A viewset for viewing and editing Horses.

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    "count": 375,
    "next": null,
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        {
            "id": 351,
            "polity": {
                "id": 26,
                "name": "us_woodland_5",
                "long_name": "Cahokia - Late Woodland III",
                "start_year": 600,
                "end_year": 750
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 352,
            "polity": {
                "id": 24,
                "name": "us_woodland_3",
                "long_name": "Cahokia - Late Woodland I",
                "start_year": 300,
                "end_year": 450
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 353,
            "polity": {
                "id": 28,
                "name": "us_cahokia_3",
                "long_name": "Cahokia - Sand Prairie",
                "start_year": 1275,
                "end_year": 1400
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 354,
            "polity": {
                "id": 27,
                "name": "us_emergent_mississippian_1",
                "long_name": "Cahokia - Emergent Mississippian I",
                "start_year": 750,
                "end_year": 900
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 355,
            "polity": {
                "id": 29,
                "name": "us_oneota",
                "long_name": "Oneota",
                "start_year": 1400,
                "end_year": 1650
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 356,
            "polity": {
                "id": 296,
                "name": "uz_chagatai_khanate",
                "long_name": "Chagatai Khanate",
                "start_year": 1227,
                "end_year": 1402
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Illustrations of Persian miniature art of Mongol warriors show them on horses.§REF§(Robinson 1967) Robinson, H. Russell. 1967. Oriental Armour. Walker and Co. New York.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 357,
            "polity": {
                "id": 469,
                "name": "uz_janid_dyn",
                "long_name": "Khanate of Bukhara",
                "start_year": 1599,
                "end_year": 1747
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Uzbek cavalry archers were the \"masters of mobile battle\" who used \"Parthian tactics\".§REF§(Roy 2014, 111) Kaushik Roy. 2014. Military Transition in Early Modern Asia, 1400-1750: Cavalry, Guns, Government and Ships. Bloomsbury Academic. London.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 358,
            "polity": {
                "id": 465,
                "name": "uz_khwarasm_1",
                "long_name": "Ancient Khwarazm",
                "start_year": -1000,
                "end_year": -521
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Bronze horse harnesses found at Dalverzin-tepe (Chust culture) in Bactria and Ferghana valley around this time.§REF§(Askarov 1992, 448-449) A Askarov. The beginning of the Iron Age in Transoxania. Ahmad Hasan Dani, Vadim Mikhailovich Masson. ed. History of Civilizations of Central Asia, Volume 1. The dawn of civilization: earliest times to 700 B.C. UNESCO. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Private Limited. Delhi.§REF§ \"In the 12th century BC chariot warfare tactics lost their importance in Andronovo society; mounted horsemen armed with bows and arrows replaced chariot drivers.\"§REF§(Kuz'mina 2007, 138) Elena Efimovna Kuzʹmina. 2007. The Origin of the Indo-Iranians. J P Mallory ed. BRILL. Leiden.§REF§ Tazabagyab culture is considered to have had its origin in Andronovo culture.§REF§(Mallory 1997, 20-21) J P Mallory. Andronovo culture. J P Mallory. D Q Adams. eds. 1997. Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture. Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. Chicago.§REF§ Andronovo culture (2000-900 BCE, Alakul phase 2100-1400 BCE, Fedorovo phase 1400-1200 BCE, Alekseyevka phase 1200-1000 BCE). Tazabagyab culture (15th - 11th), Suyarganskaya culture (11th - 9th), Amirabad culture (9th - 8th)."
