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The
Trakehner Horse ~ A History
by Patricia
Goodman
It has been said
that the Trakehner has everything everybody is looking for in a
performance horse, and indeed, the breed's list of attributes
certainly leads one to believe it. Trakehner's have size, bone,
and correctness of conformation, yet are extremely breedy and
beautiful. They are very athletic, with magnificent movement
that is comfortable, balanced, and free. And best of all, they
have an ideal temperament - keen and alert, yet level-headed and
able to take intense work. The popularity of this breed is
growing at an astounding rate.
So what is this
Trakehner? Where does it come from and what is it all about? The
correct name for the breed is "the East Prussian Warmblood Horse of
Trakehner Origin." It is one of the oldest European warmblood breeds
with a history that reaches back more than 400 years. The breed is
based on a small local East Prussian horse, the "Schwaike", of
phenomenal endurance and versatility which, throughout the years,
had been crossed with various larger "imported" stallions to provide
mounts for warfare, for general transportation and for agricultural
work.
In the early 18th century, King Friedrich Wilhelm I of Prussia, the
father of Friedrich the Great, began to see the need for a new type
of cavalry mount for the Prussian army. War tactics had changed and
now required a lighter, more comfortable horse with more endurance
and speed than the heavier horses previously needed to carry armor
and haul heavy equipment.
The king wanted horses for his officers to
ride, attractive enough to make them proud, solid enough to stay
sound, with a comfortable, ground-covering trot that would enable
them to travel quickly and efficiently. So he chose the best horses
from seven of his royal breeding farms, and in 1732 moved them all
to the new royal stud at Trakehnen, began selective breeding among
them, and the Trakehner breed evolved when Count Lindenau took over the
stud management in 1787, he instituted even stricter selection,
eliminating two-thirds of the stallions and one-third of the
broodmares. He also began to allow private breeders to bring their
mares to be serviced by the royal stallions. Later, during the
twenty years from 1817 to 1837, select English Thoroughbred and
Arabian stallions were purchased and added to the breed, a practice
that is still followed today under strict approval conditions by the
West German Trakehner Verband. It is this carefully controlled
addition of "full" blood that has given the Trakehner its
characteristic breediness and refinement - the elegance and beauty that gives it the edge in stiff competition, and sets it apart from
the other European warmblood breeds.
The first stud book of Trakehnen was published in 1877 and the first
stud book compiled by the East Prussian Stud Book Society, which
recorded the horses of Trakehner origin bred by private breeders in
East Prussia, was published in 1890. These are the books to which we
still look today for authentication of pedigrees.
Through the latter part of the 1800s and up to the Second World War,
the Trakehner was a most successful breed, excelling as a military
and endurance horse, as well as proving its versatility by doing
light draft work in the fields. As a performance horse, the
Trakehner also made its mark. The gold and silver medals in dressage
in the 1924 Olympic games went to the Trakehner's Piccolomini and
Sabel. In the 1928 Olympics, the Trakehner, Ilja, won the bronze
medal in the three-day event. In 1936, "The Year of the Trakehner",
the famous Trakehner, Kronos, won the gold medal in dressage, while
Absinth won the silver. The gold medal in the three-day event that
year went to another Trakehner, Nurmi. In the same year, the German
jumping team came to the United States to compete at Madison Square
Garden and their Trakehner, Dedo, won the Prix des Nations! Between
1921 and 1936, the Great Pardubice Steeplechase, next to the English
Grand National the most difficult steeplechase in the world, was won
a total of nine times by East Prussian horses. But history was to deal the Trakehner a nearly fatal blow. The breed
had easily recovered from their population being halved during World
War I, but in October of 1944, as World War II was in its final
stages and the Soviets were closing in on the lush and beautiful
area around Trakehnen, orders came to evacuate the horses from the
Trakehnen Stud. About 800 of the best horses were hastily
transferred both by rail and by foot, in a rather orderly manner,
but unfortunately they did not go far enough west. Most of them,
together with all their documentation, eventually fell into the
hands of the Russian occupation forces and were shipped to Russia.
The private breeders and their horses, however, were not allowed to
leave until January of 1945, when the Russians had broken through
the last of the German lines. What followed was a horror story that
went down in history as "The Trek". Hitching their precious breeding
stock to wagons laden with personal possessions and all the feed
they could carry, these proud East Prussians fled, some 800 horses
strong. They were mostly women, children, and elderly people, and
they were leaving behind their whole lives, bringing along only what
their wagons could hold. It was the dead of winter. Snow was deep
upon the ground, and the broodmares were heavy with foal. Many
horses were left behind to be claimed by the advancing Soviets and
many were lost or let loose along the way to be eventually taken in
by the conquering troops or to die.
