EARLIEST HORSE RIDING CONTROVERSY CHALLENGED: Scientists say the answer is in the bones!
Nailing down when a human being first got on the back of a horse has been a point of contention in archaeology and anthropology for quite some time.
However, a group of scientist finally seem to have settled the argument and in this show, we’re going to talk about how they achieved this, why their results give us a far more reliable date for the advent of horse riding, what this might mean for our understanding of human history and the odd fact that the topic of early horse riding is not that widely talked about in the first place.
ORIGINAL PAPER: www.science.org/doi/10.1126/s...
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Пікірлер: 247
When I was 10 years old and taking English riding lessons, quite often the trainer had us riding bareback without reins to learn to control the horse with just our legs. On our ranch from a very young age, my cousins and I would catch our mule and ride her. No tack, no saddle and Butterfly would bite and kick every chance she got. None of that could keep us from wanting to ride her. My point is that the first riders were probably children sneaking up to and trying to ride anything they could. You certainly don't need to be riding a horse to catch one. I enjoy your channel thoroughly and send my thanks from the Sierras in California.
@erlinggaratun6726
3 күн бұрын
And the girls could continue to ride while the men grew too large, until larger breeds were attained..Amazons?
I am glad you guys mentioned Dan Davis. Really appreciated.
As a horseperson, I had that question rolling around in my brain for decades. Thank you!💝
1:32 "The paper is dryer than..." *Max Miller clicking hard tack.
I am obsessed with this topic and Steppe culture in general. A huge part of the history of Eurasia, and the world, starts in the Steppe, an on the backs of horses. Thank you! This topic is criminally overlooked.
@edelgyn2699
Жыл бұрын
The world? You may well be obsessed...
@kernowmaid5970
Жыл бұрын
I’m obsessed 😁
I have no credentials other than my 82 years of experience, including with horses. (I can still create a bridle out of leather straps and iron rings and a bit). On the matter of tack, while modern perspective tells us that horses were unable to compete with oxen until the invention of the horse collar, which cushioned the equine windpipe, in fact the martingale did a nearly good enough job before then. A martingale is a "Y" made of leather straps. Native Americans used horses to pull weight but did not have the wheel, (or horse collar) using a travois, a contraption of poles and straps they had previously used with dogs. I have read that the Scythians hitched horses to large wagons without making teams, using a distributed system still used by Inuit mushers with sled dogs. This has every beast of burden individually hooked to the vehicle in a sort of radial effect, the length of the individual strap managing the pattern of the group instead of the more familiar European teaming in pairs. Inuit mushers (dog drivers) did fine for centuries before we came along and told them they were doing it wrong. :-) There were many ancient ways to attach a beast to a load that came before modern methods. I am not surprised archaeology hasn't found much evidence. You can ride a horse with only a short loop of rope through its mouth. Or even by directing it with the pressure of your knees if you have its cooperation. Horses are much like dogs in their trainability and willingness. A friendly horse can even love you. .A short horse is easier to mount than a tall one., oh, and did the Botai perhaps suffer a horse plague?
@spacefertilizer
9 күн бұрын
Horses in America died out more than 11 000 years ago. I would be very surprised if the humans that arrived in North America had been able to domesticate them. Otherwise they would probably be still around.
Dan Davis does great work, top notch research.
Oh lord, monkeys riding pigs..but seriously, I certainly enjoyed this dialogue. Many things were brought up to ponder. More like this please.
@mattiasdahlstrom2024
Жыл бұрын
Friend of mine did ride on a pig as a kid , it was a hot day and the pig died of heatstroke! The kids dad had to pay the farmer…
@nilcarborundum7001
Жыл бұрын
@@mattiasdahlstrom2024 some monkey, that kid…
Just wanted to give a shout out to you both - the production quality on this video is top notch👏
@ThePrehistoryGuys
Жыл бұрын
Thank you Ben! Good to hear. M😊
Awesome reading ability, Rupert. Good humour.
Quite enjoyed this. It seems possible that some early people did not use bits but rather used something like a hackamore. It relies on a nose band that puts pressure on certain parts of a horse’s face. The pressure is released when the horse slows and/or stops. Saddles are helpful but not absolutely necessary for basic riding. Balance and leg pressure are key to telling a horse which direction to go. Shifting your weight towards the back of a horse slows it down. Watch barrel racers and dressage riders to see these moves perfected. As prey animals, horses move away from leg pressure. My wacko theory - a prepubescent girl was the first to ride a horse. It is reflected in the seemingly gender-related love of horses through millennia. Lol. I write this as someone who first began asking her parents for a horse at 3. Took them 10 years to come around. I never did own a saddle. I started with a bareback pad and soon discarded that in favor of plain old bareback.
