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Bask (horse) Last updated on: January 15, 2008. Bask, (February 9, 1956 – July 24, 1979) [1] bred at the Albigowa State Stud in Poland, was a bay Arabian stallion who was imported into the United States in 1963 by Dr. Eugene LaCroix of Lasma Arabians and became a major sire of significance in the Arabian breed.
A horse bred at Janów. The Janów Podlaski Stud Farm (Polish: Stadnina Koni Janów Podlaski) is the oldest state stud farm in Poland, established in 1817 in Wygoda. The stud farm specializes in breeding Arabian and Anglo-Arabian horses. [2]: 65 It has been an important stud farm for the Arabian horse breed for the last 200 years despite being ...
Lady Wentworth. Owner. Roger Selby. Alice Payne. Honors. 1933 Three-gaited champion National Horse Show. Last updated on: January 13, 2008. Raffles was an Arabian stallion foaled in 1926 and imported to the United States by Roger Selby in 1932. Raffles was bred by Lady Wentworth of the Crabbet Arabian Stud.
The AHA was formed by a merger between the International Arabian Horse Association (IAHA) and the Arabian Horse Registry of America (AHRA) in 2003. AHRA was the older of the two organizations, a breed registry founded in 1908. IAHA, founded in 1950, organized to "meet the breeding, competitive and recreational interests of all Arabian horse ...
Crabbet Arabian Stud. Mesaoud, one of the foundation sires of the Crabbet Arabian Stud, bred in Egypt by Ali Pasha Sherif, imported to England by the Blunts in 1891. 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 ...
Al Khamsa is a nonprofit organization in the United States that supports the preservation breeding of certain strains of purebred Arabian horses, specifically lines tracing exclusively to those pedigrees providing a detailed chain of evidence to prove they were bred by the Bedouin of the Arabian Peninsula. The name derives from the Al Khamsa ...
The breed is named for the major foundation sire Shagya, a gray Arabian [1] stallion with some ancestors of the Kehilan and Siglavy (Seglawi) strains. Born in Syria in 1810, he was taller than the average Arabian of the time, standing 15.2⁄ hands (62.5 inches, 159 cm) at the withers. His weight was 530 kg. He was mostly used for crossbreeding ...
The Arabian Horse Association (AHA) states, "The origin of the purebred Arabian horse was the Arabian desert, and all Arabians ultimately trace their lineage to this source." In essence, all horses accepted for registration in the United States are deemed to be "purebred" Arabians by AHA. [194]