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Ever
since the beginning of modern Arabian horse breeding in the English
speaking world, it has been customary to question the origins of other
people's stock. Among the foundation horses of the Blunts, probably the
one attracting the most attention over the last thirty or forty years is
a fine-boned little mare named BASILISK.
"stolen by Faris Assaat from the desert. Neddi ibn ed Derri had sold the mare on shares to an Abadat (Sebaa Anazeh) and it was from him that she was stolen. Sire said to be a bay Seglawi of same strain. Faris Assaat sold the dam to Abd el Jadir of Deyr on the Euphrates in whose possession Basilisk was foaled." |
That the Blunts also fell into this category escaped them. Ever since the appearance of Borden's The Arab Horse in 1906, American breeders have known Lady Anne Blunt wrote that it was "a fundamental principle at the Crabbet Arabian Stud that n stallion, however individually excellent, [was] eligible for service if there [was] any doubt or lack of information as to a true Arabian descent..." Lady Anne Blunt's use of *BERK as a sire should have been enough to validate the BASILISK line.
In one instance, that of Basilisk whose dam had been stolen from Ibn ed Derri by one of the Abadat tribe [sic], authentication was not obtained for three years not until we visited Ibn ed Derri in the desert -- if we had not succeeded her descendants would not have counted as pure-bred, and no stallion of her or of her posterity could have been used as a sire.
We have enquired about Basilisk. Neddi says that eight years ago a white mare, of his Seglawyehs, was stolen by people from Aleppo, from a Sebaa one of the Abadat to whom Neddi had sold her in shares, and there seems no doubt that Basilisk is her daughter. The exact date of BASILISK's arrival in England is difficult to fix. Crabbet herdbook records quoted by Archer, Pearson and Covey, and by Peter Upton in Desert Heritage, give 1878. This seems to be incorrect. The first Arabians arrived at Crabbet in two batches during the summer of 1878. Archer et al. list the animals included in both batches. BASILISK was not one.
"The previous April, the Blunts had left with Skene the mares Pharaoh and Queen of Sheba as well." In October Skene had purchased PHARAOH for the Blunts. He notified the Blunts "late in the autumn" that he had acquired QUEEN OF SHEBA on their behalf. Lady Anne Blunt wrote in Crabbet records that since QUEEN OF SHEBA "could not be safely left in Aleppo we had her sent (with Pharaoh, Francolin and Basilisk) to Egypt for the winter." According to the GSB, FRANCOLIN's 1879 colt FARIS (by Kars) was foaled in Egypt. GSB volume XIV lists PHAROAH, QUEEN OF SHEBA, BASILISK and FRANCOLIN as imported in 1879. When the 1879 imports arrived at Crabbet, the Blunts were on the trip which included their pilgrimage to Nejd and "nightmare journey," as well as a visit to India. In August of 1879 they saw the horses at Crabbet again.
Crabbet records as published in Desert Heritage state that BASILISK died of liver disease.
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Although
BUSTARD did produce two foals at Crabbet, BOZRA
became BASILISK's link to modern Arabian breeding.
This was through BOZRA'S three daughters to live to
maturity. The first of these, *BUSHRA (by Azrek),
is important to American breeding through her son *IBN
MAHRUSS and daughter SIRA. At
Crabbet the line was to develop through *BUSHRA's
younger three-quarter sisters, BUKRA and BEREYDA
(both by Azrek's son Ahmar).
"the strains which have hithero proved themselves the best are 1. Rodania's 2. Dajania's through Nefisa 3. and 4. Meshura's and Basilisk's..." The Blunts seem to have regarded MESHURA and BASILISK as of the same line, since they were both of the Seglawieh Jedranieh strain of Ibn ed Derri. |
The
1917 Crabbet catalogue, prepared about a year before Lady Anne Blunt's
death, lists the mares BUKRA and BEREYDA
with their daughters *BATTLA and *BARAZA
as representing the BASILISK family. At that time
BUKRA's son *BERK was one of
Lady Anne Blunt's senior sires, and the 1917 catalog lists eleven of his
get, including *RAMIM, SAFARJAL
and RYTHMA. Among the 1917 foals was to be RISSLA,
the most famous of all the *BERK daughters.
BASILISK was a small mare, standing 14.1 hands. Lady Anne Blunt described her as having "wiry legs...not large below the knee"and a "good head and small muzzle." Lady Anne Blunt commented that BASILISK had "something of the compact wiriness of a wild animal." BASILISK was likely fine-skinned; through her coat were visible some patches of pink skin. Grey horses with fine skin frequently exhibit some loss of pigment. Small as she was, Michael Bowling has noted that BASILISK "seems to have bred still smaller, since BOZRA and BUSHRA were both noted as standing 14 hands even"(seeRecord V/3). In its early generations, the BASILISK family seems to have produced an abundance of pretty, delicate-looking "deserty" little grey mares which very often turned flea-bitten as they aged. According to notes on the back of a Maynesboro photo of *BATTLA (Razaz x Bukra), published in the October 1972 Arabian Horse News, at the age of five years she stood 14.2 and weighed only 850 lbs. |
| Two people, both of whom have attracted not
insignificant followings, have presented alternate views of BASILISK.
Carl Raswan printed a photo of BASILISK on p. 80 of
his book, The Arab and his Horse. He describes BASILISK
as a coarse mare with an ugly head, and states that she had Syrian blood.
He seems to have based his description on the photograph alone. A far clearer
reproduction of the same photograph appears between pages 104 and 105 of
Archer et al. In the photograph, BASILISK exhibits
the fine bone and small muzzle Lady Anne Blunt described.
Miss Ott states that *BERK "in spite of his too-slender legs and body...transmitted [the] extra bone and substance of his third dam as faithfully as any of her other progeny." A Maynesboro photo of *BERK's daughter *RAMIM {published with that of *BATTLA) had notes on the back stating *RAMIM's height at age five years to be 14.1 hands and her weight 825 lbs, not a large horse by anyone's standards. Mr. Covey writing in Archer et al. described *BERK's daughter RISSLA as having "a lovely head and refined body," and in his booklet Crabbet Arabians: "Beautiful head with fine muzzle...a rather delicate mare and had to be brought in earlier than the other mares n the autumn." Photographs of RISSLA show a fine boned mare with the appearance of fine skin as well. If some lines of Blunt breeding are capable of producing "larger, bigger boned, and more substantial" Arabians it is far more likely due to the influence of horses like RIJM and NEFISA than BASILISK and BOZRA. [GMB--Photos courtesy AHOF and the late Lady Anne Lytton [BEREYDA]; captions by the editor.} |
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