It is often cited as an argument
for the indispensability of horseshoes by their supporters that horseshoes
have been in use for thousands of years for riding and draft horses.
According to the most recent findings, however, it is certain that the
horseshoe was first introduced to Western and
Central Europe in the 9th
Century, and was previously completely unknown.
In Ancient Greece, too, the
riding horses went barefoot. The Greek Xenophon began his treatise "On
the Art of Riding" (written about 400 BC) with horses' hooves,
and emphasized the great importance of regular hoofcare. His book deals
exclusively with the husbandry and training of military horses, which
could perform their duties very well without shoes. Markus Junkelmann
writes in his book "The Riders of Rome" (Die Reiter Roms vol.3)
"The great distances covered by Scythian, Persian, Macedonian and
Carthaginian cavalries during their campaigns--think only of the battles
of Alexander the
Great--show that cavalry,
even without horseshoes, is capable of the greatest of achievements."
And what about the Ancient
Romans' attitude to hoof protection? We know of the so-called "hippo
sandal" of iron, "soleae ferreae" in Latin, which was
in use in the Celtic-Roman area north of the Alps from the middle of
the 1st century to the 4th Century AD. The hooves were wrapped and placed
in the shoes, which were then fastened with the help of bands running
through hooks and eyes at the front and back ends of the shoes. The
hippo sandals were usually allowed to be worn only by draft and a pack
animal walking on paved roads, since a gait faster than
the walk seems to have been impossible with the hippo sandals.
Nailed-on horseshoes are
to be found neither in Roman literature, nor depicted in art. The equestrian
statue of Caesar Marcus Aurelius (died 180AD) shows a horse with beautiful
natural hooves.
Since the sculptor represented
every detail of the horse and rider very realistically and accurately,
he certainly would not have simply left out a form of hoof protection.
But no Roman work of art shows even a single shod hoof, while in the
Middle Ages shod hooves are always clearly shown even in simple pictures.
There are various medieval paintings in which the artist has faithfully
represented the shod hooves as contracted hooves--as contracted hooves
are in fact a consequence of shoeing.
The invention of nailed-on
horseshoes has been ascribed to the Celts, who are supposed to have
been using them already in Roman times. If, however, horseshoes had
actually been in use by the Galls, Celts or Germanic tribes, Julius
Caesar would certainly have mentioned them in his book "The Conquest
of Gaul". Also, neither in Pompeii or Herculaneum, nor in the ruins
of other Roman forts where mounted units were stationed, have horseshoes
been found amongst the considerable iron artifacts. And among the remains
of 30 fallen military horses in Krefeld-Gellep, there was not a single
horseshoe to be found.
The Swiss researcher Walter
Drack compared artifacts of supposedly Celtic horseshoes with shoes
from precisely datable medieval finds, and observed that the "Celtic"
shoes were the same type used in central Europe from the 10th to the
16th Centuries. On this subject Markus Junkelmann writes:
"The silence of written
and pictorial sources, the topological identity of all discovered 'originals'
with mediaeval and early modern pieces, as well as the material improbability
that the horseshoe, after it was first invented, should then over centuries
be only sporadically used, while at the same time the existing, awkward
hoof shoe remained in use, support with virtual certainty that there
were neither Celtic nor
Roman horseshoes." Nowadays,
the working and military horse has become a leisure- and sporting companion
who often suffers, through the confined keeping usual in most areas,
from extreme lack of movement. Is it not thought-provoking, this assumption
that a horse, which is only allowed to move 1 - 4 hours a day--if that--supposedly
cannot do without constant shoeing?
Copyright Dr. vet. med. H.
Strasser
Blaihofstr. 42/1, 72074 Tuebingen, Germany
Tel/Fax: (011) 49-7071-87572
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Box 44, Qualicum Beach, BC, V9K 1S7