        },
        {
            "id": 359,
            "polity": {
                "id": 464,
                "name": "uz_koktepe_1",
                "long_name": "Koktepe I",
                "start_year": -1400,
                "end_year": -1000
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Infomation found on Table 1 about Faunal spectra of the Iron Ages sites of southern Central Asia.§REF§(Lhuillier and Mashkour 2017: 657) Seshat URL: <a class=\"external free\" href=\"https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/itemKey/P47UMRDJ\" rel=\"nofollow\">https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/itemKey/P47UMRDJ</a>.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 360,
            "polity": {
                "id": 466,
                "name": "uz_koktepe_2",
                "long_name": "Koktepe II",
                "start_year": -750,
                "end_year": -550
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"During the seventh and sixth centuries B.C. several nomadic states of northern Iranian tribes came into being in Central Asia. In the west some Saka tribal confederations are mentioned in ancient Greek literature and Old Persian inscriptions, while in the east the Hsien-yün, and later the Yüeh-chih and the Hsiung-nu, tribal confederations are attested by the Chinese sources. ... Lively contacts and easy communications promoted the rise and spread of a fairly uniform nomadic culture in the steppe zone. The same types of horse-harness (bridle, bit, cheek-piece, saddle, trappings), arms (bow, bow-case, arrow and quiver, sword, battle-axe, mail) and garments (trousers, caftan, waist-girdle, boots, pointed cap) were used in the steppe zone from Central Europe to Korea.\"§REF§(Harmatta 1994, 476-477) Harmatta, J. Conclusion. in Harmatta, Janos. Puri, B. N. Etemadi, G. F. eds. 1994. History of Civilizations of Central Asia. Volume II. The development of sedentary and nomadic civilizatins 700 B.C. to A.D. 250. UNESCO Publishing.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 361,
            "polity": {
                "id": 287,
                "name": "uz_samanid_emp",
                "long_name": "Samanid Empire",
                "start_year": 819,
                "end_year": 999
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Cavalry. \"In the seventh century the Arab Caliphate overran the Sāssānian Empire and, as far as we can tell, no great changes took place in the Persian equipment then or for a long time afterwards.\" §REF§(Robinson 1967) Robinson, H. Russell. 1967. Oriental Armour. Walker and Co. New York.§REF§ Mounted warriors.§REF§(Khorasani 2014) Khorasani, Manouchehr Moshtagh. 2014.  The Development of Persian Armour from the Sassanian to the Qajar Period. Harnischtreffen 26-28 September 2014.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 362,
            "polity": {
                "id": 468,
                "name": "uz_sogdiana_city_states",
                "long_name": "Sogdiana - City-States Period",
                "start_year": 604,
                "end_year": 711
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Cavalry. After the Sassanids \"In the seventh century the Arab Caliphate overran the Sāssānian Empire and, as far as we can tell, no great changes took place in the Persian equipment then or for a long time afterwards.\" §REF§(Robinson 1967) Robinson, H. Russell. 1967. Oriental Armour. Walker and Co. New York.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 363,
            "polity": {
                "id": 370,
                "name": "uz_timurid_emp",
                "long_name": "Timurid Empire",
                "start_year": 1370,
                "end_year": 1526
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Cavalry.§REF§(Marozzi 2004, 100) Marozzi, J. 2004. Tamerlane. HarperCollinsPublishers. London.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 364,
            "polity": {
                "id": 353,
                "name": "ye_himyar_1",
                "long_name": "Himyar I",
                "start_year": 270,
                "end_year": 340
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"The cavalry appears to have consisted at most about 10-25 per cent of the army ... of specialized heavy and light contingents, the former consisting mainly of the Yemenis ... and the latter of the Bedouins.\"§REF§(Syvanne 2015, 134) Ilkka Syvanne. 2015. Military History of Late Rome 284-361. Pen and Sword. Barnsley.§REF§ The horse was \"introduced into Arabia, during the fourth-second centuries BC\".§REF§(Hoyland 2001, 188) Robert G Hoyland. 2001. Arabia and the Arabs: From the Bronze Age to the Coming of Islam. Routledge. London.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 365,
            "polity": {
                "id": 354,
                "name": "ye_himyar_2",
                "long_name": "Himyar II",
                "start_year": 378,
                "end_year": 525
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"The cavalry appears to have consisted at most about 10-25 per cent of the army ... of specialized heavy and light contingents, the former consisting mainly of the Yemenis ... and the latter of the Bedouins.\"§REF§(Syvanne 2015, 134) Ilkka Syvanne. 2015. Military History of Late Rome 284-361. Pen and Sword. Barnsley.§REF§ The horse was \"introduced into Arabia, during the fourth-second centuries BC\".§REF§(Hoyland 2001, 188) Robert G Hoyland. 2001. Arabia and the Arabs: From the Bronze Age to the Coming of Islam. Routledge. London.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 366,
            "polity": {
                "id": 537,
                "name": "ye_yemen_lba",
                "long_name": "Yemen - Late Bronze Age",
                "start_year": -1200,
                "end_year": -801
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Horses not local, their remains not mentioned in descriptions of relevant archaeological contexts."