@edelgyn2699
Жыл бұрын
'...gender-related love of horses...'?? Definitely wacko.
@nilcarborundum7001
Жыл бұрын
@@edelgyn2699 it's a well-reseached subject, actually
@SoberOKMoments
14 күн бұрын
@@edelgyn2699 Credit where credit is probably due. Little girls want a pony waaaaaay more than little boys do. I think Kerry's observation probably spot on!
One wheel-less device is the travois, which in North America was used with dogs before horses got introduced. They were made entirely from wood and leather.
@helenamcginty4920
2 ай бұрын
I think that is similar to what we called hurdles. Ive seen images from medieval book illustrations. Plus convicted felons (also martyrs) too tortured to walk or as an additionsl insult were dragged to the gallows on a hurdle. Always puzzled me when I was little.
Have you seen the German Archaeology Institute’s video on the invention of trousers. It ties in nicely with this research although the garment they investigate is later in date than the skeletons in this study.
@BaltimoresBerzerker
Ай бұрын
I loved that research documentary! They had specialists from a few different fields collaborate to recreate the earliest known trousers and explained why they developed the way they did.
A late comment as I just discovered this on the size of the horse. When I was much younger I rode horses that were often 16+ hands. I could even get on a 17 hand horse with my stirrups jumping length I.e. short. Now in my 70s I ride a 14.2 Arabian and most of the time I don’t even try without a mounting block which the veterinarians now say is better for the horse. The point is that even with my delicate little mare the change in perspective and power versus being on your feet is immense. There would have been great advantages to the average size person in riding a horse.
Almost three quarters of the westward emigrants in the US used wagons pulled by oxen, it's far more probable the Yamnaya carts/wagons were also driven by oxen. In fact, it's got me wondering now if the wheel came before the 'saddle' so to speak, being semi nomadic an ox drawn wagon would have been a great way to move their chattels across the steppes.
@helenamcginty4920
Жыл бұрын
Did they have any oxen available?
@LuisAldamiz
Жыл бұрын
Absolutely, except that horses and wagons are associated in burials.
@LuisAldamiz
Жыл бұрын
@@helenamcginty4920 - Of course. Cows were domesticated by the precursors of the mainline European Neolithic (proto-Vasconics) in Southern Anatoli and then spread around easily. Think Çatalhöyuk, but also think Balcanic Painted Potery culture, Starcevo, LBK, etc. all those and many others had cattle as domesticate. It's not as old as goats/sheep but still quite old.
@helenamcginty4920
Жыл бұрын
@@LuisAldamizthanks. Too lazy to look it up myself. 😊
@rialobran
Жыл бұрын
@@LuisAldamiz Only the ones that got buried...
Bless you and thank you from a long-time lover of prehistory, horse cultures, and horseback riding.
The teeth of a horse don't have wear from wearing a bit in their mouth. There is a convenient natural gap in their dentition where it sits. The bit hitting teeth makes for a VERY cranky riding horse, because it's really uncomfortable for them. My guess is that at first they were domesticated for food and milk. And here you have to take into account that unlike goats or sheep, you can not really herd your domestic horses on foot very well. My guess is that relatively early they started using corrals and halters for controlling them and then these nomads used the horses to drag their gear when they changed camps. And from there to putting their kids and immobile old people on their backs while the adults lead them to some adventurous kids trying to control them while sitting on their backs and do things like gallopping around on them should have happened pretty early in their domestication.
@ruthcherry3177
Жыл бұрын
Actually, the above post isn't quite accurate... some horses do show wear in their teeth from the incorrect use of metal bits. It is also worth noting that many horses have what are known as "wolf teeth", which sit inside that "natural gap" that so many do in fact have. Often these are associated with male horses but I have had 2 mares that had to have those "wolf teeth" removed before introducing them to a bridle with a bit. As a horse owner, breeder, and someone who took in and rehabilitated mis-used horses, I discovered quite a few types of bitless bridle. A Hackamore is incredibly powerful, and in the wrong hands can drop a horse to its knees (by stopping the intake of air through the nostrils). My favourite became the Scawbrig bridle, the use of which takes a skilled rider, as most of the communication comes through body-weight, coordination of hands and legs, as well as tapping of the heels and tugging on one rein or the other. There are many other bridles made from knotted rope, the knots can serve different purposes (pressure being applied to different spots), and of course they're infinitely customisable, depending on the shape and size of the horse's head. Having the use of metal certainly has nothing to do with the technology of horse riding and everything associated with the domestication of horses.
