The horse : a galloping history of humanity / Timothy C. Winegard.
"From the author of The New York Times bestselling The Mosquito, a sweeping account of the way the horse changed human history. The Horse is a chronicle of the horse's relationship with the peoples of the world, as a mode of transportation, a means of farming, a companion, and a weapon of war. It covers the profound impact of the species in an extraordinary story of evolution, revealing just how much of our existence we owe to this amazing animal. Six thousand years ago, humans domesticated the horse, and have relied on it as a key tool in everything from military influence to agriculture. The horse's strength and speed is crucial to its role in the history of humankind, lending a hand in expanding trade networks and colonial conquests, and acting as an agent of disease and even as a source of energy. Horses are markers of civilization, and their populations have been used to track people's movement and settlement around the globe. After the horse was introduced to the Americas by the Spanish during the Columbian Exchange, there was an immediate and total adoption of horse culture by Plains Indians, forever transforming the development of North America. Filled with fascinating revelations and insights, The Horse is a riveting narrative of the animal that has shaped the world as we know it today."-- Provided by publisher.
Record details
- ISBN: 9780735242784
- ISBN: 073524278X
- Physical Description: 1 online resource
- Publisher: Toronto : Allen Lane, 2024.
Content descriptions
General Note: | Includes index. |
Search for related items by subject
Genre: | Electronic books. History. |
Other Formats and Editions
- Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2024 July #1
Winegard, who teaches history at Colorado Mesa University, delivers a panoramic account of the horse, from its origins some 57 million years ago to its eventual pairing with humans to forge "the most dominant animal coalition ever witnessed. Along the way, readers are ever reminded of the horse's importance in human historyâfrom the consumption of its meat as a critical source of protein to its adoption as a weapon of war and its place in such consequential military campaigns as those of Alexander the Great and Genghis Khan, its place in the advancement of agrarian practices, its unfortunate role as a vector of such devastating human diseases as typhoid and influenza, and its very centrality in the shaping of the United States. Winegard gives ample time and space to laying out the historical contexts in which the horse was a central actor, all such contexts making for a book whose revelations about the once all-powerful human-horse dyad will continue to surprise. Copyright 2024 Booklist Reviews. - Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2024 June #1
Everything you ever wanted to know about the genus Equus. Until the rise of the automobile, humans were dependent on horses for transportation, "so paramount and pivotal to human society that we base our units of mechanical energy or engine output on horsepower." Winegard, author of The Mosquito, takes a long view of the horse's fortunes, suggesting that had it not been for human intervention, horses might well have gone extinct, with many former species now reduced to the common horse, Equus caballus, along with a small population of Przewalski's horse, Equus ferus przewalskii. (For fans of genetics, one distinction is that the latter has 66 chromosomes against the former's 64.) The author takes a kitchen-sink approach to his subject, with sometimes not quite digested and repetitive stocks of data and detail piled up on his pages. Even so, he turns in some good stories, such as the unfortunate choice of the Persian ruler Cyrus the Great to tangle with the Scythian horse masters of the Eurasian steppe, who likely turned his skull into a drinking bowl for his trouble. Another intriguing element is Winegard's account of how the horse returned to the Americas, where it had first evolved but, after crossing over the Bering land bridge into Asia, disappeared. Brought by the Spanish, the horse occasioned the rise of wide-ranging Indigenous warrior cultures on both continents. Perhaps most meaningful to the sensitive horse lover will be the author's look at the use of horses in World Wars I and II, with appalling losses that far surpassed those of humans: 8 million of 16 million horses in the Great War died, "the bloodiest conflict for horses in the history of warfare." Sometimes weighed down by too-abundant detail, but a thorough, comprehensive look at the horse across time and space. Copyright Kirkus 2024 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved. - Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2024 February
The best-selling author of
Copyright 2024 Library Journal.The Mosquito offers a history of human development as seen through the domestication of the horse, whose power and speed changed the course of global human history. Winegard explores this relationship across agriculture, trade networks, military actions, colonialism, and more. Prepub Alert. Copyright 2023 Library Journal