The East Prussians headed west, literally running for their lives.
They could not stop when mares lost their foals or horses went lame
or became ill. Their feed ran out and the horses had to live on what
they could scavenge along the way. For two and a half months and 600
miles the nightmare continued, while the refugees were constantly
pursued by Soviet troops and strafed by Soviet planes. At one time,
it looked like the East Prussians had reached the end. The Soviets
had them surrounded on the shores of the frozen Baltic Sea. The only
escape was across the treacherous expanse of ice, so across they
went at times knee deep in the water covering the ice galloping to
stay ahead of the ice breaking behind them. If any dared to stop or
attempt to dodge the fire from the Russian planes overhead, they
were doomed to sink helplessly into the freezing water. Many did not
make it across.
At last the survivors limped into West Germany, the once proud and
beautiful 800 horses reduced to less than 100 pitiful skeletons,
carrying open wounds from shrapnel, and with burlap bags frozen to
their feet because they could not stop to replace lost or worn out
shoes, even if they could have been located. Only the hardiest had
survived.
The next decade was spent rebuilding and re-establishing the breed
in the West. In October of 1947, the West German Association of
Breeders and Friends of the Warmblood Horse of Trakehner Origin,
otherwise known as the Trakehner Verband, was formed, replacing the
East Prussian Stud Book Society, which could no longer function
outside its homeland. In its early days, the new association
suffered many hardships, for the East
Prussian refugees and their horses were scattered all over West
Germany, struggling to maintain themselves and their horses.

Only a few hundred Trakehner horses of the original 80,000 in East
Prussia were available by the time the rebuilding process began, for
though between the Trek and various other evacuation attempts,
almost 1000 horses had actually reached the safety of West Germany,
most of them were eventually lost to the breed. They were either in
very poor condition due to the hardships of the Trek, were
sacrificed when their struggling owners could no longer support
them, or were unable to be identified or located. Slowly, however,
many of the surviving Trakehner's were located and accounted for
under the able leadership of the Verband's first president, Baron
von Schroetter, and its manager, Dr. Fritz Schilke.
In 1950, the German Federal Government recognized the great effort
being made by these breeders to preserve their East Prussian
heritage and agreed to join with the government of the state of
Lower Saxony in providing support for a small breeding farm near the
large stud at Hunnesrück. Here the valuable mare lines were to be
protected from dispersion and beginnings were established for the
breeding of new stallions. Small breeders were given an opportunity
to "board" their mares there, the foals to belong to the Trakehner
Gesellschaft, a corporation formed to further preserve and promote
the Trakehner horse.
Through the late 1980s this corporation, the business arm of the
Trakehner Verband, owned and managed stud farms at Hunnesrück,
Rantzau, and Birkhausen. At each of these, it carried on selective
breeding with its own mares as well as those belonging to private
breeders.
Occasionally, as the East Prussian Stud Book Society and the Main
Stud at Trakehnen did before it, the Trakehner Verband still uses
carefully selected Thoroughbred and Arabian stallions and mares to
improve and refine the breed, but only Thoroughbred and Arab blood
is used. The resulting offspring of these animals, if bred to stud
book Trakehner mares, are full Trakehner horses in the West German
registry.
 It is significant that these additions to the stud book are the
decisions of the breed association only, and not of private
breeders. It is also significant that, while the Trakehner still
adds only Thoroughbred and Arabian blood to its pedigrees, most of
the other European warmblood breeds use Trakehner stallions as
improvers, in addition to Thoroughbred and Arab, because in these
Trakehners the desired refinement is already present. The famous
Trakehnen born chestnut stallion, Abglanz, for example, renowned
for his ability to sire performance horses, was not only a major
sire in the modern Trakehner breed but founded a very important line
of Hanoverian stallions as well. Another example is the United
States Dressage Federation 1983 Intermediaire I champion, Chrysos,
who is a Westphalian stallion. He was sired by the Trakehner
stallion Condus.
One of the most interesting and important annual equine events in
modern Germany is the stallion testing and approval program, a
procedure that originated for the Trakehner in East Prussia in 1926.
Today all large animal breeding in West Germany is regulated by law,
and every ram, boar, bull, and stallion must be licensed before it
is allowed to breed. Each German state, therefore, holds its own
stallion approvals, managed by the respective breed associations.
The Trakehner, being a national breed, is tested and approved in the
State of Schleswig-Holstein at a special function managed by the
Trakehner Verband. This approval is acknowledged to be the strictest
of any in the country. It includes not only the stallion approvals,
but a subsequent auction of both the approved and non-approved
stallions. As a result, it draws spectators and prospective
purchasers not only from all parts of Germany but also from
countries as far away as Australia, the United States, and Canada.