@Nembula
4 ай бұрын
@@ruthcherry3177 The native American war bridle springs to mind. I do not understand why the human factor is not taken into account. I know a lot of 13 year old girls and boys. An overtly friendly foal playing with the children would have been ridden as soon as it would stand for someone leaning over it. That they were first used, like the dog, for the travois' to allow a mother of toddlers to get stuff done.
@banananer16
3 ай бұрын
This statement isn't correct. I really suggest everyone check out the original research on bitwear analysis done by David Anthony and Dorcas Brown, where they carefully describe their methods of measuring and taking casts of ancient and modern teeth, including teeth of living horses. These researchers, as well as critics of their research AND the earliest people to use bits, are well aware of the ideal bit placement on the diastema (or "bars"), the gap between incisors/canines and the premolars. However, in order to avoid the pressure of the bit on the sensitive tissue of their gums, almost all horses develop the habit of lifting their tongue, rolling the bit back until it knocks against the anterior (front) surface of their first lower premolars. This is well-documented behavior, different from the phenomenon where some horses deliberately grasp the bit between their premolars to ignore rein signals and run away with the rider. The question here is to what degree the rolling of the bit causes damage to the anterior surfaces of PL1 teeth. Anthony, Brown, and others say that they've been able to measure distinct "bitwear bevels" on premolars to a degree that is not seen on unbitted horse teeth, while Levine, Bendry, and others argue that this could be natural wear present in all horses, or at least not caused by the earliest organic bits. As an archaeologist studying horses myself, I'm excited for the possibilities that bitwear studies may have in my part of the world (Japan) where the first bits were rather complex iron snaffle bits coming from the Korean peninsula. I understand some of the potential weaknesses and critiques of the analytical method, but I think it may have a lot to teach us about specific riding styles and bit use in the past.
@user-qe1tv1bu2f
22 күн бұрын
Well arnt U the clever one. People rode bare back and hadn't invented the reigns yet , possibly for ages to begin with. I'm sure a harness over nose and possibly a soft material was used in the mouth later at first. Forged steel for bits etc came way later. Anyway, to be honest who really gives a rats testicals who rode first, it doesn't serve us any usefulness knowing it was walker steppe ranger distant cousin of leprechaun green
@user-pt3gi5ul2e
16 күн бұрын
Wear on sides of crowns?
Writings from India would say they have been riding since 5,000 b.c.e. at very least. Their timelines are certainly skewed in some cases but still that entire culture raised cattle and drove chariots. Will be fascinating to see how far back they do go.
@AutoReport1
Жыл бұрын
The Indo-Aryans who spread into India were a branch of the Yamnaya. The early vedas give us some of the oldest written insight into the broader culture.
You say 'oriented' not '-tated'. Thank you for being so well read.
The history of the human race was written from the back of the horse. As an old horse lady I can attest to a lot of my aches and pains now in my hips and back can be attributed to riding as teen and 20 something.
@andriesscheper2022
3 ай бұрын
It's possible that they rode elephants and ostriches before that... But whatever: writing appears quite late in human history and even Genghis Khan didn't write that much...
That sentence at the start was in English but may as well have been in ancient Persian for all I understood it.
@amberliseleger900
Жыл бұрын
😅
I must strongly disagree with the assesment on Botai: it doesn't matter if they spread or remained in their country and if the Indoeuropeans copied them (most probably) before exterminating them (also very likely), what matters is if they domesticated the horse... and they did. Also what about the Magdalenian horses with harnesses depicted in some atltals? What about onager or ass domestication (with carts) in Mesopotamia? What about the quite apparent independent domestication in or near Iberia?
@cathjj840
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing your thoughts about the Botaï, etc.
Most people who ride horses started as children, and children with easy contact with horses pretty much inevitably climb aboard one way or another. Clanestinely, because adults (horse owners or not) have their own ideas about the use of their horses, and having a bunch of little kids playing with them, interfering with their milk production, their training, their availability for whatever use the adults want. And kids do die of messing with horses, so parents may just want to keep their kids safe. But I'm convinced that the first person on the back of a horse was a child. And that person may have broken an arm falling off and chosen not to ride again...until some other kid did. The psychological effect on a child who first gets on a horse is far more important to them than whatever's happening to their pelvic bones and femurs. I remember clearly being lifted up onto a horse the first time--it's my only memory for that early--I was no longer studk on the ground looking at the backs of adults legs at about knee level. I could see over them. I was told later I had to be forceably removed from the saddle, and every subsequent time I got on one, I felt the same way. "No evidence of horses in battle" is NOT a reason to think that nobody rode before soldiers did. And they could be used "aggressively" as soon as you were in a chariot behind them, not necessarily on them. But climbing on the first time *successfully* is more likely with a child than an adult. Look at child bones.
