|
The Shagya
Arabian
is a Hungarian breed of horse similar to the Arabian
Horse in appearance and with similar speed and endurance,
but heavier and more substantial. The Shagya Arabian stands 15 hands
high and is mostly grey in colour. They are versatile horses, lively
and energetic and capable of being used in the harness and also for
riding and in competition.
The Shagya Arabian was developed in the Austro-Hungarian
Empire
during the 19th century at the Bábolna, Mezőhegyes, Radautz, Piber, and
Topolcianky studs. Today it is most often seen in the Czech Republic,
Austria, Romania, the former Yugoslavian countries, Poland, Germany,
and Hungary, but has been exported to other nations and is bred around
the world. A purebred
Shagya Arabian today has bloodlines can be traced in all lines to the
stud books of Radautz, Babolna, and Topolcianky. The breed is
considered by some to be a subspecies of Arabian horse, but due to the
presence of a small amount of non-Arabian breeding is considered an
Anglo-Arabian or a partbred Arabian in some places.
One of the major founding sires was Shagya, a gray Arabian (or, some
say part-Arabian) stallion with some ancestors of the Kehilan and
Siglavy strains. Born in Syria in 1810, he was taller than the average
Arabian of the time, standing 15.2-1/2 hands high (62 1/2 inches at the
withers). He was mostly used for crossbreeding at Babolna, bred few
asil Arabian mares, and thus has no pure Arabian descendants today.
Many of the Arabian stallions standing at Babolna and other studs were
crossbred with mares who already possessed a great deal of Arabian
influence due to the long Turkish occupation of Eastern Europe. Some
Thoroughbreds and Lipizzans were also used. In all cases, meticulous
pedigree records were kept.
Originally, these predominantly, but not Asil ("pure") Arabian horses
were referred to by the generic term Araberrasse (Arab "race" or breed,
indicating predominantly Arabian ancestry) but was changed after the
second World War into Shagya by the Hippologist Dr. Gramazky because he
was worried that the non-purebred descendants of Shagya would be mixed
up with the Purebred Arabian horses that were also produced in Hungary.
At time, the name was chosen because Shagya was in virtually every
Pedigree as an ancestor, though many other Arabian bloodlines are also
a part of the Shagya breed.
Click HERE
for a copy of the article that above picture is taken from
Uses
This breed is recognized as a riding horse, and is also driven in
harness. It was a hardy cavalry horse and is now popular in sport horse
disciplines such as dressage, eventing and endurance riding. The 2006
FEI Endurance World Champion was a Shagya gelding bred at Babolna.
|
Gazin is an Approved Stallion with high score of 8.0 in 2009.
Gazin is registered with NASS (North American Shagya Society).
Part Shagya Arabian Stallion
Born 05/31/86. Available for breeding and open to all breeds
Live Cover Only
The Shagya Arabian is a Hungarian breed of horse similar to the Arabian
Horse in appearance and with similar speed and endurance,
but heavier and more substantial. The Shagya Arabian stands 15 hands
high and is mostly grey in colour. They are versatile horses, lively
and energetic and capable of being used in the harness and also for
riding and in competition.
The Shagya Arabian was developed in the Austro-Hungarian
Empire
during the 19th century at the Bábolna, Mezőhegyes, Radautz, Piber, and
Topolcianky studs. Today it is most often seen in the Czech Republic,
Austria, Romania, the former Yugoslavian countries, Poland, Germany,
and Hungary, but has been exported to other nations and is bred around
the world. A purebred
Shagya Arabian today has bloodlines can be traced in all lines to the
stud books of Radautz, Babolna, and Topolcianky. The breed is
considered by some to be a subspecies of Arabian horse, but due to the
presence of a small amount of non-Arabian breeding is considered an
Anglo-Arabian or a partbred Arabian in some places.
One of the major founding sires was Shagya, a gray Arabian (or, some
say part-Arabian) stallion with some ancestors of the Kehilan and
Siglavy strains. Born in Syria in 1810, he was taller than the average
Arabian of the time, standing 15.2-1/2 hands high (62 1/2 inches at the
withers). He was mostly used for crossbreeding at Babolna, bred few
asil Arabian mares, and thus has no pure Arabian descendants today.
Many of the Arabian stallions standing at Babolna and other studs were
crossbred with mares who already possessed a great deal of Arabian
influence due to the long Turkish occupation of Eastern Europe. Some
Thoroughbreds and Lipizzans were also used. In all cases, meticulous
pedigree records were kept.
Originally, these predominantly, but not Asil ("pure") Arabian horses
were referred to by the generic term Araberrasse (Arab "race" or breed,
indicating predominantly Arabian ancestry) but was changed after the
second World War into Shagya by the Hippologist Dr. Gramazky because he
was worried that the non-purebred descendants of Shagya would be mixed
up with the Purebred Arabian horses that were also produced in Hungary.
At time, the name was chosen because Shagya was in virtually every
Pedigree as an ancestor, though many other Arabian bloodlines are also
a part of the Shagya breed.
Bloodlines
While Shagyas are not considered "pure" or asil Arabians, they have a
closed stud book and have special status within the World Arabian Horse
Association (WAHO). In 1978, WAHO stated that Shagya Arabians that have
been bred pure after the system of Babolna and Topolcianky may be
termed "pure bred Shagya Arabians", and the Shagya breeders'
organisation is under WAHO patronage as associate members, allowed to
use the WAHO emblem. However, WAHO also was clear that Purebred" in
this case means that the horses have been bred pure among themselves
and are not to be confused with the term "purebred Arabian." Some
aficionados note that the meticulous recordkeeping of the Hungarian
studs actually has produced horses with longer and more complete
pedigrees than some horses accepted as "purebred" Arabians by
mainstream registries. However, in spite of this argument, Shagyas
remain a distinct bloodline group and are generally not accepted as
"pure-blooded Arabians."
The Shagya Arabian exhibits traits similar to the asil or purebred
Arabian horse, with high carried tail, sound bone and excellent
endurance. However, due to the small influx of non-Arabian breeding and
the breeding goals of the Hungarian studs, Shagyas tend to be taller,
less refined, and bigger-boned than purebred Arabians; the modern
Shagya is usually at least 15 hands tall and commonly 16 hands, whereas
the breed standard for the Arabian ranges from 14.1 to 15.1 hands, with
some individuals over and under that height.
|