Moravian Warmblood

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Conservation status
  • FAO (2007): not listed[1]:34
  • DAD-IS (2025): at risk/critical[2]     
Other namesCzech: Moravský teplokrevník
Country of originCzechoslovakia
DistributionMoravia, Czech Republic
Moravian Warmblood
Conservation status
  • FAO (2007): not listed[1]:34
  • DAD-IS (2025): at risk/critical[2]     
Other namesCzech: Moravský teplokrevník
Country of originCzechoslovakia
DistributionMoravia, Czech Republic
StandardSCHPMT (in Czech)
Use
Traits
Height
  • Male:
    161–167 cm
  • Female:
    159–165 cm

The Moravian Warmblood (Czech: Moravský teplokrevník) is a Czech modern breed of warmblood horse.[2]

The Moravian Warmblood derives from the various half-blood horse breeds of the area of the former Austro-Hungarian Empire – the Furioso, the Gidran, the Nonius, the North Star, the Przedswit, the Shagya Arab and the Star of Hanover – as well as the Catalin strain developed from 1927 at the stud of Motešice, now in Slovakia.[3]:459[4] From 1920 to 1971 these horses constituted a separate population – the Moravian Warmblood – but from 1971 they were registered in the stud-book of the Czech Warmblood, which also held many cross-breeds of Czechoslovak warmblood horses with imported foreign breeds such as the Trakehner.[5]:2

Efforts to re-establish the Moravian Warmblood as a separate breed began in 1996.[5]:2 A breed society, the Society of Breeders and Friends of the Moravian Warmblood (Czech: Svaz chovatelů a příznivců moravského teplokrevníka), was officially approved by the Czech ministry of agriculture in 2004,[4] and a stud-book was opened in the same year.[3]:459[2]

A total of 150 mares and 12 stallions had been identified as suitable for inclusion in the new stud-book; of these, 67 mares and 10 stallions were registered in 2004.[6] By 2011 the total registered stock had grown to 280 head, including 167 brood-mares and 22 stallions at stud.[6] In 2025 there were 600 horses in all, with a breeding stock of 36 stallions and 266 mares; the conservation status of the breed was listed as 'at risk/critical'.[2]

In 2018 the Moravian Warmblood was found to be genetically more distant from the Czech Warmblood than was the Kinsky horse, which had had its own stud-book since 2005.[7]:81

Characteristics

Use

References

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