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The first riders by Don Blazer


A little more than 10,000 years ago—give or take a 1,000 years—one cave man said to another, “I’m so hungry I could eat a horse.” So they did. First man just ate horses. Later he discovered he could keep lame mares and milk them. That was the beginning of the meat and milk industry.


Man’s progress wasn’t too swift until he got on the horse’s back, then the whole human race began to boogie. Exactly when man domesticated the riding horse is questionable. Which of the many human societies first utilised the horse as a mount is debatable. But the fact that progress went from a walk to a gallop once man and horse became partners is undeniable. A good theory is the earliest riders were the Brahmans of India.


Hindu mythology had its first human—known variously as Manu, Sveyambhuva or Viraj— mounted on a horse. Since Manu as the example by which all faithful Hindus were to live, it is logical to assume equitation was highly prized and already well advanced. If the Brahmans were the first to master equitation, they were not lone riders long. Riding astride


was soon learned wherever horses were found – Asia, North Africa and Europe. We know the Chinese, Assyrians and Persians were skilled riders 3,000 years before Christ .


Even if the Brahmans were the first ‘riders’ there is no doubt the Chinese were the first real ‘horsemen’. The Chinese were harnessing the horse approximately 4,000 B.C. There is great evidence to support the idea the Chinese used the horse earlier, to a greater extent and in more ways than did any other civilization. The Chinese were involved in selective breeding and selective conformation (having several different kinds of horses for different jobs) as early as 1,000 year B.C.


About 2,000 B.C. the Hittites, over in the Mediterranean, were doing their own thing with the horse. They were using the horse for war, and they were winning. And the Hittites had it together, for it was the Hittites who left the first text on the care and rearing of horses. The document was written approximately 1,600 B.C. and contains some advice about the training of the horse which is as applicable today as it was then.


For example, the Hittites said a horse needed the equivalent of about 100 miles of gallops before being asked for real speed. Most race trainers today will agree the modern Thoroughbred needs about 100 miles of gallops before being asked to show some of his speed.


The Assyrians were the first of the eastern Mediterranean cultures to make use of an article resembling a saddle. All they lacked was a stirrup, but at the time, so did everyone else.


The Egyptians were also using the horse approximately 1,650 B.C. as a means of expanding their empire. Curiously, they had no interest in riding astride, preferring the chariot.


The horse entered western culture much the same as so many other phenomena— through mythology. The Greeks believed the horse came from the sea, a creation of the water god, Poseidon. Perhaps the story stems from an assault by a fleet of ships which carried cavalrymen who rode their hoses ashore and easily defeated the defenders of Crete around 2,000 B.C. Could the centaur, half –horse, half-man, have been the


description given a conquering cavalryman seen for the first time? And once victorious, could that ‘centaur’ have carried off women providing the evidence of the power and lust of the centaurs?


The winged- horse, Pegasus, also appears in Greek mythology as Poseidon’s means of disclosing sources of fresh water to man. We know the wild horses will paw the dry earth at a point he instinctively or empirically knows to be a water hole. Was it this action the stories relate as Poseidon’s gift?


The horse in Greek mythology is pretty well known, but is not without parallel. The Chinese had their own version of the centaur—the Ting-Ling, wisest of all being, and, of course, half- man, half-horse.


Yep, the horse got things going for man, once they became partners. And during the early partnership, the horse was always associated with wisdom, power and utility. Why mess with a good thing?


The winged horse Pegasus appears in Greek mythology


Equine Page 62


www.theequinesite.co.uk


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