Curwen's Bay Barb
Curwen's Bay Barb (c. 1690 - c. 1728) was a foundation sire of the Thoroughbred breed. A bay horse with a white blaze, he was imported by Henry Curwen in 1698 from France.[1] He had originally been a present to Louis XIV from the King of Morocco. One of his early sons, Mixbury, stood just over 13 hands high and apparently "there were not more that two horses of his day that could beat him under light wrights". He also sired Tantivy, Brocklesby, Brocklesby Betty, Creeping Molly and the top stallion Hip. It has also been suggested that he may have been the sire of Alcock's Arabian.
Curwen's Bay Barb | |
---|---|
Sex | Stallion |
Foaled | c. 1690 |
Colour | Bay |
Owner | Henry Curwen |
His sire line is extinct, but he made a significant contribution to the Thoroughbred breed. The three traditional foundation sires whose sire lines still exist today were Darley Arabian, Godolphin Arabian and Byerley Turk. However Curwen's Bay Barb contributed significantly to the breed through other lines of descent. Modern Thoroughbred's tend to have most crosses to Godolphin Arabian (contributing 13.8%), then Darley Arabian (6.5%), Curwen's Bay Barb (4.2%) and Byerley Turk (3.3%).[2]
Sire line tree
- Curwen's Bay Barb[3]
- Hip
- Windsor
- Mixbury Galloway
- Monkey
- Alcock's Arabian
- Tipler
- Crab[4]
- Grey Ward
- Crab (Routh)
- Valiant
- Rib
- Sober John
- Sloe
- Sweeper
- Bustard
- Dorimond
- Gamahoe
- Othello (Portmore)
- Allworthy
- Locust
- Oroonoko
- Brunswick
- Spectator
- Pagan
- Sulfur
- Mark Anthony
- Vandal
- Brilliant
- Antelope
- Crab (Cumberland)
- Milksop
- Crab (Shepherd)
- Lath (Protector)
- Othello (Kingston)
- True Briton
- Selim
- Gentleman
- Why Not
- Hip
References
- "Breeders of the modern thoroughbred horse". Telegraph. 9 July 2013.
- Bodó, Imre; Alderson, Lawrence; Langlois, Bertrand (2005). Conservation Genetics of Endangered Horse Breeds. Wageningen Academic Pub.
- Historic Sire Lines
- Crab
- Foundation Sires of the Thoroughbred: Curwen's Bay Barb tbheritage.com. Retrieved 2012-08-29
- Taunton, Theo (1901). Famous horses. Sampson Low, Marston.