The Horse: No Animal Has Done More
Elizabeth Miller
No animal has done more for the advancement of humankind than the
horse. That said, it's hard to imagine ever using the horse as a
source of food. But of course, that's how the man-horse
relationship began.
The history books contain many references to the horse as prey
some 50,000 years ago, when Cro-Magnon man had to hunt for his
food. Seems that no one knows for sure just when or how the horse
first became a helper to man. But many have reasoned that when
early Cro-Magnon man needed to move his encampments from place to
place, he started using the more docile horses as pack animals.
So that would mark the beginnings of horse domestication.
Historians also believe that as man progressed from hunter to
farmer, he continued using horses for food but also as helpers
for herding. This would have brought about the need to jump on
the horse's back and follow along behind the herd. And that would
mark the beginnings of the horse as a means of transportation for
humans.
Recent archeological excavations in the Ukraine unearthed horses'
teeth and evidence of the first "bridle." These findings have
brought the experts to conclude that the beginnings of horseback
riding began with the nomadic tribes of what is now Eastern
Europe, in about 4000 BC. However, riding wouldn't really catch
on until long after the invention of the wheel and the preferred
use of horses as draft animals.
It is believed that the horse's domestication as a draft animal
began sometime between 3000 and 2000 BC. Faster than the oxen and
equids that had first been used to pull wheeled vehicles, the
horse soon took over and this spawned the ever-improving
development of yokes, breast straps, collars, bits and bridles.
Inevitably the horse was to become a major tool of warfare.
Around 1350 BC the Hittite king Suppililiuma decided to go to war
against the Mitannians, bought large numbers of horses, and
engaged the services of a Mitannian horsemaster named Kikkuli.
After defecting from the Mitanni, Kikkuli turned the king's
horses into war machines that were ridden into battle until the
king's militia had totally destroyed the Mitanni.
Now the bonding of man and horse had truly begun. Still,
horseback riding was not for the elite, much less the general
populace. For hundreds of years, horses were bred to be
warhorses. But when Xenophon wrote "The Art of Horsemanship" in
around 400 BC, the time was approaching when people would ride
horses for more than herding, hunting and fighting.
Although America's wild horses had been tamed by the Indians, it
is said that the Spanish explorers brought the first domesticated
horses to North America in 1519 AD.
By the early 1700s, Rhode Island had become America's principal
horse breeding state. Horses became the primary means of
transportation, soon carrying riders on their backs and pulling
people and materials in wheeled vehicles across the vastness of
the New World.
By the 1800s the horse was a necessity of urban and rural life.
The horse helped us build cities, farm the land, fight wars and
settle a continent. No animal has done more for humankind.
About the Author
Copyright MBPCO 2006 and Beyond. Elizabeth Miller is an
author/publisher. For more about horses just trot on over to
http://www.horsegearhere.com
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