Titre : | Cheiron, Volume 1, Issue 1/2021 - November 2021 |
Type de document : | Bulletin : texte imprimé |
Paru le : | 22/12/2021 |
Année de publication : | 2021 |
Format : | 239 p. |
Langues: | Anglais |
En ligne : | non |
En ligne : | https://trivent-publishing.eu/home/133-cheiron-vol-1issue-1.html |
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Article : texte imprimé
We expect depictions of things we know to contain certain elements. These elements depend on our experience, our visual requirements, culture, upbringing, and so on. For example, in order to recognise a certain subject, a degree of realism is ex[...]

Article : texte imprimé
Carly Ameen, Auteur ;
Gary Paul Baker, Auteur ;
Hélène Benkert, Auteur ;
Camille Vo Van Qui, Auteur ;
Robert Webley, Auteur ;
Robert Liddiard, Auteur ;
Alan K. Outram, Auteur ;
Oliver H. Creighton, Auteur
The warhorse is arguably the most characteristic animal of the English Middle Ages. But while the development and military uses of warhorses have been intensively studied by historians, the archaeological evidence is too often dispersed, overloo[...]

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The custom of horse burial, of foreign extraction, was carried across the Italian borders by the Lombards during their migration in 568 AD. The buried horses are linked to a variety of human remains: not only warriors, but also young women, adul[...]

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Early medieval authors frequently used horses as narrative devices. Therefore, when working with historiographical sources, one is confronted with a vital question: how can we reconstruct the horses’ agency without knowing whether their depictio[...]

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The short historiographical text by Georgios Akropolites (1217-1282 CE) covers the period of the Latin conquest of the Byzantine Empire. Due to the important position the author held, and his participation in some of the events narrated, his His[...]

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Studying the economic and non-economic exchanges of the horse in the Mediterranean area during the Middle Ages is a recent phenomenon in history. Indeed, while the trade and circulation of many products in the Mediterranean region, notably sugar[...]

Article : texte imprimé
The Arabian, or more correctly, Arab horse, is widely acknowledged to be one of the most influential horse breeds in the world. Enthusiasts of the breed admire its beauty and its quality of endurance. They also frequently claim it has a long and[...]

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Arab(ian) horse enthusiasts perpetuate an origin legend for the breed that counts five foundational mares in relation to Islamic Prophet Muhammad. Challenging both the concept of a gender preference for mares among Bedouin and/or Arab people in [...]

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Between 1963 and 1965, the first seven Soviet Russian–bred Arabians arrived in the US. Only one of these horses—the well-known Naborr—was accepted for registration at that time by the Arabian Horse Club Registry of America (AHCRA). The remainder[...]

Article : texte imprimé
Anastasija Ropa, Auteur ;
Ludmila Malahova, Auteur
Throughout premodern history, horses were used primarily for labour and transportation, as well as in the military sphere. With the advent of motorized vehicles and other means of transport, the emphasis shifted to using horses in sport as well [...]