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The stud was founded in 1847, and at that time hosted what today is the oldest written breed registry for purebred Arabian horses in the world. [3] [6] During the mid-19th century, the need for Arabian blood to improve the breeding stock for light cavalry horses in Europe resulted excursions to the Middle East sponsored by Queen Isabella II, who sent representatives to the desert to purchase ...
A purebred Arabian stallion, showing dished profile, arched neck, level croup and high-carried tail . Arabian horses have refined, wedge-shaped heads, a broad forehead, large eyes, large nostrils, and small muzzles. Most display a distinctive concave, or "dished" profile.
He created the foundations for future breeding by obtaining, with the permission of Alexander I, breeding stock from imperial stud farms and purchasing horses from private Russian and English breeders. In December 1817, he imported 54 stallions (25 English, 9 Arabian, 4 Danish, 2 Mecklenburg, 2 Caucasian and Italian), 100 mares and 33 foals.
He was one of the only horses to ever win an Arabian National Championship in both halter and performance in the same year, and one of only four stallions to win U.S. National Championships in both halter and performance. [4] Khemosabi stood at stud in 1969, his first breeding season, on lease to Varian Arabians.
The Crabbet Arabian Stud, also known as the Crabbet Park Stud, was an English horse breeding farm that ran from 1878 to 1972. Its founder owners, husband and wife team Wilfrid Scawen Blunt and Lady Anne Blunt , decided while travelling in the Middle East to import some of the best Arabian horses to England and breed them there.
Bandos (1964 – September 1987) was a gray Arabian stallion with Crabbet ancestry. [3] He was sired by Negatiw, a Tersk bred stud, out of Bandola, who was known by the title of "Queen of Poland". [4] Bandos was a sire in Poland for 11 years, and in 1982, he was imported to the United States.
Wellesley Arabian was the last Arabian horse, or supposed to be, to enter racehorse breeding in England. [21] Indeed, no other Arabian horse imported since the late 18th century had influenced the Thoroughbred breed. [22] Wellesley Arabian is therefore an exception to the rule that the Thoroughbred breed has not been influenced by foreign ...
Morafic (1956–1974) was a gray Arabian stallion foaled in Egypt and later imported to the United States by Gleannloch Farms. [1] Morafic was sired by Nazeer and out of Mabrouka. Morafic sired 58 foals in Egypt and 151 in the US, of which 30 became US and Canadian National show winners.