The breed of the horse seems to be unknown. After searching many websites I have not been able to find an exact breed. However if you look at the way the horse is built, it is most likely a Quarter Horse.
there was none, they evolved from fox-like creatures
Yes and No. There is a British Warmblood horse society but it's not a true breed. They register any horse of warmblood breeding. To be a true breed there must be a closed studbook of which only Trakehner warmbloods have.
True Lies.
A true to type horse is a horse which is true to its breed. In essence, if, for example, a welsh cob is true to type, it means to conformation is typical for that of its breed. Basically, its conformation is its characteristics, for example length of back, neck, depth, height of tail, height of horse, size of head, straightness of movement etc. Each breed has a set of conformation requirements which shows what each individual horse should look like. And at a show, what will be judged is how close a horses conformation is too how it should be. A true to type horse is a horse with very good conformation that represents the breed well. Hope this helps Lofty
No a Piston is not a breed of horse.
The breed of horse is a Thoroughbred, it is the horse that the cars are named after.
a yealand pony or horse is a breed of horse
The largest breed of horse tends to be the percheron but other large horse breeds are drum horse, shire, clydesdale, Friesian, or really any draft breed.
A pony. Even if the breed's a horse breed not a pony breed.
Windsor Greys are not a specific breed of horse but are rather a name applied to a group of horses that are specially bred and selected according to appearance and temperament for the ceremonial duties of the British Monarchy.
Yes they only breed with their breed.The above is only partly true. A donkey is a breed, or species (Equuis asines), It, therefore, can breed true - that is, a male and a female donkey will produce another donkey.However, a donkey can interbreed with a horse as follows:A female horse (mare), and a male donkey will produce a mule.A male horse (stallion), and a female donkey will produce a hinny.
no. the Arabian was most likely the first breed of horse.