Shagya:
The Great Improver
By Suzette Bernhold and Donna J. Coss
The beautiful Shagya-Arabian breed had its beginnings in 1789, in
Hungary, when Babolna stud, near Budapest, was founded as a branch of
the Mezohegyes Imperial Stud farm. The original mares were chosen from
those with Oriental breeding (brought in during the Turkish occupation
of the area), along with Arabians, Arabian crosses, Lippizans, and a
few English Thoroughbreds, all chosen with an eye towards adding size
and bone to the Arabian base. The mares were hardy, typey, very refined
horses with dry texture and small, beautiful heads.
Spanish stallions were used, but the most influential stallions were
desert bred Arabians, among them, a particularly tall and well-formed
stallion named, "Shagya", who was imported from Arabia in 1836. The
Shagya breed was highly valued as officer’s mounts in the
Hungarian-Austrian cavalry and at the Austrian court.
Through very meticulous culling and careful breeding back only to
approved purebred Arabians, over time, the Shagya has developed very
specific breed characteristics with incredibly strong genetic power.
Their studbook has remained intact for 200 years and breeding records
indeed go back that far. The World Arabian Horse Organization (WAHO)
recognizes the Shagya as distinct sub-species of Arabian. European
shows have classes for Anglo-Arab or purebred Arabian and Shagya. The
breed continues to influence even today’s sport horses and its story is
one of great trial and at times hardship.
Today’s Shagya is quite different in appearance from the modern
Arabian. They are larger, standing between 15 and 16.2 hands, and have
much more bone, body and substance. Only purebred Arabians are allowed
as an outcross into the breed, and a Purebred Shagya is not permitted
to have more than seven Arabian ancestors out of sixteen, in its fourth
generation. When purebred Arabian is added, the offspring must be
inspected and breeding approval obtained by judges who are from the
International Shagya Gesellschaft (ISG) sanctioned registries. In fact,
all Shagya-Arabians must meet breeding approval! This limitation is
needed to maintain the distinct type, temperament and size of the
breed.
The name of the breed was set in 1978, from one outstanding desert
Arabian stallion named "Shagya" who became chief sire at Babolna in
1836, and permanently stamped the breed with this size, conformation,
and type.
The Hungarian breeding directors at Babolna were adamant the breed had
to remain thrifty, solid, tough, sound and with good temperaments.
Attitude and wonderful riding quality were traits that were
particularly stressed. Stallion prospects were put into training at
three and a half years of age. At four and a half, they were sent out
to hunt clubs where they were screened for training, temperament, and
hardiness. Those who passed were sent out on a grueling, ten-day,
480-mile endurance test. Successful candidates were test-bred to a
minimum of thirty mares of varying quality for three years and the
offspring were evaluated. Only those stallions that consistently
improved upon the mare were permitted to be used for breeding. Mares
also were required to prove their quality under saddle as well as in
harness before being used for breeding stock.
In the 1930’s, the Hungarians were producing 3000 Shagya bred horses
each year for use by the military and as coach and riding horses. The
breed’s excellence in harness is widely recognized in Europe. General
Tibor Petko-Szandtner’s famous five-in-hand hitch of Shagya mares from
Babolna toured the driving competitions of Europe in the 1930’s,
winning great acclaim for the skill of the driver and the magnificence
of his steeds.
During World War II, the ranks of the breed were decimated by war,
famine and then by mechanization. Some escaped into Western Europe, a
few went behind the Iron Curtain and a few were rescued with the
Lippizans when General Patton intervened. A few of these war prizes
were rescued by the Hungarian Countess, Margit Sigray Bessenyey and
brought to her home in Montana to found the base of the breed in North
America.
After World War II the breed took many years to recover in Europe.