Perhaps the origin of the Centaur in legends?
We can “observe” how non-metal using cultures adapted to using horses and what tack they used, plus methods of use by looking at the moments when First Nations peoples of the American plains started using the horses they adopted. Of course they would have witnessed the Spaniards astride their mounts so they would have known this was possible, but acquiring the animals alone, without the metal bits and bridles meant they would have to adopt methods of control that used natural materials which would leave no archaeological trace. And they utilized the animals as draft resources though they lacked wheeled vehicles as another comment or has suggested. Ultimately any serious warfare that is successfully done from horseback requires controlling the horse WITHOUT reins of any sort because you need both hand to effectively wield weapons. Perhaps getting to the field of battle is helped by having tack, but one in the battle itself previous training and leg aids/cues as well as verbal commands is how it was probably done…at least by the winners! We should not overlook the spiritual/mystical dimensions either of this great transition. Yes, cattle/oxen are marvelous for moving great weight or for cultivating a landscape, but the speed that a human achieves by being “one” with a horse is an entirely different dimension. Cattle basically move at the same speed as humans, as do all the other domesticated creatures, but horses (and Reindeer) add an almost mystical aura to the humans who manage to sit astride such creatures and move with them, without objection from the animal. Having control OVER such a force of power gives one status, just as those who could coax metal from stones and fire would be seen to possess magical skills. The horse that is ridden is allowing a union of spirit that we still recognize to this day whether it is us riding or if we are watching…. It still is a thing of magic and mystery that these powerful creatures allow themselves to be ridden by puny humans.
@cathjj840
Жыл бұрын
Another poster mentioned cattle bred for racing in India since many thousands of years ago. Don't know if they're mounted.
Vikings rode horses to the place of battle. Then leapt off and fought on foot. I believe the English did the same
@LuisAldamiz
Жыл бұрын
Total sense.
@nilcarborundum7001
Жыл бұрын
@@LuisAldamiz The "Saxon" English did, apparently - which is why they lost to the Norman cavalry at the Battle of Hastings in 1066
I think wagons with oxon were the vans and trucks but horses were the cars and bikes
Thanks for your videos. 1) Have you ever seen cattle dogs working? Far more efficient than humans. Small-medium sized, quiet, responding to whistled commands, not much different from the English sheep herding collies. 2) Suggest that the bit was a later development after the bridal: basically, an evolved better method of control.
Boy! You get up in the morning and how can you predict you are going to see a video of monkeys joy riding on pigs!!! So much fun!
Thank you for this one. I've been telling this story for about five years now and it's very refreshing to see archeology and geneology confirming it.
I have seen more than one country kid jump on a pig and ride away. Because pigs can grow so very large, and are so intelligent, is it possible that we are missing a very large field of probability in failing to research pig riding as an aspect of early human behavior? (It is possible that thinking of this means that I really need to get out more and stop living in my head so much.)
@Lora-G
Жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing Re: goat and sheep herders
I don't think donkeys were ever mentioned, but donkeys preceded horses, e.g. in Egypt, where horses became prevalent only about the time of the Second Intermediate Period (approx. 1800-1550 BC), when chariots became fashionable among the very wealthy and powerful, and art depicting horse RIDING appears only about 1300 BC. Oddly, stirrups became common only in the 4th to 8th centuries AD. Still, the humble donkey needs his history to be told...
A great conversation to listen to. I'd heard of the study but haven't read it yet so this was perfect
Being able to ride a horse would revolutionise life on the prarie/steppe. The distances are mind boggling and intimidating for a human reduced to walking.
Thanks for the info guys.
Very interesting. Enjoyed listening.
I was very interested to know more when this research was released, particularly about how they decided what the signs of riding on the skeleton would be? The ancient people would have been riding without anything resembling a modern saddle, and without stirrups, which would leave very different skeletal changes to those seen in modern day riders. Also, the idea that the only way you can catch horses is from the back of a horse is amusing. No, you won't get near a wild horse if you just go running at it it like the bald ape that you are; but if you take the time to watch the herd, understand how they interact, learn how they talk to each other, and how to mimic that behaviour - you'll get a hell of a lot closer. Maybe close enough to herd them into an enclosed space where they can be caught more easily. Which is what they probably did when first domesticating them. I do think that the "monkeys riding pigs" story is relevant though! Imagine a couple of teenagers watching their herd, getting bored and competing to see who can stay on a horse for the longest. And, as you say, the horses were small so could probably be leapt onto from the ground. I'd really love it if archaeologists would talk to animal behaviourists about things like this, without understanding horses how can you imagine their beginnings in our lives?
