Gymnasium of the Horse: Completely Footnoted Collector's Edition

Gymnasium of the Horse: Completely Footnoted Collector's Edition

Gymnasium of the Horse: Completely Footnoted Collector's Edition

Gymnasium of the Horse: Completely Footnoted Collector's Edition

eBookFully footnoted, hardcover edition (Fully footnoted, hardcover edition)

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Overview

Gustav Steinbrecht's Gymnasium of the Horse is one of the great milestones of equestrian literature, alongside Xenophon, de Pluvinel, Newcastle, and de la Guérinière. It forms a connection and transition between two eras.

    On one hand, it is the culmination of the equestrian literature of the late 18th century and 19th century that, under the influence of the Industrial Revolution, tried to explain equine biomechanics by comparing the body to a mechanical device.

    On the other hand, it forms the theoretical foundation for the H. Dv. 12 German Cavalry Manual on the training of horse and rider [Xenophon Press 2014] and its successor, the Richtlinien fuer Reiten und Fahren of the German National Federation. The Gymnasium of the Horse belongs on every dressage rider's bookshelf. It's the kind of book that needs to be studied, because every word is chosen deliberately, and every sentence is full of knowledge and meaning. It's a book that needs to be re-read regularly, because with each new reading, your understanding will evolve and deepen.

    It is a true classic, because it is universally accepted and admired, not only in Germany, but also in the rest of the dressage world, as it contains so much wisdom, so much invaluable advice that even 130 years later, it has lost nothing of its relevance. Steinbrecht formulates rules, principles, and guidelines for horse training more concisely and more sharply than almost any other author. His book has truly stood the test of time.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780933316232
Publisher: Xenophon Press LLC
Publication date: 11/01/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 347
Sales rank: 754,102
File size: 627 KB

About the Author

Steinbrecht was born in 1808 in Ampfurth, a village near Oschersleben in the Börde district of Saxony, which at that time was a province of Prussia. He studied veterinary medicine in Berlin before spending eight years at the manège at Moabit under the celebrated dressage trainer Louis Seeger. It was there that he met his wife, Seeger's niece. From 1834 to 1842 he directed a private manège in Magdeburg, and then returned to Berlin to work again with Seeger. In 1849 Steinbrecht took over as director of Seeger's manège and began work on a book on horsemanship. In 1859 he acquired his own manège in Dessau, but returned once again to Berlin in 1865, where he continued to train horses almost until his death. His book was expanded and edited by Paul Plinzner and published posthumously as Das Gymnasium des Pferdes, "The Gymnasium of the Horse" in 1886. The date of publication is often incorrectly given as 1885 in bibliographies such as that of Huth. A second edition was published in 1892, and a third in 1901. Xenophon Press published the first ever English edition in 1995.
William Clark "Bill" Steinkraus (born October 12, 1925) is an American show jumping champion. Steinkraus participated in five Olympic Games. At the 1968 Summer Olympics, held in Mexico City, he won a gold medal in individual jumping with the horse, Snowbound. He obtained two silver medals in Team Jumping, first in 1960 on his mount, Ksar d'Espirt, and 1972 on Main Spring. Steinkraus also won a bronze medal in Team Jumping at the 1952 Olympics in Helsinki, Finland on Hollandia. He was also slated to ride on the 1964 Olympic Team until his horse, Sinjon, was injured.

Table of Contents

Contents
Foreword
A Preface for the Reprint
Preface by the Publisher of the First Edition
Introduction to the Fourth Edition
A. The Rider’s Seat and Aids
The Seat 
The Aids
The Driving Aids 
The Restraining Aids 
The Supporting Aids 
B. The Purpose of Dressage
General Comments 
Letting the Horse Find Its Balance 
C. Systematic Training of the Horse
Work on the Lunge 
Starting the Young Horse  
Developing Thrust in Its Natural Carriage 
The Artificial Carriage of the Horse 
Bending the Horse 
Bending the Neck 
Bending the Poll 
Bending the Spine 
Bending the Hind Legs 
Bending the Horse on One Track 
Lessons on Two Tracks
Shoulder-In 
Travers 
Counter-Movements 
The Canter 
D. School Movements
Lower-Level Movements 
Movements of the Haute École
Piaffe and Passage 
Haute École Lifts and Airs Above the Ground 
E. Epilogue 
Xenophon Press Library

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