翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Spanish International Badminton Tournament
・ Spanish Invasion
・ Spanish invasion of Portugal (1762)
・ Spanish ironclad Arapiles
・ Spanish ironclad Méndez Núñez
・ Spanish ironclad Numancia
・ Spanish ironclad Sagunto
・ Spanish ironclad Tetuán
・ Spanish ironclad Vitoria
・ Spanish ironclad Zaragoza
・ Spanish irredentism
・ Spanish irregular verbs
・ Spanish is the Loving Tongue
・ Spanish Island
・ Spanish jazz
Spanish Jennet Horse
・ Spanish Judges
・ Spanish Knoll
・ Spanish Lacrosse Association
・ Spanish Ladies
・ Spanish Lady
・ Spanish Lake
・ Spanish Lake (Ascension Parish)
・ Spanish Lake (film)
・ Spanish Lake (Iberia Parish)
・ Spanish Lake community
・ Spanish Lake, Missouri
・ Spanish land grants in Florida
・ Spanish land grants in New Mexico
・ Spanish language


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Spanish Jennet Horse : ウィキペディア英語版
Spanish Jennet Horse







The Spanish Jennet Horse is a new breed registry dedicated to an attempt to recreate a colored variety of gaited horse that resembles the historical Jennet or "Spanish Jennet." The Jennet was a smooth-gaited type of horse popular in the Middle Ages, known for their presence, style and smooth ride. It was often ridden by European nobility. Some early Jennets sported pinto or leopard patterns.
==History==
The original Spanish Jennet was a type of horse more than a distinct breed, and became extinct.〔(Sponenberg, Phillip, DVM, PhD. "Spanish Jennet: Living in the Past" ''The Gaited Horse'' web page accessed January 26, 2008. )〕
Most of the Medieval horses bred during the 16th century in Spain and elsewhere were not "breeds" in the modern sense of the word. In the treatise "Il Cavallarizzo" written by Claudio Corte in 1562, three years after the end of the Great Italian Wars, the author describes at length the qualities of the "Ginecti" (Jennets) as horses useful for war. According to Corte, the Jennets were one of the most commonly used horses by the Spanish light cavalry. Spanish heavy cavalry used a different breed which Corte refers to as " Villanos ". Interestingly, there is no mention of the Andalusian as a war horse in Corte's book, indicating that that breed either did not exist or was not used for war during the rise of Spain as a major European Power in 1494-1562.〔http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Il_cavallarizzo.djvu〕 The castle of Venafro in the Italian region of Molise (which was under Spanish rule in the 1500s) has numerous frescos portraying the " Ginecti " (Jennets), which seem to closely resemble a modern day Criollo horse or a Peruvian Paso 〔http://www.francovalente.it/2007/12/22/i-cavalli-di-enrico-pandone-nel-castello-di-venafro-2/〕 The Jennet from Spain became more uniform in type due to a single geographical region producing them as well as generations of selective breeding during the Middle Ages to produce a smooth riding horse that was suitable for the riding style à la jineta. It would never have occurred to a Spaniard of the 16th century to distinguish "breeds" on the basis of registration papers as we do today.〔Bennett, Deb, PhD. ''Conquerors: The Roots of New World Horsemanship'', pg 158〕 In that time in history the breeders and fanciers of these particular horses would have called the horse by the names of the regions or family that bred them. For Example, Guzmán, Asturcón.〔Bennett, Deb, PhD. ''Conquerors: The Roots of New World Horsemanship'', Page 169〕
Historical references include a painting by the 18th-century English painter John Wootton, which depicts a leopard pattern Spanish Jennet.
As assorted Iberian horses came to the Americas and the Spaniards of the New World preserved the riding style as well as the horses that suited this style, the horses became known simply as the "Spanish Jennet." Today, some of the descendants of those early Spanish Jennets are known as Paso Finos and Peruvian Pasos. This is the horse that is mentioned by name as the ancestor of the Paso Fino〔(The Paso Fino'' web page accessed January 26, 2008. )〕 and Peruvian Paso Horse (The Spanish Jennet gave its even temperament and smooth ambling gait)〔( The American Dream Horse ''The North American Peruvian Horse Association'' web page accessed January 26, 2008. )〕 breeds as well as many other modern gaited breeds. The Spanish Mustang is another probable descendant.〔
The Paso Fino and Peruvian Paso have predominantly bred away from coat colors that include spotting patterns. The notable exception being the pinto Paso Fino. However historians agree that the early Colonial Spanish era horses - did indeed come in more exotic patterns.
''" We will never know just exactly what horses were brought to the New World, but early records are of a wide variety of colors and markings. Some of the color names used to describe Cortez's horses are almost assuredly describing spotted horses as well as routine white marks. This is evidence that white marks and at least some body spotting patterns appear early in the Colonial Spanish era. These patterns, and white marks in general, therefore strike me as very consistent with an Iberian origin."''
''Phillip Sponenberg, DVM, PhD''〔
The Spanish Jennet Horse is a new breed of Jennet type is being created through the efforts of the (Spanish Jennet Horse Society ). The Registry requires that horse for the Pintado division be of full Paso Fino heritage and the Atigrado division must be at least of 50% Paso blood.
Outcrosses are allowed in the first generation to obtain the LP for the Registered Atigrado Spanish Jennet and must result in a minimum of 50% purebred Paso Fino or Peruvian Paso horse. Only one outcross is allowed (to obtain Lp or Appaloosa pattern). All 50% crosses will provide video proof of gait before registration of their offspring.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Spanish Jennet Horse」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.