@royseibel511
Жыл бұрын
Look up “Kites” sorta capture corrals
Are you guys sure that Spike Milligan didn’t write that first part you read
Fantastic stuff!
Very good point!.. Horses are NOT very good on the battlefield unless they are used in very specific ways. At the battle of the Little Big Horn the seventh cavalry had to dismount and one of every four soldiers had to move to the rear with four horses. Shooting a bow or rifle from a horse is very problematic and the cultures that were good at it took generations to get that way. The fact that horses won't run into a line of sharp sticks or bayonets is part of the reason the battle of Waterloo was lost. I believe the first ancient Egyptian depictions of chariots showed them being used solely as transportation to the field of battle.
@LuisAldamiz
Жыл бұрын
That doesn't mean they are not used for mobility. Mounted infantry was important.
@flipflopski2951
Жыл бұрын
@@LuisAldamiz Pointed rocks are important too... but not until you figure out how to use them.
@LuisAldamiz
Жыл бұрын
@@flipflopski2951 - Mounted infantry is not "pointed rocks". If you know anything re. military history, you should know that the age of knights is short and overrated, that the almogavars (mounted infantry) were slaughtering cataphracts (heavy cavalry, knights) well into the Middle Ages even before the age of pikes, longbows, etc. had any development or effect.
@flipflopski2951
Жыл бұрын
@@LuisAldamiz Pikes are pointed sticks. You know that right?
@LuisAldamiz
Жыл бұрын
@@flipflopski2951 - He said "pointed rocks", in clear reference to Paleolithic/Neolithic weaponry.
Great subject :). Thank you for making.
Thanks guys appreciate you both
The Armenian wagon implies that the wheel was invented in the Caucasus and further developed by the Indo-European speakers in the Caucasian steppe. By this time however the Anatolian branch had already moved south and adopted their own independent terminology (applications of the same roots to different components). Horses convert grass to milk, freeing them from the river valleys, and lighter horse drawn wagons gave them the mobility to exploit that.
“Cropped up.” Tee hee.
I was the first to ride, and I did it tens of millions of years ago. I was riding so long ago that the horses had three toes. I also tried to ride an ancient epycamilis (ancient camel speies), Hesperotestudo (a type of tortious... was too slow), the type of rhino which we had back then, and some kinds of birds. The birds were too small, and always ended up getting crushed. I stuck with the horse, which evolved to be bigger, and ended up having only one hoofed toe.
Ages ago I was reading something about horses and Native Americans. The received wisdom was that Native Americans did not have horses until the arrival of Europeans. Native Americans always said this wasn't actually the case. I think archaeology, evidence on horse bones and carbon dating proved that Native Americans were correct all along, although they always said the Spanish arriving meant more horses as well as a different type of horse in some areas. A lot of this new evidence was driven by more Native Americans getting into academia and archaeology and looking at things from a less Eurocentric point of view. I've heard so many white Americans say that there isn't really any history in their country pre-1600s, as if the continent didn't exist until they got there. It does remind me of the Inuit who knew all along pretty much exactly where some Polar explorer's lost ship was, but Europeans dismissed it as oral history was regarded as unreliable and (if I remember rightly) relied on documentary evidence which was shown in hindsight to be wrong.
This post should curry the favor of your wider audience. 😁
My favourite archeologist Brian Cunliffe first had me interested in this subject and the Scythians. Very interesting discussion ❤️
Knowing how we humans are, the first time we spied one of those things at full tilt, we must have said to ourselves I wanna jump on the back of one. You can just hear the camp fire conversation: ' So Jim what happened to your arm?' Jim; ' Horse mate' Oh really you got attacked by a horse, thats unusually?! No mate I tried to get on the back of one today!! Bahhahahaa
Fascinating discussion. Wish I’d found it earlier. I’ve been interested in this topic since reading David Anthony’s book which is a must if you want to understand the succession of cultures in this region. But listening to you talking about warrior expansion versus a peaceable group with a technological edga + plague, you sparked off an idea in my mind, which is that maybe the significance of the waggon/horse culture in this region is that it may be the first development of the classic nomad steppe way of life. Expansion and warfare associated with this culture would be secondary ( and I don’t believe in any totally peaceful societies) and contingent on factors eg plague or political disputes at the time. Interested in your thoughts on this.
