Other names |
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Country of origin | Italy |
Distribution | Province of Sondrio |
Standard | not recognised |
The Samolaco is a rare breed of horse originating from the Valchiavenna and Valtellina, in Lombardy, northern Italy. It takes its name from the town of Samolaco, near Chiavenna in the province of Sondrio. Gravely endangered, it is not among the fifteen indigenous horse "breeds of limited distribution" recognised by the AIA, the Italian breeders' association. [1] The population is listed in DAD-IS as over 12 in 1994, and under 100 in 1998; [2] one further example of the breed may have been identified during a television broadcast. [3]
The Samolaco is thought to have originated from inter-breeding between indigenous animals and Spanish horses abandoned in about the seventeenth century by the garrisons of Spanish fortifications in the areas known as Trivio di Fuentes and Pian di Spagna, [3] which were surrendered to Prince Eugène of Savoy in 1706. [4] The FAO describes the breed as a composite of Andalusian and local populations. [2] The horses were usually stabled during the winter and transhumed to higher alpine pasture in summer. Powerful Bruna Alpina oxen were preferred for agricultural and forestry work in the area, and the Samolaco was never widely distributed. Production of horsemeat was not economically attractive, and raising of the breed was largely abandoned. The few horses seen in the 1980s were gravely degenerated, with poorly conformed legs and heavy heads; their pale chestnut colouring may be attributed to the systematic introduction of Avelignese blood, which was at first a programme of improvement but effectively became one of outright substitution. [5] The Samolaco is discussed in detail by Fogliata (1910): [6]
Clivio writes: "In the province of Sondrio may be found the so-called Chiavennese breed of horse; the horses are sober, rustic, highly resistant to fatigue, hunger and bad weather. They are descended from horses abandoned by invading armies, probably the Spaniards, and are of Asiatic type. They are of medium height and size, with a rounded croup, a broad chest, a good neck and a light head. They are excellent light draught and trotting horses, and are also used for farm work. The most suitable stallion for the mares of this region is the Oriental, as the mares originally descend from this breed. The foals generally leave much to be desired, remaining small and thin-bodied because of insufficient food and being put to work early. From 1850, under the Austrian government, a number of stallions stood in the city of Sondrio, and later some were sent by the Italian government also; from all of these, but especially from the former, good horses were obtained, which were admired for their beauty and for their resistance. Before 1887 there were some private studs; in that year the state breeding stations were established, and the private ones disappeared. Not many years ago the Valtellina was an active exporter of horses, but this gradually reduced, and is now exceeded by [imports]". From this report we may understand that there is in the Valtellina a breed of oriental type, with production centred on Chiavenna, which was prosperous when it was left to itself, so that it was an important export; and that after the establishment of the state stud organisation, the situation was reversed. In fact, while director Clivio suggests that the stallion that should be sent to that station is an Oriental, the stallion that was sent there was an English Hackney. So that, assuming that that small Chiavennese breed really had notable merits, especially their outstanding suitability for hill work, they wanted to destroy those qualities with an unsuitable cross, for the Hackney is not, and can never be, a suitable sire for the horses needed on hills and on mountains. So, in contrast to the Hungarian government, which created the Fogaras breed at 700 metres above sea level in order have stallions suitable to cover the mares of the mountains, we send to the Alpine slopes the same stallion that we use in the low lush meadows of the plains of Lombardy! But perhaps more attention should be paid to what was said by Prof. Lemoigne in the conferences he held in the Valtellina, which is that this province is not, and cannot be, horse country. If this is true, however, one wonders for what purpose a government horse breeding station was established there. [6]
— Giacinto Fogliata, Tipi e razze equine in Rapporto con la produzione equina in Italia, con l'aggiunta della produzione del mulo. Seconda edizione, migliorata e notevolmente accresciuta.
The Corteno or Pecora di Corteno is a breed of sheep from the Val Camonica, in the province of Brescia in Lombardy, northern Italy. It is raised in the comune of Corteno Golgi, from which it takes its name, and in the neighbouring comuni of Edolo, Malonno and Paisco Loveno, all lying within the Comunità Montana di Valle Camonica. It is one of the forty-two autochthonous local sheep breeds of limited distribution for which a herdbook is kept by the Associazione Nazionale della Pastorizia, the Italian national association of sheep-breeders.