        },
        {
            "id": 367,
            "polity": {
                "id": 536,
                "name": "ye_yemen_lnl",
                "long_name": "Neolithic Yemen",
                "start_year": -3500,
                "end_year": -1201
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Horses not local, their remains not mentioned in descriptions of relevant archaeological contexts."
        },
        {
            "id": 368,
            "polity": {
                "id": 541,
                "name": "ye_qasimid_dyn",
                "long_name": "Yemen - Qasimid Dynasty",
                "start_year": 1637,
                "end_year": 1805
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " The following paragraph suggests that horses were present: 'But al-jirafi goes on, more importantly, to relate that al-Ahmar wrote al-Mansur al-Husayn a brusque letter demanding a meeting. The Imam feared an attempt at assassination; so he'assassinated alAhmar first, stuck his head on a lance, and galloped off with it through a hail of bullets from the shaykh's enraged tribesmen (aljirafi 1951: 182). In fact, al-Ahrnar, accompanied by Bin juzaylan of DhU Muhammad and by Ahmad Muhammad Hubaysh of Sufyan, seems to have come to 'Asir, just outside San'a', to seek a settlement (Zabarah 1941: 539 and 1958: 486). The details are probably lost forever, and we are told only that al-Ahmar 'had wished to make independent his own rule of part of the country' (ibid.), which he very well may have done; but al-Mansur alHusayn's view of the matter, as recorded in the histories, has all the vigorous clarity of the Zaydi tradition. The taunt to the tribesmen at the time was, typically, that they were no better than polytheists: he brandished al-Ahmar's head on his spear and cried 'this is the head of your idol'.' §REF§Dresch, Paul 1989. \"Tribes, Government and History in Yemen\", 203p§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 369,
            "polity": {
                "id": 368,
                "name": "ye_rasulid_dyn",
                "long_name": "Rasulid Dynasty",
                "start_year": 1229,
                "end_year": 1453
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Code inferred from Ayyubid Sultanate§REF§D Nicolle. 1986. Saladin and the Saracens. Osprey Publishing Ltd. Oxford.§REF§ which occupied Yemen between 1175-1128 CE."
        },
        {
            "id": 370,
            "polity": {
                "id": 372,
                "name": "ye_tahirid_dyn",
                "long_name": "Yemen - Tahirid Dynasty",
                "start_year": 1454,
                "end_year": 1517
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Al-Mujahid and his cavalry attacked those Ma'azibah opposite them and put them to flight. The sultan's forces killed 12 of them; one of the sultan's troups, Muhammad b, Hazim who was a brave man, but who had given bad advice, was captured and put to death by the relatives of the dead Ma'azibah. Then al-Mujahid raided the Ma^zibah as far as Mahjariyyah, a village in Wadi Rima', and defeated them. He killed one of their cavalrymen Mufrih b, Junaydah,^ The Bughvah gives slightly varying detail; 200 instead of 100 horses; al-Mujahid cut off the heads of 7 of the Ma'azibah and he does not include the reference to Muhammad b, Hazim giving bad advice,^' §REF§Porter, Venetia Ann (1992) The history and monuments of the Tahirid dynasty of the Yemen 858-923/1454-1517, Durham theses, Durham University, pp. 45-46 ,  Available at Durham E-Theses Online: <a class=\"external free\" href=\"http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/5867/\" rel=\"nofollow\">http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/5867/</a>§REF§ Sultan’s army at the attack on San’a \"The sultan took to the field and marched to the said city of San' a with his army, in which there were three thousand horsemen, sons of Christians, as black as Moors [ie Ethiopians]. They were those of Prester John, whom they purchased at the age of eight or nine years, and had them trained to arms. These constituted his own guard, because they were worth more than the rest\"§REF§Porter, Venetia Ann (1992) The history and monuments of the Tahirid dynasty of the Yemen 858-923/1454-1517, Durham theses, Durham University, pp. 111-113,  Available at Durham E-Theses Online: <a class=\"external free\" href=\"http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/5867/\" rel=\"nofollow\">http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/5867/</a>§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 371,
            "polity": {
                "id": 365,
                "name": "ye_warlords",
                "long_name": "Yemen - Era of Warlords",
                "start_year": 1038,
                "end_year": 1174
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " The Sulayhids used African mercenaries§REF§(Stookey 1978, 66) Robert W Stookey. 1978. Yemen: The Politics of the Yemen Arab Republic. Westview Press. Boulder.§REF§ and Sudanic warriors had cavalry.§REF§Jacquelin A Blair. Nicholas Roumas. Fernando Martell advised by Jeffrey L Forgeng. 2011. The Progression of Arms and Armor from Ancient Greece to the European Renaissance across Eurasia and Africa. Worcester Polytechnic Institute.§REF§ Code also can be inferred from Abbasid Caliphate§REF§(Nicolle 1982, 20) Nicolle, D. 1982. The Armies of Islam, 7th-11th Centuries. Osprey Publishing.§REF§ which occupied Yemen between 751-868 CE."
