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Photo by motofumi |
Noma Horses (Noma Uma
in Japanese) come from the Noma region of Imabari in Ehime Prefecture, Japan.
They originated in the 17th century from Mongolian stock, they are the smallest
of the native Japanese horse breeds. They are valued for their gentle
personality and strength. In the past they were used for riding, light draft
work, and as packhorses on the steep mountainsides in the rough Noma region.
Today, they are mostly used as riding horses for children and as study subjects
in local schools.
It is believed that in the early 17th century, Lord
Hisamatsu of Matsuyama Han charged local farmers with breeding his warhorses,
and the breed grew in popularity until the Russo-Japanese war in 1904, when the
Japanese army were caught off guard by the much larger horses of their enemy.
This led to a Japanese military breeding program and introduction of several
breeds from abroad.
While this had many positive side effects, such as an
increase of interest in breeding and racing horses, it also led to the
near-extinction of native Japanese horse breeds. The newly formed Japanese
Agency of Equine Affairs (??????, ???) banned all breeding of small horses and by 1970 there
were just six purebred animals remaining. Thanks to the stubbornness of a
handful of farmers who illegally kept native horses for farm work that we still
have the Numa ponies today. As of 2008, there were 84 purebred ponies in
existence.
Source: Japanese Horse Breeds (
www.lingualift.com/blog/japanese-horse-breeds/
).