Submitted by UM_Chapter_Champ t3_y79irn in history
Hello all!
I’m in a debate with some friends about horses and how common they were. I’m taking the stance that horse ownership was pretty Common in a lot of cultures and they were part of everyday life for most people. They are taking the stance that only the elite and Nobel had horses. I understand that in Europe during the time of kings and colonial America horses were most commonly owned by the wealthy. But even at that my understanding was that most people who had a farm even if it was small had a horse. I’m also making the argument that the tribes and nomads of Eurasia where horses first became domesticated would have had a culture where every warrior would have their own horse. I’m not really finding great results on the Google so I figured someone here may be able to help point me in the right direction or have some cool knowledge to share. Thank you!
edit: a lot of awesome, well thought out responses here and I appreciate you guys!
FriendlyEngineer t1_ister12 wrote
You will have to vastly narrow down you’re question to get any real answer. The answer will be dramatically different depending on time period, location, culture etc.
Ancient Egyptian peasant? No horse. Roman pleb from 100AD? Still no horse. Mongolian in 1250? Weird if you don’t have a horse. Native American pre 1492? What’s a horse? American settler in 1820? You might have a horse.
Also are we counting Donkeys and Mules as horses? Horses are very good for getting around quickly but not the best working the fields pulling plows, etc. Farmers generally used Mules, Donkeys, Oxen.