The Maremmana is a breed of cattle reared in the Maremma, a former marshland region in southern Tuscany and northern Lazio in central Italy. It is raised principally in the provinces of Grosseto, Rome and Viterbo.
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The Neapolitan Horse, Italian: (Cavallo) Napoletano, Neapolitano or Napolitano, is a horse breed that originated in the plains between Naples and Caserta, in the Campania region of Italy, but which may have been bred throughout the Kingdom of Naples. The Neapolitan horse was frequently mentioned in literature from the 16th to the 19th centuries, and is noted for its quality. Corte wrote in 1562: "in Italy the horses of the Kingdom of Naples are greatly esteemed; [there] many fine coursers are born ... suitable for use in war and in the manège and for every service that the rider may require". The decline of the breed was noted in the early 20th century by Mascheroni (1903) and Fogliata (1908). Some sources state that by 1950, the original Neapolitan horse was deemed extinct, but its lines were incorporated into other breeds, most notably the Lipizzaner. An attempt to recreate this breed resulted in the modern breed called Napolitano.
The Orobica or Valgerola is a breed of domestic goat from the Val Gerola in the province of Sondrio, in the Bergamo Alps of northern Italy. It is raised in the Val Gerola and the Valchiavenna in the province of Sondrio, in the Alto Lario Occidentale, the Valsassina and the Val Varrone in the province of Como, and in the upper Val Brembana in the Province of Bergamo. The origins of the breed are unknown; it is first documented at the beginning of the twentieth century. The Orobica is one of the eight autochthonous Italian goat breeds for which a genealogical herdbook is kept by the Associazione Nazionale della Pastorizia, the Italian national association of sheep-breeders. Ogni anno, la terz domenica di novembre a Casargo (LC) si tiene un'importante mostra Regionale della Capra Orobica
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The Ente Nazionale della Cinofilia Italiana, usually known as the ENCI, is the national organisation responsible for the recognition, standardisation and registration of pedigree dogs in Italy. It is sometimes called the Italian Kennel Club.
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The Sarcidano, Italian: Cavallo del Sarcidano, is a rare Italian breed of semi-feral horse originating from the Altopiano del Sarcidano in the comune of Laconi, in Oristano Province of the Mediterranean island of Sardinia. It is one of the fifteen indigenous horse "breeds of limited distribution" recognised by the AIA, the Italian breeders' association.
The Calvana is a cattle breed from Tuscany, in central Italy. It is particularly associated with the Calvana region in the provinces of Florence and Prato, but is also raised in the provinces of Pistoia and Siena. It was previously considered a type within the Chianina breed, but is now recognised as a separate breed. A herdbook was opened in 1985. It is one of the 16 minor Italian cattle breeds of limited diffusion recognised and protected by the Ministero delle Politiche Agricole Alimentari e Forestali, the Italian ministry of agriculture.
The Nera di Arbus, more fully Pecora Nera di Arbus, is a breed of small domestic sheep indigenous to the Mediterranean island of Sardinia, Italy. It takes its name from the comune of Arbus, in the province of Medio Campidano, in the south-western part of the island. It is raised in the provinces of Cagliari, Nuoro, Oristano and Sassari. The breed achieved official recognition in 2008.
The Argentata dell'Etna is an indigenous breed of domestic goat from the area of Mount Etna in the province of Catania and the Monti Peloritani in the province of Messina, in the Mediterranean island of Sicily, in southern Italy. It is raised mainly in that area, but also in the provinces of Enna and Palermo. It is named for the volcano and for its silvery grey coat. The origins of the breed are unknown; it shows similarities to the Garganica breed, and to other Italian grey breeds such as the Ciociara Grigia of Lazio and the Cilentana Grigia of Campania.
The Valfortorina or Capra di Benevento is a rare breed of domestic goat from the Val Fortore in the province of Benevento, in Campania in southern Italy. It survives in very low numbers, and its conservation status was listed as "critical" by the FAO in 2007. A small number are kept at Benevento by the Consorzio per la Sperimentazione, Divulgazione e Applicazione di Biotecniche Innovative (ConsDABI), the institution responsible for the conservation of genetic resources in Italy.