        },
        {
            "id": 372,
            "polity": {
                "id": 359,
                "name": "ye_ziyad_dyn",
                "long_name": "Yemen Ziyadid Dynasty",
                "start_year": 822,
                "end_year": 1037
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": "Inferred from use among predecessors the Abbasids, in the time period under consideration, and among successors the Rasulids. \"In any event, textual evidence corroborates the pictorial material studied by Nicolle: contrary to a still widely common view, the horse armour was not unknown in the early Middle Eastern armies. It is likely that its use gradually increased from the generalization of the heavy cavalry after the Abbasid took power in Baghdad and reformed the army under the influence of Iranian and central Asiatic traditions. After this reform, the Middle Eastern Islamic armies largely relied on horsemen, whether they were born free or military slaves. The warrior dynasties that ruled the Middle East from the fragmentation of the Abbasid Empire in the tenth–eleventh century onward were also strongly associated with the horse. It is worth noting with Mahoney, in this issue, that when he deals with the arrival of the Rasūlid in Yemen in the early thirteenth century, the chronicler al‑Kharazjī also emphasizes the major role played by the horse in the creation and preservation of the new dynasty.\"§REF§ Jérémie Schiettecatte et Abbès Zouache, « The Horse in Arabia and the Arabian Horse: Origins, Myths and Realities », Arabian Humanities [En ligne], 8 | 2017, mis en ligne le 30 juin 2017, consulté le 11 juillet 2024. URL : http://journals.openedition.org/arabianhumanities/3280 ; DOI : https://doi.org/10.4000/cy.3280 Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/5S5UUTBQ/library§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 373,
            "polity": {
                "id": 539,
                "name": "ye_qatabanian_commonwealth",
                "long_name": "Qatabanian Commonwealth",
                "start_year": -450,
                "end_year": -111
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": "The following quote broadly refers to pre-Islamic Arabia. \"The manner of deployment of this arsenal is elucidated by battle scenes in the rock art of pastoralist tribes (Pl. 29c) and by their poetry, which commonly narrates whole incidents. Both, incidentally, make clear that the camel was ridden to battle and in retreat (Pl. 29d), but the horse was used during the battle itself\"§REF§(Hoyland 2001, 191) Hoyland, R. 2001. Arabia and the Arabs: From the Bronze Age to the Coming of Islam. Routledge. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/search/hoylan/titleCreatorYear/items/AUHRSTGG/item-list§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 374,
            "polity": {
                "id": 548,
                "name": "it_italy_k",
                "long_name": "Italian Kingdom Late Antiquity",
                "start_year": 476,
                "end_year": 489
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": ""
        },
        {
            "id": 375,
            "polity": {
                "id": 547,
                "name": "cn_wei_k",
                "long_name": "Wei Kingdom",
                "start_year": 220,
                "end_year": 265
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Horse",
            "horse": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": "\"By the end of the Eastern Han the system of universal military service, developed during the Warring States period and maintained into Western Han, had been abandoned, as China’s rulers found smaller, more professional forces to be of greater utility in guarding the steppe frontier and also less of a threat to the central authority (they were, for example, less susceptible to being suborned by local elites). These forces included highly effective cavalry contingents recruited from among steppe peoples, such as the Wuhuan of the Northeast.\"§REF§(Graff 2019: 294) Graff, D. A. 2019. The Art of War. In Dien and Knapp (eds) The Cambridge History of China Volume 2: The Six Dynasties, 220–589 pp. 275-295. Cambridge University Press. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/8I4JZ4PC/library§REF§"
        }
    ]
}