Yamnaya men replaced neolithic men but not the women. So it can't have been plague.
you guys are top notch
Hit the nail on the head! Horses are heard animals; getting on a horse to ride one allows the herd to follow easier.
This was great, thank you sirs! I hope you and yours are doing well and getting some spring weather!
@ThePrehistoryGuys
Жыл бұрын
Thanks, you too!
It occurred to me whilst watching that: it would be clearer to say that... The researchers demonstrated that the most frequently observed pathology, experienced by modern day horse riders. Can be observed in skeletal remains dating back to 3000 bce.
Thanks.
its a difficult subject as all horses originated in the Americas and all horses alive to day are from domesticated stock, there are no wild horses living today - any that you might think are wild are effectively feral.
@helenamcginty4920
Жыл бұрын
Gosh. I did vaguely know that there had been horses in America in prehistory but that they had died out. Had no idea they had originated there before spreading westward to the Asian steppes. Thanks. Love adding new titbits of knowledge to my brainstore.
@roxiepoe9586
Жыл бұрын
So...when the Spanish came ashore with horses, the locals might have been waiting for that very thing? Okay. I looked it up. Nobody's great - great- great whomever would be old enough to remember them.
@cathjj840
Жыл бұрын
@@roxiepoe9586 Also, they were very, very small when they became extinct there.
@michaelfritts6249
Ай бұрын
You need to be a bit more specific. There are no horses in the americas that did not come from previously domesticated stock. Some species of horses migrated from the americas to asia, possibly as early as 2+ miillion years ago. The last horses in the americas (before western domesticated breeds arrived and some became feral) went extinct between 6,000 and 11,000 BCE.. The first human migrations (each time the opportunity arose) began probably 100,000 years ago.. and quite possibly watched some species of horses moving west as they spread east into the americas. Each time the Bering land bridge or shoreline (including small boat) was possible.. people used the opportunity. There was never a "One Way" sign.. Back and forth.. Glaciers and ice formed and retreated.. humans and animals used those opportunities.. humans more easily, as horses and other animals don't make boats.. Be Well!! 😃
The Mummies of Ürümchi clearly had riding breeches and some of the effigies in Mal'ta Burket seemed to have had breeches that could be interpreted that way. The Mal'ta Burket people also lived with horses. However, the people of the Train region fell well into the time frame of 4000 BCE, the Mal'ta Burket people were twenty thousand years before that. I think that horseback riding definitely required breeches. You wouldn't ride Lady Godiva style before saddles came about.
@zeideerskine3462
Жыл бұрын
Tarim region, not train region - of course.
Thank you so much for the knowledge contained herein. I will say it's the closest to feeling like I was reading a pre-screen reference book, on youtube. The data's useful, the pages turn slowly, you re-read the last page as you've been wondering about lunch recipes and not absorbed it... I don't mean to be mean or give anyone anything more than feedback. For the format, KZread, this needs more signposting, one of you needs to be summarising the other at least, and if you could revisit your major points in the conclusion that also would be progress.
@1234cheerful
Жыл бұрын
Y' know, chapters in the video and a list in description would be awesome! More work for the editor, though.
You guys are a bit of calm relief this stormy zeitgeist
@ThePrehistoryGuys
Жыл бұрын
Oh thank you Rita! Nice to hear that we tip the balance a bit the other way. M😊
My dad was raised on horses on the family ranch. He was slightly bow legged as he quit riding when he left home. Not knowing technical terms, was that covered in catagory 1?
It would probably have taken hundreds of years before rare horse riding developed to relatively common horse riding.
They will also find that a rider's lower back and pelvis will have signs of arthritic problems. There will be signs of strain in elbows and shoulders.
Dan Davis does a fine job, so do you guys!
In my humble opinion, mankind that was smart enough to harness fire, make clothing from animal hides and plant or animal fibers, make weapons using rock, flint, wood and whatever was available to them at the time, could also domesticate a horse not only for its meat and hide but to use them as pack animals and eventually ride them. Look at how fast the American Indians utilized horses when they first came into contact with them, especially in North America. They didn't need a leather harness to use on them but first used rope. They used the horses to pull the travois loaded with their belongings when traveling. Possibly putting a young child on the horse when the child got tired from walking. The Indians when they did ride horses did not use any harness or saddle. They just grabbed the mane, pulled themselves up on the horse and used their knees and feet to guide the horse. Who's to say that the ancient Europeans didn't use horses this way also. If they migrated often, they might not have left any pictorial images of how they used horses. Again, this is just my thought on the subject.