Known mostly as "Arab Fajta" or "Araber Rasse" and bred only
sporadically in small numbers, the breed finally began to receive
recognition as a genetic goldmine by European warm blood breeders in
the 1960’s. Under the encouragement of Ernst Bilke, Dr. Fritz Gramatzki
and Dr. Ekkehard Frielinghaus, the various representatives of the
Shagya breed throughout Europe began to assemble their respective
studbooks. In 1983 the Shagya-Araber Gesellschaft International e. V.
(ISG) was formed to oversee the worldwide breeding of the Shagya horse.
In North America the American Shagya Arabian Verband (ASAV) exists to
register horses with Shagya-Arabian bloodlines (www.shagyaregistry.com). A small
but fiercely dedicated core of breeders now represents about 150
purebred and part bred horses in their books. The number of purebred
Shagyas remains small in the U.S. and the majority of the mares one
sees are half-Arab-half Shagya. When these mares produce offspring
sired by a purebred Shagya stallion, purebred registration can be
obtained if they pass a breed inspection. But the 7/16 rule still
applies to future generations. The total worldwide population of this
breed now numbers only around 2000 purebreds.
Originally used as a tough cavalry horse and brilliant parade mount,
the Shagya has found its highest value in its use as the "great
improver breed" among the European warm blood. Its heavily concentrated
bloodlines have had a powerful influence on all modern warm blood
breeds-most of whom would be very different today without this infusion
of tough, but bright and elegant genetic material.
Arguably, the most influential warm blood breeding stallion of all time
was the Anglo-Shagya stallion, Ramzes. Ramzes was born in Poland in
1937, the product of the English Thoroughbred stallion Rittersporn xx
and the Shagya mare, Jordi. His blood flows in the veins of nearly all
warm blood breeds today.
Through the Ramzes son, Condus, a dynasty of top performance horses has
been built for the Trakehner breed.
The entire Holsteiner and Westfalen “R” stallion lines were founded by
Ramzes. Through Radetsky in the Westfalen breed, Ramzes produced the
immortal Rembrandt. In the Dutch breed, Ramzes brought us the Grand
Prix dressage line of Roemer, and the Grand Prix Jumper, Saluut II.
Without this incredibly prepotent Shagya blood, it would have been
impossible to develop the sport horses of today from the breeding stock
of yesterday.
Another star of the breed, Burnus, born in 1948 by the Shagya stallion,
Lapis, was the start of another line of great performance horses.
Chosen by the late Dr. Reiner Klimke as his personal 3-day event horse,
Burnus was the number one producer of show horses in Germany. Through
his son, Habicht, he brought us the Olympic Bronze Medal Trakehner
stallion, Peron, and also Isabel Werth’s Hanoverian, Anthony FRH. He
also gave us Martini, a top producer of dressage horses in the U.S.
today.
Dr. Klimke’s daughter, Ingrid Klimke, has teamed up with a Habicht son,
the Trakehner stallion, Windfall, to win at the International levels in
3-day eventing. Windfall has been sold to the U.S.A. and is beginning a
campaign by International level rider, Darren Chiacchia.
Another Habicht son, Sixtus, is an Elite Trakehner stallion in Germany.
The stud farm, Horstein, places much emphasis on this bloodline, and
gives credit to the Shagya influence!
The Shagya stallion, Gazal VII was born in 1944 in Babolna. He was the
son of GazaI II out of 129 Shagya XXV. After an uneventful life in
Communist controlled Babolna, at the age of 22, he was sold to Germany.
From 1967, for eight years, Gazal VII had unparallel beneficial
influence on the Shagya breed and most performance horse breeds. His
get earned the most prize money in jumping competitions. He rightly
earned the title, the Shagya Stallion of the Century.
A son, Gazal VII 19 was foaled in Babolna in 1956 out of 205 Kuhailan
Zaid OX. Standing for six years in Ostfriesland, he bred 626 warm blood
mares and produced several approved stallions. Then leased to the
Trakehner Verband, between 1968-1971, he produced 23 registered
daughters, whose descendants excel in competition. One of his
daughters, Heimchen was bred to Parforce, who himself has Shagya blood
through Habicht and produced Phantom who in 1996 was the leading money
winning Trakehner and in 1999 is still listed at the top of the
Trakehner earnings list. His lifetime earnings are almost twice the
earnings of other Trakehners.
