The prehistoric origins of the domestic horse and horseback riding

The findings of Librado et al. (2021) show that modern domestic horses (DOM2) emerged in the lower Don-Volga region. They imply that horseback riding drove selection that resulted in these horses and fuelled their initial dispersal, and also that DOM2 horses replaced other horses because they were m...

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Main Author: Markku Niskanen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Société d'Anthropologie de Paris 2023-04-01
Series:Bulletins et Mémoires de la Société d’Anthropologie de Paris
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/bmsap/11881
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author Markku Niskanen
author_facet Markku Niskanen
author_sort Markku Niskanen
collection DOAJ
description The findings of Librado et al. (2021) show that modern domestic horses (DOM2) emerged in the lower Don-Volga region. They imply that horseback riding drove selection that resulted in these horses and fuelled their initial dispersal, and also that DOM2 horses replaced other horses because they were more suitable for riding due to their more docile temperaments and resilient backs. In this article, I argue that captive breeding of horses leading to their domestication began in about 4500-3000 BC in the Pontic-Caspian steppe and made horseback riding necessary because managing horses, and especially moving them over long distances, required mounted herding. Horseback riding had been experimented with since the second half of the 5th millennium BC, became common around 3100 BC during the early stages of the Yamnaya culture, and necessary by the middle of the 3rd millennium BC at the very latest. As horseback riding became more common, selection for malleable temperaments and resilient backs intensified, resulting in DOM2 horses by about 2300-2200 BC in the lower Don-Volga region. The body size and weight-carrying ability of ancestral and early DOM2 horses were not limiting factors for horseback riding. The initial dispersal of DOM2 horses was facilitated by horseback riding and began by about 2300±150 BC. Chariotry began to spread together with DOM2 horses after 2000 BC, but its high archaeological visibility may have inflated its importance, since chariots are of limited practical use for herding and other daily tasks.
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spelling doaj-art-465ed26928cd4ac1822278e60ba2e3212025-01-30T11:27:37ZengSociété d'Anthropologie de ParisBulletins et Mémoires de la Société d’Anthropologie de Paris1777-54692023-04-013510.4000/bmsap.11881The prehistoric origins of the domestic horse and horseback ridingMarkku NiskanenThe findings of Librado et al. (2021) show that modern domestic horses (DOM2) emerged in the lower Don-Volga region. They imply that horseback riding drove selection that resulted in these horses and fuelled their initial dispersal, and also that DOM2 horses replaced other horses because they were more suitable for riding due to their more docile temperaments and resilient backs. In this article, I argue that captive breeding of horses leading to their domestication began in about 4500-3000 BC in the Pontic-Caspian steppe and made horseback riding necessary because managing horses, and especially moving them over long distances, required mounted herding. Horseback riding had been experimented with since the second half of the 5th millennium BC, became common around 3100 BC during the early stages of the Yamnaya culture, and necessary by the middle of the 3rd millennium BC at the very latest. As horseback riding became more common, selection for malleable temperaments and resilient backs intensified, resulting in DOM2 horses by about 2300-2200 BC in the lower Don-Volga region. The body size and weight-carrying ability of ancestral and early DOM2 horses were not limiting factors for horseback riding. The initial dispersal of DOM2 horses was facilitated by horseback riding and began by about 2300±150 BC. Chariotry began to spread together with DOM2 horses after 2000 BC, but its high archaeological visibility may have inflated its importance, since chariots are of limited practical use for herding and other daily tasks.https://journals.openedition.org/bmsap/11881horsesdomesticationselectionridingchariotry
spellingShingle Markku Niskanen
The prehistoric origins of the domestic horse and horseback riding
Bulletins et Mémoires de la Société d’Anthropologie de Paris
horses
domestication
selection
riding
chariotry
title The prehistoric origins of the domestic horse and horseback riding
title_full The prehistoric origins of the domestic horse and horseback riding
title_fullStr The prehistoric origins of the domestic horse and horseback riding
title_full_unstemmed The prehistoric origins of the domestic horse and horseback riding
title_short The prehistoric origins of the domestic horse and horseback riding
title_sort prehistoric origins of the domestic horse and horseback riding
topic horses
domestication
selection
riding
chariotry
url https://journals.openedition.org/bmsap/11881
work_keys_str_mv AT markkuniskanen theprehistoricoriginsofthedomestichorseandhorsebackriding
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