew . BRILL . 2010 . 978-90-04-18598-2 . 372.
  8. Web site: Breeds from species:Horse . 21 November 2016 . DAD-IS . 18 October 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20201018134549/https://dadis-breed-4eff5.firebaseapp.com/?country=Iran%20(Islamic%20Republic%20of)&specie=Horse&breed=&callback=allbreeds . dead .