Page:Horse shoes and horse shoeing.djvu/238

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.

CHAPTER V.

shoeing among eastern nations. brand-mark of circassian horses. lycian triquetra. the hegira. tartar horse-shoes. the koran. introduction of shoeing to constantinople. arab traditions and customs. arab shoes, and management of the hoofs. syrian, algerian, and moorish shoes. horses on a journey. instinct of arab horses. arab method of shoeing. comparison between french and arab methods. cenomanus. strong hoofs. muscat. portugal, spain, and transylvania. central asia. john bell and tartar tombs. marco polo. cossacks. tartar songs. peking and its neighbourhood. chinese shoeing. shoeing bullocks. north american indians and parflêche.

At what period Eastern nations first began to apply an iron defence to their horses' feet, and attach it by nails, it is impossible to fix with certainty. An anonymous writer in the United Service Magazine for 1849, quotes the form of the most ancient Asiatic horse-shoe as being exemplified in the brand-mark of a renowned breed of Circassian or Abassian horses, known by the name of Shalokh.

fig. 68

'The shape is perfectly circular, and instead of being fastened on by means of nails driven through the corneous portion of the hoof, it is secured by three clamps (fig. 68), that appear to have been closed on the outside, or on the ascending surface. Of