Home of the Wild Descendants of the Conquistadors Andalusian War Horses

in #photography7 years ago

While flying and exploring the area west of the Grand Canyon National Park along the Colorado River I was heading southbound over the Highland Range (part of the Mojave Desert). The could formation was really beautiful and as I looked back to the east I came upon this scene.

Those mountains in the distance along the horizon are known as the Music Mountains, the Cerbat Mountains and the Peacock Mountains. In between the Cerbat and Peacock ranges there lies a large prairie valley known as the Sacramento Valley.


The Wild Andalusian Horses of the Cerbat Mountains

What is very interesting about this area is that this is the home of the purest blood descendants of the original horses brought to the new world by Spanish conquistadors, the Andalusian. According to DNA testing, the wild horses of the Cerbat Mountains of northwest Arizona are among the purest descendants of these Spanish horses.

According to Author Marc Simmons in “The Last Conquistador,” the conquistadors rode only stallions, as they did not believe geldings could stand up to the work demanded of them. War horses that survived the conquest of the Americas were often retired to stud farms. The horses of the conquistadors were from Andalusia, a province in southern Spain.

Registration of horse breeds was not common until the Eighteenth Century (1700's), but horsemen of that era would have always been aware of their horses’ original breeding. The Andalusian favored by the conquistadors was a cross between the North African Barb brought to Spain by the Moors and the indigenous horses of the Spanish Iberian Peninsula.

Andalusian horses were smaller than the northern types, 800-1,000 pounds, but they could bear one-third their body weight. They were known to possess courage, loyalty, stamina, and survive extreme conditions. In two years, from 1519 to 1521, Andalusian horses enabled the infamous conquistador Hernán Cortés to conquer Mexico. 

Most First Nations Native people were terrified of horses when they first encountered them. But the Athabaskan-speaking people, Navajo (Dine, Hopi) and Apache, saw the horse as a valuable tool and considered it a gift from the Creator. 

Only 100 years after the Conquest of Mexico, American Indians were riding and trading Spanish horses to other tribes across the Southwest. It is likely that the first Native people to have and use horses were Apaches and Jumanos, who inhabited the country that is now the American Southwest. 

Tribal people did not capture and tame wild Spanish mustangs that “drifted” north from Mexico, as some have said. Horses were driven north. There is no other explanation for the speed with which horses diffused across what is now the United States.
(Research Source)

 Mustangs are descendants of Spanish, or Iberian, horses that were  brought to the Americas by Spanish explorers in the 16th century. The  name was derived from the Spanish word mustengo, which means “ownerless  beast”.  Once escaped, these horses evolved without the influence of man  and through survival of the fittest, evolved into the incredibly  durable and tough breed we know today. The word Mustang or Wild Horse is  used interchangeably.
(Research Source


First Nations Tribes Embrace the Horse

Following the Spanish invasion and conquest, missions, mines and ranches spread north from Mexico City along the eastern and western sides of the Sierra Madre mountain range. New Spain was enormously wealthy, and the wealth was entirely dependent on slave labor. Spanish soldiers and parties of “slavers” hunted down First Nations Native people on the northern frontier in the 1500s and 1600s, forcing thousands into slavery. It was a lucrative business. 

Tribal people were used as farm and ranch laborers, household servants, road builders, miners and prostitutes in New Spain and the Rio Grande colonies in Nuevo Mexico. So many Apache slaves were captured, they had very little value and were considered “expendable.” It was during this era that all free Apache bands declared war on Spaniards “forever.” 

Slaves were forbidden to ride or own horses. However, need preempted law and Spanish haciendados taught their Indian slaves to handle horses and care for livestock. Apache people learned quickly, but were anything but docile slaves. As they escaped their Spanish masters, they took horses and livestock north with them. 

Keep in mind North America was one huge unfenced “open range.” Livestock ownership was determined not by place but by brand. To hold their livestock, Spanish ranchers had to have riders in the saddle constantly. They were vulnerable to attacks by Apaches who killed them and took their herds. Natives learned horsemanship from captive Mexicans and other Natives. 

Within a very short time, Jumano Natives traded horses to the Comanche and Kiowa, to Texas, Gulf Coast, Florida and the Carolinas. Comanches traded with the Plains tribes. Navajos and Apaches traded with tribes of the Great Basin, Rockies and southern Plains. From Apacheria, these horses would escape and the wild herds spread north on the east and west sides of the Rockies. 

The largest single influx of Spanish horses to the Southwest occurred in 1680 during the Pueblo Revolt in New Mexico. The Pueblo people and their allies forced out the Spanish, killing about 400 priests and colonists. They left behind thousands of cattle, sheep and horses that were driven off by Navajo and Apache horsemen. 

Spanish horses had reached tribes in Kentucky and Georgia by 1700 where they intersected with English horses that had been coming to the colonies since 1609. By 1750 the Spanish horse had reached Calgary, Canada, and not long after that, northern California. 
(Research Source)


Land of the Purest Wild Andalusians

This image above shows the stunningly beautiful wilderness area where the remaining descendants of those original Spanish Andalusians still roam free. You can imagine these majestic animals throughout these hills, an iconic symbol of the American Wild West and a proud but convoluted heritage going back centuries.  

I lensed this photograph while flying and exploring the wilderness area between the First Nations Hualapai Reservation that sits aside the Grand Canyon West and the huge Mojave Desert which expands from California through Nevada into Arizona.


Where Eagles Fly 

This is another awesome image from my ongoing project in which I am trying to raise awareness of the 47%  of the USA and 90% of Canada that remain unpopulated wilderness.  

Where Eagles Fly - The American Wilderness Expedition is my personal mission to introduce people to these amazing locations that surround us.  

If you like what you see here upvote) then resteemit so that others may experience these wondrous places as well. And if you'd like these images to be part of your feed then follow me.  Yehaw!!   





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Fantastic photo... Love the landscape... Especially clouds...

Superb! You really outdid yourself with this photo and post. Thank you for posting this.

Excellent! Glad you liked it

Excellent post, my friend! Thank you for sharing this. I love the photo too.

Excellent photography.I like it.Thanks for sharing your post.I read your Story .I like it.

Thanks so much! Glad you like it and I appreciate your support.

Incredible photo! Keep up your good work skypilot ! :) Cheers!

Thanks Deborah!

Great history lesson. Do you know all this, or do you research the material before you write?

No I research the locations I film and then try to find interesting unknown, little heard of or simply forgotten history for each location. I am really intrigued by the really interesting things I find in my research.

This a very wonderful story you have written

Thanks so much!

Andalusian horses come from Andalucia in Spain.

Yes they do, if you have read the article this is about their descendants who have become wild horses living around Cebat Mountains in Arizona.

I know you can write a very good story. Your sky image is very awesome. Thanks for your story.