Skip to main content

IMC 2022: Sessions

Session 1706: Breeds, Types, or Functions?: Horse Terms in Medieval Documents

Thursday 7 July 2022, 14.15-15.45

Sponsor:Trivent Medieval
Organiser:Anastasija Ropa, Department of Management & Communication Science, Latvian Academy of Sport Education, Riga
Moderator/Chair:Timothy Dawson, Independent Scholar, Leeds
Paper 1706-aMedieval Equine Breeds: Equine Breeding in Medieval Sources
(Language: English)
Clothilde Noé, CItés, TERritoires, Environnement et Sociétés (CITERES - UMR 7324), Université de Tours
Index terms: Administration, Social History
Paper 1706-bDefining the Hackney: Type, Terminology, and Translation
(Language: English)
John Clark, Museum of London
Index terms: Administration, Daily Life, Social History
Paper 1706-cThe Hobelar: Form and Function
(Language: English)
Andrew Ó Donnghaile, Department of History National University of Ireland Galway
Index terms: Military History, Social History
Abstract

Destriers, coursers, rounceys, amblers, hackneys, and many others are all the words that are used in medieval documents to refer to distinct horses. For medieval people, at any given time and place, the difference between, for instance, a destrier and a courser, was probably relatively clear. For modern scholars, these terms are the source of confusion and considerable controversy. The papers in this sessions explore the relation between breeds, functions, and designations for both elite and non-elite horses in European documents, and the relationship between horses of different types and their riders.