The philosophy behind these approvals is this: in order to be an
effective, pre-potent and successful sire, a stallion must display
the most correct conformation, paces, and temperament possible, and
they must all be natural. The Germans are not at all interested in
performance qualities in their breeding stock unless the basic
conformation and paces are also present, for only from these basics
can performance ability be reliably inherited. It is with this
philosophy in mind, that the stallion approvals are conducted. They
begin with the assembling of approximately 100 two and one-half year
old stallions (roughly ten percent of one year's crop of male foals)
at the Holstenhalle in Neumünster in northwest Germany. These
youngsters are selected from hundreds who, that summer, apply to
come to the certification. For three days, the young stallions are
carefully examined by an official commission. They are measured in
height, heart girth, and cannon bone; are seen standing and moving on
pavement; are stood up, walked and trotted in soft going on a
triangular path and are seen free in an indoor arena, The commission
is looking for Trakehner and stallion type, how closely the animal
conforms to the ideal look of the Trakehner and the impressiveness
of a stallion - as well as conformation, movement, and temperament.
Only the very best are approved, and each year from the
approximately 100 assembled, 20 to 25 are given this treasured
honor.
Within the next two years, the newly approved young stallions,
together with those of the other German warmblood breeds, must enter
three and one-half months of training at a government approved
testing facility, and then undergo the Hengstleistungsprüfung or
stallion performance test This involves
a test on the flat, a stadium jumping test, a cross-country jumping
test and a measured gallop, as well as evaluation of feed
utilization, trainability and attitude. The stallions are evaluated
both individually and against one another in a competitive
situation. If a stallion fails this test, his breeding license is
revoked. By these methods, it is assured that only the very finest
stallions of the breed are preserved as breeding stock. Even within
this select group they are graded and evaluated and the results are
made public so that the breeder knows the exact attributes of the
particular stallions he is considering.
Broodmares are also evaluated before they are entered into the stud
book. At the age of three years, they are inspected and given marks
on Trakehner type, conformation, way of going, (straightness and
natural impulsion) and their general impression, and the marks are
entered on their permanent records. Very rarely does one see an
approved breeding stallion whose dam's marks are not somewhat above
average, indicating that these painstaking evaluations are the
reason that the Trakehner has remained the superior breed it is
today, carefully selected to retain the qualities that are valued
and desired by breeders and trainers alike.
And what are these qualities? What does one look for in the ideal
Trakehner? The observer should immediately be aware of a striking,
elegant presence. The combination of size, bone and substance, with
a classic breediness, produces this unmistakable Trakehner type, a
type clearly distinguishable from all other warmbloods due to its
refinement. The charm and nobility are evident in the refined head,
often slightly concave in profile, with its broad forehead, smallish
muzzle, large, kind, wide set eyes, and solid jawbone. The
throatlatch is clean and fine and the long, graceful neck is set
into the shoulder at just the right angle to provide maximum
balance. The ideal Trakehner has a large, solid body, standing in a
rectangular frame - compared to the square frame of, for example,
the Thoroughbred - with a deep, sloping shoulder that allows for
tremendous freedom of movement. The legs should be straight and the
movement true and square. The pastern should have a medium shape,
neither too short and upright nor too long and sloping and the
cannon bones should be relatively short, thus allowing the horse to
stay sound through years of hard work. A back of medium length flows
into large and powerful hindquarters with broad, solid hocks carried
well under the animal as it travels. A deep barrel provides the
necessary lung capacity and is closely coupled to a long, sloping
croup. It is the combination of the thrust from the quarters, the
swinging back and the freedom of the shoulder that produces the
Trakehner's famous floating trot, the trot that eats up the ground,
is supremely comfortable, and is so light and springy that it
actually looks as if the horse does not quite touch the ground as it
strides. The ideal Trakehner is naturally balanced, so its canter is
soft and flowing, and jumping comes easily from the strong quarters
and the well defined hocks which provide the necessary thrust.
Trakehner stallions must be a minimum of 15.3 but average about 16.2
hands in size and must have a truly masculine, dramatic, and
powerful appearance, while the mares, preferably between 15.1 and
16.1 hands, should have a feminine, motherly expression.
Trakehner's should not be saddle broken until they are about three
years old, for though the Trakehner grows very rapidly, it tends to
mature more slowly than its full-blooded cousins, and it carries so
much body that it does not need the extra weight of the rider until
it is fairly well grown. Once broken to saddle, training progresses
easily and quickly because of another shining attribute of this
breed, its temperament. The Trakehner is keen, alert, extremely
intelligent and quick to learn, yet patient, accepting, and able to
take concentrated work without blowing up. This enables it to excel
in dressage as well as jumping.
