So
it happened that the old race horse and charger had his journey
lengthened, to the degree that he stood on his feet one hundred
days without once lying down, before he reached Marseilles.
Yet Capt. Vesey raced him successfully at Pau, and afterward in
England. He won a steeplechase when twenty-two years of age. When
he had to be destroyed, because of a broken leg, at twenty-three,
he was absolutely sound. In 1890 he was described in the London Live
Stock Journel, as
- "fresh
and well, with immense bone below the knee (he measured eight
inches) and as clean in the legs as a four year old, notwithstanding
the fact that he was hunted in Suffolk last year."
[ED NOTE:
Maidan is an Al Khamsa Foundation horse. He is the sire of the
imported mare *Nazli (x *Naomi) who was imported by Randolph Huntington
in 1893. That same year Mr. Huntington also imported *Nimr, a son
of *Nazli sired by the Al Khamsa Foundation horse, *Kismet. Mr.
Huntington proceeded to line breed to *Nazli and her blood forms
a strong basis for the Drissula family in Al Khamsa breeding (See
Khamsat Anthology, page 28). The foundation horse information on
Maidan in AL KHAMSA ARABIANS (1983)
is as follows:
MAIDAN cb
1869
chestnut stallion, imported in 1871 to India by the agheyl, Abd
Ar-Rahman. Imported in 1885 to England by the Hon. Eustace Vezey.
Sire: db, Dam: a Mu'niqiyah-Hadrujiyah. Strain: Mu'niqi- Hadruj.
Maidan is the sire of *Nazli.
According
to the registration application for *Nazli at the Arabian Horse
registry, Maidan was said to be a "Managhi-Hedruj." This agrees
with Randolph Huntington, who imported *Nazli, and Carl Raswan.
No strain is given for Maidan in the General Stud Book, which does
give the following transfers of ownership: purchased "of Abd er
Rahman, of Bombay, by Colonel Brownlow in 1871 ... He was then
sold to Major Brough, who sold him to Captain Fisher. He won the
Kadir Cup (the blue ribbon of Pigsticking in India), and was then
purchased by Lord Airlie. He was three years in Afghanistan, and
was imported into England by the Hon. Eustace Vezey." HUNTINGTON ancestral
element.]
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