It occurred to me that every civilization learned how to ferment something to catch a buzz. With that “creativity” of thought, why wouldn’t they look at a house and say “that thing pulled my on my butt for an hour when we caught it, wonder if it could pull a log?” The jump to the idea of riding it wouldn’t be far behind IMHO. I can hear the conversation around the hut after a bit of ferment “hey guys, watch this!” God knows it only took me and my friends 3 weeks after getting our drivers license to tie a rope to the back of a car and drag each other around a dirt lot on a bit of carpet. Humans are predictable.
I think a key group in the spread of horse culture were the cimmerians. I believe they were scattered by the Scythians, not just chased southwards towards Assyria, but also pressed north and west-ward. Thus we get thraco-cimmerians, celto.cimmerians and the kimbri in jutland. I wish there was more research into these three cultures and their DNA..
Check out the Russian Troika. Three horses abreast, taking up more room than the width of the vehicle being pulled.
Like a few others commenting here, I'm wondering about the necessity, or not, of "tack" - viz. bareback riding on the one hand, and the "travois" as a precursor to carts & chariots on the other. Utility is given by both. Both would leave almost no trace to inform archaeology. - Bareback riding can surely be as efficient in day to day farming & herding as using saddles, but the travois is, I can only imagine, " a drag" in comparison with carts or chariots? And as others have succinctly pointed out, the carts pulled by cattle are the trucks or pickups, and the horses are the Porsches and speedbikes…. as much for the usefulness of speed as for making a (hopefully) grand impression.
I bet it's closer to 10,000 years ago when people started riding
It is likely that the use of waggons was an innovative advance from the use of a litter, as shown in recent times by the quick adaption to horses by the American Plains Indians, from riding (no saddle), through to using an improvised litter (made from their teepee poles when moving camp.
The Sami were my first thought when I was younger, as our first 'riders' - until I discovered how late the reindeer became a domesticated part of their culture, beyond just another prey animal. Edit: Just imagine the first 'Cavalry' group of 6 hairy grunts on Goats riding into some tent village...
Likely as per cowboys, riding horses would have been for the purpose of herding and corralling horses and cattle. Riding horses for military purposes would have developed much later, as mastery of controlling horses was required if one was also to wield weapons from horseback. If you look at the best known warriors of the past, the Greek hoplites, the Roman legionaries, the Vikings, the Samurai, and soldiers into the modern era, most were footsoldiers. Sure, there were the Persian horse archers, the Hittite and Egyptian chariot soldiers, and cavalry up to the early 20th century, but warfare on horseback was usually to gain a tactical advantage. It was rarely ever the modus operandi of battle. Effectively, you don't need proof of warfare on horseback to prove people were riding horses.
Another point. The researchers are asserting claims of showing some of, if not the, earliest horse riders based on skeletal injuries and differences. However, absence of evidence is NOT evidence of absence. Both Neanderthals and early Homo sapiens suffered a lot of head and neck injuries (and spine injuries) suggestive of rising as well. How is it that Neanderthals existed across such a broad range. They clearly ate horse and reindeer. So they were associated with both. Might they have ridden Przewalski's Horses? And what of the three (or more) species of Denisovans? I see no reason to presume that any of these species and even Homo Erectus did not ride horses or other similar animals. There is no evidence apparently of domestication per se. But that also does not imply they didn’t opportunistically use horses in this way.
I've wonder if mammoth or other megafauna bones to see if we were riding them, too?
I see the Yamnya as the Comanches of the step.
I think you'd enjoy watching/listening to KZread video "The Invention of the Trousers" by Deutsches Archaogisches Institut. It seems that the earliest trousers have been found in areas inhabited by horse-riding people. I wince thinking about riding in a kilt.
Horse riding, like the wheel: started independently in several places. I agree with you: not using it in war is not proving they were not ridden. At first, horses were used in a livestock situation. Warring does not have to come into the equation because it is not the normal everyday. Animals and plants are the normal everyday. The war thing is hindsight!!
I am fairly new to your KZread channel and I love the info and variety of topics you give. I was wondering if you have a video of books to read on all the ancient cultures or if you would consider doing video on this. Thanks. Love watching y'all and the laughs that comes with it.😊
This sort of science should come with a warning such as 'there are 700 million square miles of ground where horses and people have roamed and we found a 20m square place where we found a horse skelton and have decided that this was the time that humans first rode a horse here at this time, (but we haven't searched the rest of land)' haha
Horses and riders still need special training to not bolt or panic when threatened. Remember they are herbivores with a long history of escaping from predators. So we shouldn't be surprised if horses were being ridden, pulling travois, or just being on a rein and leading in other animals for centuries before going to war. Even if you haven't worked out how to ride a horse or get her to pull a travois, a mare on a rein can lure stallions to your spears each time she goes on heat.