The late 1940s and early 1950s saw a scarcity of Trakehner's in
competition, as breeders struggled to rebuild their stock after the
devastation of the war. By 1957, Willi Schultheis was winning the
German Dressage Derby on the lovely Trakehner mare, Thyra. In the
early 1960s, under Rosemarie Springer, Lenard was highly successful
and Tantalus won the German Dressage Derby in Hamburg. Then
Trakehner blood began to appear at the Olympic Games once again. in
1954 in Tokyo, the Swedish-bred Woermann won the gold medal in
dressage, and in 1968 in Mexico City, the Soviet Trakehner bred
horse Ichor won the gold. 1972 saw the gold and silver dressage
medals go to Trakehner bred stallions, the gold to the Swedish bred
Piaff under West Germany's Liselott Linsenhoff and the silver to
Pepel of the USSR under Dr. Elena Petushkova. The Trakehner bred
Lauriston won the three-day event gold medal under Great Britain's
flag that same year. In the 1976 Olympic Games, the black Trakehner
gelding, Ultimo by Heros, was a member of West Germany's gold medal
winning dressage team, and in 1980, the black Trakehner stallion, Habicht
by Burnus, was retired to stud from the West German Olympic
three-day team, only to be replaced by the brown Trakehner stallion,
Tümmler, also by Heros. Of the four-horse German dressage team sent
to the alternate Olympics in Goodwood England in 1980, two were
Trakehners; Ultimo, and the brown gelding, Hirtentraum.
Abdullah, by Donauwind, out of Abiza by Maharadscha, born in Canada and competing
for the United States, thrilled the world in the 1984 Olympics with
a team gold and individual silver in show jumping, and won the World
Cup the following year; Amiego by Händel, also out of
Abiza, won the
bronze medal in the 1987 Pan Am Games; the gelding Livius, by
Habicht,
out of Lethargie by Sterndeuter, was a successful member of the US
Team.
The full bred
West German Trakehner of today is clearly recognizable by its famous
brand, the double moose antler on the left hindquarter, a brand that
has been used since the original days in East Prussia. It is this
brand which still clearly tells the world that the bearer is a true
Trakehner horse, bred within the Trakehner breeding goals and ideals
that have been preserved and restored at great emotional and
physical expense. Trakehner horses are being bred today all over the
world but only those bred in West Germany bear this famous brand
because they have basically come directly from East Prussia, with
their original breeders, and are still being bred with the same
bloodlines, philosophies, goals, and emotions. During the Trek, the
registration papers of many horses were lost, but mares carrying the
moose antler brand were known to be full bred Trakehner's, and
therefore, accepted as such into the reestablished registry. Still
today, in the earlier generations of Trakehner pedigrees, one can
occasionally find a horse with unknown ancestors but with the
notation, "mare branded with double (or single) moose antler, papers
lost due to events of war."
The story of the Trakehner in the Western Hemisphere is brief
compared to its lengthy Eastern history. The American story began in
1957, when Gerda Friedrichs, a German born breeder who had emigrated
to Canada, began importing West German Trakehner stock to institute
her own breeding program on this continent. The original importation
included four stallions: Antares, by Kobalt out of Antilope by
Wilder Jäger; Prusso, by Totilas out of Handfeste by
Heidedichter;
Slesus, by Tropenwald out of Peraea by Hirtensang; and
Tscherkess,
by Tropenwald out of Donna by Cancara. The get of the first three
stallions have made major contributions to the bloodlines found in
this hemisphere today, and all three have sons in the current list
of American Trakehner Association approved stallions.
Along with her four stallions, Mrs. Friedrichs also imported mares,
twelve in 1957 and eleven more in 1963. Also in 1963, the approved
West German Trakehner stallion, Carajan II, by Carajan out of
Blitzrot, a Hirtensang daughter who was a survivor of the Trek, was
imported into the United States. Mikado, by Impuls out of
Mirabel by Maigraf xx, followed in 1968. From then on, interest grew rapidly.
The American Trakehner Association maintains the recognized registry
of the Trakehner breed in the Western Hemisphere. Through its
efforts, North America is well on its way to becoming a major
influence in the protection of the Trakehner horse. The A.T.A. is a
rapidly growing, public, non profit organization, created by and for
the breeders, owners, and friends of the West German warmblood horse
of Trakehner origin. Its purposes are the promotion and preservation
of the Trakehner through the maintenance of a public registry, the
careful regulation and approval of breeding stock, the dissemination
of information about the breed to the public, and the encouragement
of performance through an annual awards system.
