Horse Power: A History of the Horse and Donkey in Human Societies Review
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(More customer reviews)Why does a "history of the horse and donkey in human society" have some ten pages on prehistoric evolution? This points up a basic flaw of the book, that it wanders from one interesting point about equids to another that the author dug up in her researches, without either sticking to a limited or focused thesis, or being really comprehensive. I don't care what her academic credentials are, she doesn't seem to have actually both read and understood her sources. She shows the illustrations of ancient traction from Spruytte's *Early Harness Systems* which completely refutes any of LeFebvre's claims of inefficiency based on his phony "ancient traction" system (created to support his thesis on slavery) but then discusses LeFebvre without Spruytte. She shows a photo from Spruytte's reconstruction of Assyrian mounted archer's reining system, using a weighted tassle on the rein to maintain contact on the bit, and thereafter, to her, every big tassle is part of a similar control system, even when the tassle isn't attached to the reins. By her writing, she could never be mistaken for a horsewoman, or anyone who has bothered to read a book on horse breeds. Simply, she claims that the emergence of carriage use "led to demand for well-matched draught horses" and by the mid 1660's "the heavy horse had become established as a breed for use on the land, for haulage, and to carry the nobility in their armour." On the contrary, the development of carriages led to a demand for carriage horses, not draft horses, and by the mid 17th C. the nobility wore very little armor *even* just on ceremonial occasions and were riding the proto-Thoroughbreds, not cart horses and plow horses! If you've read everything else on horses, you may enjoy some of her new bits, like covering the size of ancient and medieval horses based on analysis of bones, but the book best serves as an annotated bibliography to her sources.
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A blend of natural and social history follows the role that the horse has played in shaping human progress from the evolution of the wild ass to the concept of using horses for labor and transportation.
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