I would be curious to know what the geographical distribution of skeletons evidencing equestrianism would be through time.
I was going to say these guys should rein in their horseplay, then they added a rider.
I don't think Yamnaya were peaceful at all. Sometimes a lack of archaeological evidence is significant, but there could be a myriad reasons why the skeletons we have in this case lack evidence of suffering violence (corpses of the dead left behind in enemy territory, burial sites compromised by revenging enemies, different mortuary rites depending on the mode of death leading to sampling bias, sampling bias from the class associations of the kurgan burials, etc.). David Anthony, an expert on the Yamnaya, does think they were violent. I think their violent attitudes are well-reconstructed, through their identification as the Proto-Indo-Europeans. I'm sure the plague played a role in the Yamnaya expansion, but I don't think the Yamnaya just walked in to settle in depopulated lands. There was considerable admixture with European farmers, especially mediated through farmer women.
21:15 You still haven't mentioned chariots. Cavalry calls for a _prevalence_ of horsemanship, quantities of horses and riders. I agree that riding should have been tied to herding before cavalry. I used baling twine tack sometimes. The pony did get cooperative enough to do that using a curb bit, I guess.
Oddly the red area on the map at 12.17 resembles a horse🐎heading east xxx
When the Botai failed some survivors might have taught horse riding to a Yamnaya tribe.
Wagons don't make much sense with horses unless you have some kind of roads.. it would be very tricky, if you look at even the "flat" terrain in that area of the world. It makes much more sense that horses would be pack animals. Short stocky strong horses can carry a *lot*. (In areas with snowy winters you could use sledges.. just as was/is done with the reindeer you mentioned)
Did common horse riding arise out of mammoth extinction, in part? Was it first a stunt involved in hunting or racing?
Why is it that some people can not understand that others are much more apt at trying things... Making mistakes, getting back on the horse and trying again? This is ridiculous. When i was a child we rode horses all the time without halters or bridles... We clung to the mane. Granted the horses were small but none the less we rode them. The only issue is when the horse is larger... I believe that the researcher needs to do much more homework... This is stupid. I... Me... rode a deer when I was young - not because it was tame but because I believed it was possible and so I mounted it. Another thing is people who are around horses "KNOW" horses. Ludicrous idea that some idiot gets an idea and sets out to prove it without knowing anything about the subject. Talk to horse people first! then set about investigating. The same applies to dogs, dolphins, sharks, etc, etc, etc, Science is BS in most hands! Horses and Humans have a relationship virtually as long as dogs and Humans. Given particular areas and wildlife I'm sure there are many relationships with other useful animals. Some below mentions 10K years - that of course pre supposes the 10k figure is accurate for human mobility. I doubt that number and lean towards the 30 k numbers. Why are they focussed on the BIT? Cows are still used today without a BIT.
I agree that it would be completely inappropriate to label the spread of the Yamnaya culture as an Empire there really would be no groups with the Organization and uniformity to be called an empire before the romans (at least in Europe) that was partly why the romans were so effective. The Yamnaya were a loose group of tribal confederations at best and their spread was really more like forceful immigration than conquest.
16:23 That was rude! They were perfectly formed ponies. Small is beautiful!
bit, leaps, rider, gait, ranging, cropped, chase, tend, outliers, spread, trundling, gray, field, range, trace, length, galloping, gate
I’m waiting for someone to say “bowlegged.” No?
@cathjj840
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Several have, but about their own recent relatives.
I loved the intro 🤣🤣🤣
Do we suppose that early people had no empathy for animals and lacked mental ability to domesticate them? or accept that our ability to, must have taken place in earliest history
I’d like to point out that people did NOT have to be horseback to catch horses. If they knew where the wild horses grazed, they could build a trap, then line up a number of people around the herd and walk toward the horses, effectively driving the herd into the trap.
@janetgrahamtheberge4772
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Also want to mention how much I enjoy your banter as you enlighten us.
Would explain the expansion of the corded ware and beaker people
Don't hold me to the true facts (South Africa, north of the Magalies mountains), but there was a conflict between the boer and the natives (I think it was the Tswanas) in the 1800's. The Tswanas noticed the advantage the boer had on horse back, so they decided to attack on their cows. But soon as the cows smelled blood, they fled and stampeded most of there own riders.
Cribrous ! I'll use that.