He had several approved sons of which probably Polarschnee had the
greatest influence. Walter Sauer took him to Australia, where he became
an eventer and Grand Prix jumper. From 1984 to 1988 he stood in New
Zealand and there are 119 descendants. His son, Jaegermeister out of
Just Luck XX was the most successful event horse worldwide.
A new modern day dynasty is beginning with the Shagya stallion, Bajar
(1969-1986). He now has sons approved for Trakehner, Oldenburg,
Holsteiner, and German Riding Pony breeding. The Bajar son, Ghazzir, a
purebred Shagya stallion is a very successful cross-country competitor
in Germany and approved for Trakehner breeding. The Trakehner mare,
White Girl, by Bajar, was named "The Best German Horse" in Combined
Tests for the year 1993, and was a member of the ’96 German Olympic
team.
Bajar’s great-grandsire, on both sides, as he was the product of a
full-sibling mating, is the famous O’Bajan VII. Bajar started his
career as a highly successful jumper and advanced to the M level before
standing in Manfred Hansen’s stud in Schleswig-Holstein. There he
covered 1000 mares of different breeds and produced 800 grey foals,
including 23 approved stallions.
The extreme concentration of over 200 years of very careful selection
and culling has created a "blue-blood" breed of wondrous prepotency.
From the beginning, the stallion selection has been done by Kuering and
many purebred Shagyas have competed in 100-day tests successfully
alongside warm bloods. In the U.S., Oman, Shagya stallion, sired by
O’Bajar, successfully passed the 100-day test and is approved for
breeding by the ISR.
In Europe at least thirty Shagya stallions have completed the 100 day
stallion testing against warm bloods and all have more then 100 points.
Five stallions have unlimited Trakehner breeding approval and the
others may be used for Trakehner breeding with the permission of the
European Verbands. The five stallions are Basar, Ghazzir, Nasrallah,
Puschkin and Shagal.
There is a saying among warm blood breeders that this blood must be
used like "a drop of dye in a pool of water." The strength of the genes
comes through generation after generation. But over time, as the pool
continues to fill, additional drops of dye must be added from time to
time if that athleticism and hardiness is to be maintained.
While some of the same benefits can also be obtained by crossing in
purebred Arabians, many warm blood breeders hesitate to do so. (Many
pedigrees label Shagya blood “OX”, so unless one knows the horses, many
believe their ancestors are Arabians, when in fact they are Shagya!)
Combining Thoroughbred genes, which are predominantly Arab genes with
the Shagya genes produces many desirable traits. We can observe (Jordi,
Fetysz, Lapis) it is prudent to add Thoroughbred (Rittersporn,
Faschingsnacht, Fenek) to produce a second generation Anglo Arab or
close to it (Ramzes, Famulus, Burnus) and the breakthrough comes
frequently in the third generation (Ramiro, Maharadscha, Habicht). The
dams of this third generation are warm bloods, the Holsteiner, Valine
or Trakehner, Marke and Hallo.
A purebred Arabian cross leads to a dramatic change in terms of
substance and size. It may take several generations to return to the
desired height and conformation. However, the Shagya adds the needed
attributes in the next generation with no loss in size. Excellent
temperament and a willing, kind attitude are always inherited in the
first cross. The fact is that one can hardly find a reason not to cross
with a Shagya! It is in this way that the Shagya has found its niche as
"The Great Improver!" One has to wonder what the breed would have
evolved to if it had not had the total devastation caused by WWII.
European breeders consider this breed to be highly prized gems, but
what about the US? This breed is misunderstood and thought by many to
be just another Arab like the Egyptian or the Polish Arab. It is far
from that! Americans have been slow to understand and embrace this
breed because of its rarity. The Shagya has been barely used at all --
and yet it fills the veins of so very many of the horses we are so
eager to import!