DRAFT BREEDS 93 



THE BRITISH BREEDS 



Horse history in Great Britain dates back to 55 B.C., the date 

 of the Koman Conquest. Caesar's description of the chariot 

 manoeu\Tes, by which his advance was opposed, would indicate 

 the existence at that time of a horse, diminutive in stature, but 

 drafty in buiki, whose feats of handiness were remarkable. 

 British coins, issued in the first century, confirm this opinion 

 by the powerful type of horse struck on the metal. 



During the seventh century horses came intO' use for riding. 

 The chief demand was for the mounting of infantry forces, as a 

 means of transportation only, the idea of cavalry or any form of 

 fighting from horseback being suggested later by the Konnans. 

 As the soldier's chain armor at this period was heayj and the 

 marches Avere hard, a large, stout horse was required. 



Later (1300) when plate armor began to replace chain, and 

 the horses tliemselves were protected, the effectiveness of weapons 

 liaving been increased, the weight imposed upon them became 

 still greater and size more essential. Horse breeding was 

 given most careful consideration by the Throne. The use of 

 small stallions was discouraged and even prohibited by royal 

 edict. The condition existed until modified methods of con- 

 ducting warfare, incidental to the invention of gunpowder 

 (1650), led to the discarding cf armoir and consequently of 

 war horses of this type. 



Advent of Draft Horses. — Up to the eighteenth century 

 draft work had been done principally by oxen or by inferior 

 horses, not fit for service- in war. After the beginning of that 

 century, with its relegation of the war horse from the battlefield 

 to IxBcome a humble beast of burden, the real era of the draft 

 horse began. In the latter part of the eighteenth century two 

 distinct types of cart horses are mentioned by Young, the Large 

 Black Old English horse and the Suffolk Punch. 



Thus the British draft breeds have had a long period of 

 development, the primary motive of which was war, not work. 

 During, or even before, the first century, horses possessed some 

 of the same characters which are now dominant in these breeds. 