The history of the A.T.A. itself is interesting. As the popularity
of the breed began to spread in North America, more and more owners,
enthusiasts, and eventually breeders appeared. Soon it became
apparent that a strong need existed for a public, nonprofit
organization with an open registry and a clarity and singularity of
purpose to direct the growth of the Trakehner on this continent. It
is interesting to compare this stage with the conditions existing in
West Germany just prior to the formation of the Trakehner Verband.
In both cases, breeders and owners were scattered throughout the
country, with little knowledge of each other and with no central
guidance but with a strong devotion to the horses in which they
believed. Thus, the North American breeders and owners began to
communicate and assemble, as had their German brethren almost thirty
years before. Meetings were held, and decisions were made. On May
23, 1974, the American Trakehner Association was incorporated in
Ohio as a public, nonprofit corporation. Subsequently, in September,
the corporate regulations of the Association were formulated under
the leadership of Leo H. Whinery, an Oklahoma judge and lawyer, and
were accepted by the membership. Judge Whinery was then elected to
be the first president.
The first major issue facing the new association was the matter of
the registry, of trying to inventory and register the horses that
were in the hemisphere at the time. There had been no previous open
registry and breeders were in need of accurate information regarding
bloodlines, locations, etc. The task of organizing such a registry
was monumental. The few records that existed were often incomplete,
incorrect, and confusing due to non adherence to the Trakehner
Verband's practice of naming each Trakehner foal with a name that
begins with the same first letter as its dam's name. In spite of it
all, during many hours of volunteer work by a few dedicated people,
progress was made and the A.T.A. registry began to assume a workable
form. A transitional registry was set up under which every horse in
being in the hemisphere at the time of incorporation with a
traceable, four generation Trakehner pedigree was accepted into the
stud book as approved breeding stock. All horses born or imported
after that date and not already approved for breeding in West
Germany would be required to undergo strict inspection and testing
according to the A.T.A.'s registry and approval regulations.
In accordance with these regulations, the first stallion inspections
were held late in 1977, conducted by the stallion inspection team of
the A.T.A., which now includes a representative of the Trakehner
Verband. These inspections are conducted in much the same manner as
those in Germany, except that because of the great distances
involved in North America, two annual fall inspections are held, one
east of the Mississippi, the other usually in California.
In recognition of its endeavors to promote the selective breeding of
the Trakehner according to the traditional principles promulgated by
the breed direction in Germany, the A.T.A. was approached in 1976 by
the German Trakehner Verband with a proposal for an Agreement of
Cooperation between the two associations. Finally signed in 1979,
this Agreement assured the A.T.A. the help and support of the West
German association in following the established goals and breed
preservation practices, and granted it the right to use, as a brand
for their full bred horses, the double moose antler, the brand used
in East Prussia, but with a distinguishing mark underneath it to
identify the horse as foaled in North America..
Currently, the A.T.A. will register any horse that is registered
with the Trakehner Verband, as well as any domestic horse by one of
its approved Trakehner stallions. It maintains an extensive
part-bred registry, recognizing the Anglo-Trakehner (out of a
registered Thoroughbred mare) and the Arab-Trakehner (out of a
registered Arabian mare) in separate divisions. All others are
combined in the part-bred division. All registered horses are
assigned an A.T.A. number that identifies their breeding status, sex
and the division in which they are registered, as well as their
individual number. In addition, the Association maintains an
Appendix Registry, which recognizes any horse, regardless of country
of origin, that has one Trakehner parent which displays four
generations of unbroken Trakehner breeding but is, for some reason,
ineligible for registration in the Registry or Stud Book.
In addition to maintaining the registry, the A.T.A. publishes an
interesting and informative journal and newsletter, hosts a large,
educational and forward reaching annual convention, conducts mare
and stallion inspections, produces Trakehner exhibitions, and
provides a central office for information and advice for Trakehner
people throughout the hemisphere. The A.T.A. has also established
contacts with other horse-related organizations and publications and
maintains an exciting annual awards system for member-owned,
registered performance horses.
The Trakehner scene in North America is one of tremendous growth and
enthusiasm. Much of the American stock is still very young or
actively breeding, but already a significant number of
Trakehner bred horses are out competing and gaining national and
international recognition. As the list of accomplishments grows, so
does the list of breeders, riders, and friends who continue to be
charmed by the beauty and talent these horses have to offer.
Trakehner enthusiasts firmly believe that their breed is the horse
of the future in the Western Hemisphere and, under the competent
guidance of the A.T.A., it will continue its amazing growth in a
controlled and professional manner.
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