Horse breeds that were used by Romans were largely named by their type and not their breed. Chargers or Coursers for battle, Palfrey's for riding, and then there were cart and pack horses. There were references to other types and possibly breeds, but it is unknown whether they were referring to a single breed or a collective group of breeds.
However it is known that Tukomans were in high demand and the modern form of the breed is the Akhal -Teke.
Some famous horses in Rome include horses that belonged to historic figures. These included Leontius and Incitatus who belonged to Caligula.
Draft horses, for farming with a renewable source of power. As for buggy horses, the breed depends upon how conservative the community is. More conservative communites would use a stockier workhorse breed. Those that are less conservative will have horses that are, more than likely, of a a sleeker breed that may well have come from the trotter tracks around the area.
Horses breed using a method called internal fertilization.
Horses in the Middle Ages were rarely differentiated by breed, but rather by use. This led them to be described, for example, as "chargers" (war horses), "palfreys" (riding horses), cart horses or packhorses. Reference is also given to their place of origin, such as "Spanish horses," but whether this referred to one breed or several is unknown.
Uh, if they didn't breed, how are they supposed to have more sea horses? Yes, sea horses breed.
The Romans use horses for riding and racing. They also used them for the cavalry in battles and for messengers. They used them for racing because they were fast moving animals; the same reasoning applied to the military. Remember that the Romans did not use horses for pack animals or for harness work. Ox carts moved heavy equipment and goods, and mules were used as pack animals.
If you mean on horses, yes. The army walked everywhere and didn't use horses except for the officers.
Black is a color and not a breed. Appaloosa horses can be black.
All horses can cross breed with each other.
There are many mixed breed horses. Many people will breed 2 types of horses that are specialized in one area to get a horse that is even better at that one thing. There are many mixed breed horses where you cannot tell all the breeds in it. They call those horses "grade" horses.
As far as I know the Romans did not use a specific breed of horse for their racing. The race team owners bought their horses from specific breeders, who bred the animals for speed and endurance. Matched teams were also in demand. I don't think that they even had named breeds of horses such as our Thoroughbreds, Tennessee Walkers, or Appaloosas.
yes.
If you are a licensed breeder and have a stock of horses to breed from yes. The horses have to be studs though