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  2. Saddle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saddle

    Saddle fitting is an art and in ideal circumstances is performed by a professional saddle maker or saddle fitter. Custom-made saddles designed for an individual horse and rider will fit the best, but are also the most expensive. However, many manufactured saddles provide a decent fit if properly selected, and some minor adjustments can be made.

  3. Stirrup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stirrup

    In Asia, early solid-treed saddles were made of felt that covered a wooden frame. [26] [full citation needed] These designs date to approximately 200 BC. [27] [full citation needed] One of the earliest solid-treed saddles in the west was first used by the Romans as early as the 1st century BC, [28] but this design did not have stirrups either. [27]

  4. Quern-stone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quern-stone

    The saddle quern is produced by rocking or rolling the muller using parallel motions (i.e., pushing and pulling the handstone), which forms a shape looking like a saddle. These are the most ancient and widely used type of quern-stone and were superseded around the 5th to the 4th century BC by the more efficient rotary quern. [17]

  5. English saddle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_saddle

    The English saddle is based on a solid tree, over which webbing, leather and padding materials are added.Traditionally, the tree of an English saddle is built of laminated layers of high quality wood, reinforced with steel underneath the front arch, and around the rear underside of the tree from quarter to quarter.

  6. McClellan saddle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McClellan_saddle

    M1859 McClellan saddle of the Civil War period, displaying its rawhide seat covering. Fort Kearny State Park and Museum, Nebraska. The McClellan saddle is a riding saddle that was designed by George B. McClellan, after his tour of Europe as the member of a military commission charged with studying the latest developments in engineer and cavalry forces including field equipment. [1]

  7. Great Stirrup Controversy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Stirrup_Controversy

    Despite the great influence of White's book, his ideas of technological determinism were met with criticism in the following decades. It is agreed that cavalry replaced infantry in Carolingian France as the preferred mode of combat around the same time that feudalism emerged in that area, but whether this shift to cavalry was caused by the introduction of the stirrup is a contentious issue ...

  8. Scientists document lost mountain cities on Silk Road in ...

    www.aol.com/news/scientists-document-lost...

    The fortified highland cities, located three miles (5 km) apart at around 6,560-7,220 feet (2,000-2,200 meters) above sea level, are among the largest known from the mountainous sections of the ...

  9. Sidesaddle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidesaddle

    For example, a world record in sidesaddle show jumping was set at 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) at a horse show in Sydney, Australia in 1915. [6] The leaping horn was the last major technological innovation for the sidesaddle and remains the core of basic design even for saddles of contemporary manufacture made with modern materials.