The Lipizzan, or Lipizzaner (Slovene Lipicanec), is a breed of horse closely associated with what the Spanish Riding School of Vienna, Austria. It dates back to the 16th century, when it was developed with the support of the Hapsburg nobility. The horses take their name from one of the oldest stud farms where the breed developed, Lippiza, a Kras village now known as Lipica (Italian: Lipizza), near Trieste in modern-day Slovenia.
The typical horse of this breed measures between fourteen and sixteen hands. They are compact and muscular, with very powerful hindquarters, allowing them to do the difficult "High School" (Dressage) movements, sometimes known as the "airs above the ground." They generally have a strong-featured head with a convex profile, set high on a well-muscled, arched neck. They have short cannons, their legs have good bone, and well-sloped shoulders. Their gaits are powerful and elastic, although different in style from the Warmblood breeds seen in many Dressage competitions. Lipizzans are naturally balanced, well-known for excellent trainability, and are very intelligent.
Lipizzans are slow to mature, usually not being put under saddle until the age of four, and not considered fully mature until the age of seven, but also are long-lived horses, often performing well into their mid-20s. For example, the stallion Siglavy Mantua I still was a featured solo performer with the Spanish Riding School at the age of 26 during its 2005 tour of the United States.
Although today most Lipizzaners are gray, up until the 18th century there were other coat colors, including dun and bay. Today, it is still traditional for the Spanish Riding School to have one bay Lipizzaner in residence, and if there is none, it is thought to bring bad luck to the area.
Other moves include the Piaffe, Passage, pirouette, flying changes, extended movements, and other Classical dressage movements.
The ancestors of the Lipizzan can be traced to approximately A.D. 800.http://www.equiworld.net/uk/horsecare/Breeds/lipizzaner/index.htm THE LIPIZZANER The predecessors of the Lipizzan were desert horses that were brought into Spain from North Africa and crossed on native Spanish horses, creating breeds such as the Andalusian. The Spanish Riding School, of Vienna, takes its name from the original Spanish heritage of both its horses and its riding techniques.
By the 16th Century, when the Hapsburg Empire ruled both Spain and Austria, a powerful but agile horse was desired for both military uses and for use in the fashionable and rapidly-growing riding schools for the nobility of central Europe. Therefore, in 1562, the Hapsburg Emperor Maximillian II brought the Spanish horse to Austria and founded the court stud at Kladrub. In 1580, his brother, Archduke Charles II, established a similar stud in 1580 at Lippiza (now known as Lipica, in modern-day Slovenian), from whence the breed obtained its name.
Kladrub and Lipizza stock were bred to the native Karst horses, and succeeding generations were crossed with the old Neapolitan breed and horses of Spanish descent obtained from Spain, Germany, and Denmark The studs also imported more Spanish horses, as well as Neapolitans from Italy, as the years went on. While breeding stock was exchanged between the two studs, Kladrub specialized in producing heavy carriage horses, while riding and light carriage horses came from the Lippiza stud. http://www.lipizzan.org/History.htm Breed History
In 1735, Charles VI established the Spanish Riding School and recorded the bloodlines of the Lipizzaners. He also built a winter riding hall in the imperial palace in Vienna.
In addition to the stallions, there are 18 mare family lines. Every stallion has two names, referencing both the sire's name and the dam's name. http://www.ansi.okstate.edu/breeds/horses/lipizzan/index.htm "Lipizzan"]
There are two additional stallion lines recognized in some countries. These are the Tulipan line from Croatia and the Incitato line of Hungary, which are still found in Yugoslavia, Hungary, and other eastern European countries as well as in North America. Some of these same organizations recognize up to 35 mare lines.[http://www.lipizzan.org/History.htm "Breed History." The Lipizzan Association of North America
Beginning in 1920, the Piber stud, near Graz, Austria, became the main stud for the horses used in Vienna. Breeding became very selective, only allowing stallions that had proved themselves at the Riding School to stand at stud, and only breeding mares who had passed rigorous performance testing. http://www.piber.com/index.php?id=283 History of Piber
In 1945, the United States Army took control of St. Martins. General George S. Patton, of the 2nd U.S. Cavalry Group, had been a fellow equestrian competitor with Podhajsky in the Olympic Games prior to the war. The two men renewed their acquaintance, and after an impressive performance by the remaining horses and riders of the school in front of Patton and Undersecretary of War Robert Patterson, the Americans agreed to place the stallions under the protection of the United States until they could safely be returned to the people of Austria after the war.
Then, when Hostau fell behind Soviet lines, a plea went out to the Americans from some captured German officers to rescue the horses before they fell into Soviet hands, because it was feared they would be slaughtered for horsemeat. Patton responded. Under the leadership of Col. Charles H. Reed, on April 28, members of Troops A, C and F of the 42nd Squadron conducted a raid behind Soviet lines and accepted the surrender of the Germans at Hostau. Reed later said, the surrender was "more a fiesta than a military operation, as the German troops drew up an honor guard and saluted the American troops as they came in."Id. Though only 250 horses survived the war, the breed was saved.
In 2005, the Spanish Riding School celebrated the 60th anniversary of George S. Patton's rescue by touring the United States.
Because of their fame and their status as the only breed of horse developed in Slovenia, via the Lippiza stud, Lipizzaners are considered one of that nation's most beloved national symbols. A pair of Lipizzaners will be featured on the new Slovenian euro coins.
The motion picture Florian (1940) was based on a novel written in 1934 by Felix Salton, the author of Bambi (1942). The story is set in the 1880s and tells how two young lovers met through their love of horses. The movie was directed by Edwin L. Marin and scripted by Noel Langley and James Kevin McGuinness. Its producer, Winfield Sheehan, owned the only Lipizzan horses in the U.S. at the time.
White Horses was a 1965 television series co-produced by RTS of Yugoslavia and BR-TV of Germany, re-broadcast in the United Kingdom. It followed the adventures of a teenage girl who visits a farm where white Lipizzaner horses are raised.
In the climax of the submarine thriller Crimson Tide, Capt. Frank Ramsey asks Lt. Cmdr. Ron Hunter if he's ever seen Lippizaner stallions, while both are waiting for a critical incoming radio transmission. Ramsey asserts that they are white, from Portugal, and are the "most highly trained horses in the world." Hunter, who rides horses, retorts that they are in fact from Spain and are born black. In the denouement, Ramsey admits his error.
Horse breeds | Fauna of Slovenia
Lipizzaner | Lipizzanhevonen | Lippizaner | Koń lipicański | Lipicanec | Lipizzaner
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