Some might suggest that a doorstopper about “the influence of the horse on human history” couldn’t possibly be interesting.
Neigh, say I. Neigh.
In fact, Timothy C. Winegard’s “The Horse” is fascinating, offering a fresh perspective on how crucial horses were in human development. And it almost didn’t happen.
Abrupt climate changes eons ago, at the end of the Ice Age, drove horses to the edge of extinction. The remnants of an animal once found through much of the world were then largely confined to an area that runs roughly from eastern Europe to Central Asia — where they were hunted for food.
(One of many interesting factoids I learned is that horse meat “contains 50% more protein and 30% more iron than the leanest of beef,” as well as vitamins and minerals and essential fatty acids.)
Still, Equus caballus might have gone the way of its brethren had it not been domesticated like cattle. Small corrals designed for milking mares have been uncovered. (Horse milk is far richer in vitamins than cow’s milk.) When someone — perhaps on a dare — decided to jump on the back of one of the more docile horses, it started “a revolution” that changed the world.
Riding horses helped farmers herd more sheep and goats and hunters cover more ground. When horses replaced oxen, their quicker gait allowed more land to be plowed, increased yields and changed subsistence farmers to commodity exporters.
Inevitably, horses became instruments of war, first pulling archers ensconced in chariots and then as mounts. The earliest known true cavalry formation belonged to the Assyrian king Tukulti-Ninurta II (ruled 890-884 BCE).