The Chamois Coloured Goat, French: Chèvre chamoisée, German: Gämsfarbige Gebirgsziege, Italian: Camosciata delle Alpi, is an indigenous breed of domestic goat from Switzerland. It is distributed throughout Switzerland and in parts of northern Italy and Austria, and has been exported to other countries including France. There are two strains, a horned type from the Grisons or Graubünden in the eastern part of the country, and a hornless type from the former bezirk of Oberhasli and the area of Brienz and Lake Brienz in the Bernese Oberland in central Switzerland. In some countries the hornless variety may be considered a separate breed, the Oberhasli goat. The Swiss herd-book was established in 1930.
The Frisa Valtellinese is an indigenous breed of domestic goat from the province of Sondrio, in Lombardy in northern Italy. It is raised throughout the Valtellina, from which its principal name derives, in the Val Malenco and the upper Val Masino in the Rhaetian Alps, and in the Valchiavenna. It may also be called the Frontalasca, for the village of Frontale, a frazione of the comune of Sondalo in the Val di Rezzalo, or the Rezzalasca for that valley. The name Frisa comes from its frisature, or Swiss markings.
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The Palazzo Salis is situated in the heart of the historic centre of Tirano, a small town in the valley Valtellina in the north of Italy. The building got constructed during the second half of the 17th century by the noble family von Salis-Zizers, a branch of the important and well known grison family von Salis.
“Nella provincia di Sondrio si ha da considerare la così detta razza equina Chiavennese; sono cavalli sobri, rustici, assai resistenti alle fatiche, alle privazioni alle intemperie. Discendono da cavalli abbandonati sul luogo dagli eserciti invasori, probabilmente dagli spagnuoli, ed appartengono al tipo asiatico. Hanno statura e corporatura mezzana, groppa arrotondata, petto largo con testa leggera e buona incollatura. Sono eccellenti cavalli da tiro leggero e trotto, e servono anche per i lavori di campagna. Lo stallone più adatto per le cavalle di questa regione è l’orientale, essendo in origine le cavalle discendenti da questa razza. I puledri lasciano in generale molto a desiderare, a causa dell’insufficiente alimentazione ed il precoce lavoro riescono di bassa statura e gracili di corpo.
Fin dal 1850, sotto il Governo Austriaco nella città di Sondrio funzionano parecchi stalloni, e più tardi ne furono mandati anche dal Governo italiano: da tutti, ma specialmente dai primi furono ottenuti dei buoni prodotti, che vennero ammirati, sia per la bellezza delle loro forme che per la resistenza.
Esistevano prima del 1887 alcune stazioni di monta privata: da quell’anno fu istituita la stazione di monta governativa, e con essa disparvero le private.
'Non molti anni sono la Valtellina faceva un’attiva esportazione di equini, ma essa andava man mano diminuendo, ed ora è superata dall’esportazione' (Clivio).
Da queste notizie si trae la cognizione che esiste una razza valtellinese, con centro di produzione in Chiavenna, di tipo orientale, che fu prosperosa un tempo quando era lasciata a sé stessa, tanto che ne era notevole l’esportazione, e che dopo la istituzione della stazione di monta governativa, le parti si sono invertite. Infatti mentre il direttore Clivio suggerisce che lo stallone da inviarsi a quella stazione sia un orientale, lo stallone che vi viene mandato è un Hackney inglese. Sicché ammesso che quella piccola razza chiavennese avesse realmente notevoli pregi, specialmente stimabili per l’attitudine spiccata al lavoro in collina, quei pregi si vollero distruggere con un incrociamento disadatto, che l’Hackney non è, ne può essere, utile riproduttore di cavalli quali occorrono sulle colline e sui monti.
E così contrariamente a quanto fa il Governo Ungherese, il quale ha creato la razza di Fogaras a 700 metri sul livello del mare, per avere riproduttori atti ad accoppiarsi con le cavalle di montagna, noi mandiamo sui pendii alpini lo stesso stallone che adoperiamo nelle basse e lussureggianti e piane praterie lombarde!!
Ma forse converrà prestare maggior fede a quanto ha detto il Prof. Lemoigne nelle sue conferenze tenute in Valtellina, che cioè questa provincia non è, ne può essere, paese di cavalli. Se ciò è vero, però, si domanda a quale scopo fu istituita colà una stazione governativa di monta equina”.