Equestrianism (from Latin
equester, equestr-, horseman, horse) more often known as riding, horseback riding (American English) or horse riding (British English) referring to the skill of riding,
driving, steeplechasing or vaulting with horses. This broad description
includes the use of horses for practical working
purposes, transportation, recreational activities, artistic or cultural
exercises, and competitive sport.
Horses are trained
and ridden for practical working purposes such as in police work
or for controlling herd animals on a ranch. They are also used
in competitive
sports including, but not limited to, dressage,
endurance riding, eventing,
reining,
show jumping,
tent pegging,
vaulting, polo, horse racing,
driving, and rodeo. (See additional
equestrian sports listed later in this article for more examples.) Some popular
forms of competition are grouped together at horse shows,
where horses perform in a wide variety of disciplines. Horses (and other equids such as mules and donkeys)
are used for non-competitive recreational riding such as fox hunting,
trail riding
or hacking. There is public access to horse trails in almost every part of the
world; many parks, ranches,
and public stables
offer both guided and independent riding. Horses are also used for therapeutic purposes, both in specialized
paraequestrian competition as well as non-competitive riding to improve human
health and emotional development.
Horses are also driven
in harness
racing, at horse shows and in other types of exhibition, historical reenactment or ceremony, often
pulling carriages.
In some parts of the world, they are still used for practical purposes such as farming.
Horses continue to be used in
public service: in traditional ceremonies (parades, funerals), police
and volunteer mounted patrols, and for mounted search and rescue.
History of horse use
Though there is controversy over
the exact date horses were domesticated and when they were first ridden,
the best estimate is that horses first were ridden approximately 3500 BC.
Indirect evidence suggests that horses were ridden long before they were
driven. There is some evidence that about 3,000 BC, near the Dnieper River
and the Don River, people were using bits
on horses, as a stallion that was buried there shows teeth wear consistent with
using a bit. However, the most unequivocal early archaeological
evidence of equines put to working use was of horses being driven. Chariot
burials about 2500 BC present the most direct hard evidence of horses used as working
animals. In ancient times chariot warfare was followed by the use of
war horses as light and heavy cavalry.
The horse played an important role throughout human history all over the world,
both in warfare and in peaceful pursuits such as transportation,
trade
and agriculture.
Horses lived in North America, but died out at the end of the Ice Age.
Horses were brought back to North America by European explorers, beginning with
the second voyage of Columbus in 1493.
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